Archive for the ‘2000's Animals’ Category

Marley & Me

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Marley & Me is a 2008 American comedy film directed by David Frankel. The screenplay by Scott Frank and Don Roos is based on the memoir of the same title by John Grogan and stars Owen Wilson and Jennifer Aniston. The film is scheduled to be released on Christmas Day 2008.

Plot

John Grogan (Owen Wilson), a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer, moves to Miami with his wife Jenny (Jennifer Aniston) for a newspaper job. The couple adopts Marley, a yellow Labrador retriever, in order to give them a taste of parenthood, but the dog proves to be a hyperactive handful. He wreaks havoc on the household, gets expelled from obedience school, and becomes even more rambunctious when the children begin to arrive. Ultimately he is considered an indispensable part of the family.

Production

The film was shot on location in Philadelphia and West Chester in Pennsylvania and Fort Lauderdale and Miami, including Dolphin Stadium, in Florida.

The film’s score was composed by Theodore Shapiro, who previously had worked with director David Frankel on The Devil Wears Prada. He recorded it with the Hollywood Studio Symphony at the Newman Scoring Stage at 20th Century Fox.

Beverly Hills Chihuahua

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Beverly Hills Chihuahua is a 2008 comedy film by Walt Disney Pictures directed by Raja Gosnell and released October 3. A trailer of the upcoming Disney film Bolt was seen at the beginning. The plot centers around a Chihuahua who gets dognapped in Mexico and has to escape from an evil Doberman with help from a lonely German Shepherd and a hyperactive male Chihuahua who has a desperate crush on her.

Plot

Vivian (Jamie Lee Curtis), chihuahua Chloe’s (voice of Drew Barrymore) owner, leaves the pooch with her irresponsible niece Rachel (Piper Perabo) to dog-sit. Rachel decides to go to Mexico with her pals, leaving Chloe in the room; the dog sneaks out and gets stolen. Chloe ends up tossed into a dog fight ring, left to defend herself from dog El Diablo (voice of Edward James Olmos). Delgado (voice of Andy Garcia) rescues her from the fight, unleashing the other dogs from their cages and unlocking the ring to allow the two dogs to escape. Delgado was planning to just walk away, but he feels bad and decides to help Chloe get back home. The leader of the dog fights realizes that Chloe is worth something and sends Delgado to find Chloe. Rachel stays in Mexico to find Chloe, Rachel’s friend sneaks into Vivians’ house to get a picture of Chloe when she is caught by the landscaper, Sam (Manolo Cardona). He and his dog Papi (voice of George Lopez) from Beverly Hills, who is in love with Chloe go to Mexico to find her. Rachel and the landscaper team and set off to find Chloe. On their journey to Beverly Hills, Chloe and Delgado find themselves in many situations that they manage to escape; they make it to a national park in Mexico, where Chloe is regonized by an employee. Rachel and landscaper go to get Chloe but Delgago beats them to her. They end up in an old ruin where Chloe gets locked in a cage; Papi helps Chloe to escape. Chloe finds her bark and with the help of Papi and Delgado, and they get Diablo surender. Delgado becomes a K9 Unit and Rachel and Sam takes the dogs home. Back in Beverly Hills, Vivian likes Chloe’s new smell (an earthy smell). Papi and Chloe relax on the patio. Chloe thanks Papi for his help and she tells him that she loves him in Spanish and she licks him down to the ground as her way of showing her love. Before the end credits, Papi explains what happens to the dogs (Chloe’s friends that she met in Mexico), he and Chloe have puppies and Sam begins dating Rachel.

Visual effects

Cinesite in London, using their specially developed pipeline for creating digital muzzle replacements, animated the many talking dogs. The in-house visual effects supervisor is Matt Johnson, and the animation supervisor was Alexander Williams.

Box office

Despite mixed reviews from critics, Beverly Hills Chihuahua was a commercial success. The film grossed $29,300,465 on its opening weekend from 3,215 theaters, averaging about $9,114 per theater, and ranking #1 at the box office for that weekend. On its second weekend, the film arrived #1 again with $17,502,077. As of December 7, 2008, Beverly Hills Chihuahua has grossed $92.2 million in domestic and $21.5 million in other territories leading up to a total of $113.8 million worldwide.

Underdog

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Underdog is a 2007 film released on August 3, 2007 featuring the super-powered cartoon character of the same name and several other characters from the cartoon. It is produced by Spyglass Entertainment and Classic Media and distributed theatrically in the United States by Walt Disney Pictures. This film stars Alex Neuberger as Jack Unger and features Jason Lee as the voice of the titular canine superhero. It was shot in Providence, Rhode Island.

Plot

The story begins when a klutzy police beagle is accidentally kidnapped to be a guinea pig to Capitol City’s best geneticist Simon Barsinister (Peter Dinklage), who is secretly experimenting on dogs to perfect his serum. However, the beagle escapes, but not before causing a lab fire and being exposed to various substances. Found by Dan Unger (Jim Belushi), the beagle is named “Shoeshine” and becomes the pet of Dan’s son, 12-year-old Jack Unger (Alex Neuberger). But as both eventually learn, the incident at the lab has not only made Shoeshine able to speak, but also able to fly and possess superhuman strength. Jack convinces Shoeshine to use his superpowers to help the citizens of Capitol City, taking the name “Underdog.” However, Barsinister, hunting after Underdog and eventually learning of his identity, manages to use the Ungers to force Underdog to provide a sample of his DNA that the scientist uses in the form of pills and an antidote that he uses on Shoeshine to turn him back to a normal dog. After feeding three of the pills to his German Shepherds, Barsinister takes the mayor hostage while Cad sets up a bomb on top of city hall. However, Shoeshine manages to regain his powers and save the day, with Barsinister put behind bars.

Rating

This film is rated PG by the MPAA for rude humor, mild language, and action.

Firehouse Dog

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Firehouse Dog is a family film produced by Regency Enterprises and distributed by 20th Century Fox. Directed by Todd Holland, it stars Josh Hutcherson, Bruce Greenwood, Dash Mihok, Steven Culp and Bill Nunn. It was released April 4, 2007, in the U.S.

Production notes

Rexxx/Dewey is played in the film by four different Irish Terriers named Arwen, Frodo, Rohan, and Stryder, named after the characters/location from The Lord of the Rings story.

The film was shot in Toronto and Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Reception

Firehouse Dog received mainly negative to mixed reviews from film critics. It garnered 31% positive reviews on the film-critic aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, and a 43/100 on MetaCritic. Justin Chang of Variety called it, “A likable but ungainly mutt of a movie”.[2]. Ty Burr in The Boston Globe found “the human scenes in Firehouse Dog are perfectly acceptable on the level of a heartwarming family B-movie” but “that dog—or, rather, that digitally enhanced replicant—is just plain creepy”. While Carrie Rickey of The Philadelphia Inquirer called it “a touching, family-friendly entertainment about a dog and his boy”, Chris Kaltenbach of The Baltimore Sun felt it was “too busy being inspirational and cuddly to be funny or pointed” and “plays out as though its plot was stuck in molasses”. Frank Lovece of Film Journal International capped his review by suggesting that, “Firehouse Dog should be put to sleep before it can do the same to audiences”. Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune (April 11, 2007) says: “Once it figures out it is more drama than comedy, “Firehouse Dog” exceeds your limited expectations….While the movie’s ad campaign suggests wacky antics all the way, a surprisingly affecting and well-acted father/son relationship develops.”

Snakes on a Plane

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Snakes on a Plane is a cult high concept, horror-thriller feature film starring Samuel L. Jackson. It was released by New Line Cinema on August 18, 2006 in North America. The film, directed by David R. Ellis (Final Destination 2, Cellular), was written by David Dalessandro, John Heffernan, and Sheldon Turner.

The movie gained a considerable amount of attention before its release, forming large fan bases online and becoming an Internet phenomenon, due to the film’s title and premise. In response to the Internet fan base, New Line Cinema incorporated feedback from online users into its production, and added five days of reshooting. Before and after the film was released, it was parodied and alluded to on television shows and films, fan-made videos, video games, a noise album dubbed Soundtrack for the Motion Picture Snakes on a Plane, and various forms of literature. Despite the immense Internet buzz, the film’s gross revenue did not live up to expectations.

Plot

After witnessing the murder of a prosecutor by gangster Eddie Kim (Byron Lawson) and his thugs, Sean Jones (Nathan Phillips) is escorted by FBI agents Neville Flynn (Samuel L. Jackson) and John Sanders (Mark Houghton) to testify in a case in Los Angeles. Despite increased security for the flight, Kim arranges for a time-release crate full of venomous snakes to be placed in the cargo hold of South Pacific Air Flight 121, a Boeing 747-400 on which Jones will be flying from Honolulu to LAX in Los Angeles. Leis given to passengers before they leave were secretly sprayed with pheromones to make the snakes more aggressive in an attempt to bring down the plane before it reaches its destination.

The crate opens midway through the flight, and the snakes make their way throughout the cabin. A couple having sex and smoking in a bathroom are the first killed, followed by a man urinating in another bathroom due to a poisonous bite to the penis. The plane’s captain, Sam McKeon (Tom Butler), investigates an electrical short, and after fixing the problem, is killed by the viper that caused the short. Co-pilot Rick (David Koechner) believes Sam had suffered a heart attack and continues to head to LAX.

Eventually, some snakes attack Rick, and while fending them off, Rick accidentally releases the oxygen masks throughout the plane, and snakes drop into the cabin with them. Numerous passengers, including Agent Sanders, are killed in the attack. The surviving passengers, who had made their way to the front of the plane where there were no snakes, put up a blockade of luggage.

Agent Flynn contacts FBI Special Agent Hank Harris (Bobby Cannavale) on the ground who contacts ophiologist Dr. Steven Price (Todd Louiso). Price asks Flynn to gather the dead snakes so he can determine the antivenin needed. Mercedes sends photos of the dead snakes using her smartphone. Price notices that the snakes are originally from all over the world and believes a Los Angeles snake dealer could have been the person that compiled the snakes.

Rick is attacked by the viper that had killed Sam and the plane starts to dip downwards, causing a food trolley to crash through the luggage blockade. Many passengers decide to flee to the first class cabin, where there are no snakes, while several others are killed in the chaos. As all the surviving passengers reach first class, the snakes continue to pursue them and the passengers block the cabin’s entrance with an inflatable liferaft. Agent Flynn and Claire manage to regain control of the plane after a struggle with the yokes. Flynn then goes into the cargo hold of the plane in order to restore the air conditioning/ventilation system, without which the plane would overheat and plummet into the ocean. He discovers a mechanical panel that had been intentionally left open to allow the snakes to reach the cabin while successfully fixing the ventilation system.

In Los Angeles, Harris and Price go to the snake dealer’s snake farm. After a shootout, the dealer reveals that he was the person who illegally obtained the snakes for Kim’s use. He is then taken into custody, with his stock of antivenin being commandeered for the surviving snakebite victims aboard the plane.

Flynn is contacted by Harris, who lets Flynn know that he has the antivenin and it will be ready for passengers when they reach the airport. However, Flynn discovers that the cockpit is filled with snakes and that Rick is dead. After a brief discussion, Troy (Kenan Thompson) agrees to land the plane based on prior experience. Flynn then delivers the movie’s fan-anticipated catchphrase: “Enough is enough! I have had it with these motherfucking snakes on this motherfucking plane!” After everybody gets prepared, Flynn shoots out two windows with a pistol, causing the plane to depressurize. The snakes are thus removed from the cockpit and the lower floor of the plane.

Flynn and Troy take the controls of the plane and Troy reveals that his only flight experience was from a PlayStation 2 video game flight simulator. After a nearly-unsuccessful emergency landing, Flight 121 safely lands. The surviving passengers leave the plane, and antivenin is given to those who need it. However, just as Flynn and Sean are about to get off the plane, a snake jumps out and bites Sean in the chest. Flynn draws his gun and shoots the snake, and paramedics rush to Sean, who is unharmed. Flynn rips open Sean’s shirt to reveal a bulletproof vest. The closing shots feature Sean surfing with Flynn.

Critical reaction

In mid-July 2006, New Line Cinema revealed that it would not be showing any advance screenings for critics. After the film opened, Snakes on a Plane received a 70% favorable rating among the consensus of critics tracked by Rotten Tomatoes.

Reviewers reported audiences cheering, applauding and engaging in “call and response”, noting that audience participation was an important part of the film’s appeal.

The Shaggy Dog

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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The Shaggy Dog is a 2006 remake of the 1959 film of the same name. It was rated PG by the MPAA for some mild rude humor.

Plot

Dave Douglas (Tim Allen) is a deputy district attorney, whom viewers see prosecuting activists who have broken into and allegedly set fire to the laboratory of pharmaceutical corporation Grant and Strictland, which the activists accuse of deliberately creating genetic freaks while searching for a “Fountain of Youth”. This distances Douglas from his activist daughter Carly (Zena Grey).

Viewers learn that the power-hungry minions of Mister Strictland (the surviving but aged junior partner of the late Grant), led by Dr. Kozak (Robert Downey Jr.), have stolen from a Tibetan Buddhist monastery the dog Khyi-yag-po (played by a bearded collie), whose DNA carries a mutation granting an extraordinary lifespan. Seeking to obtain his seeming immortality for themselves, the geneticists carry out several experiments which fail comically; though cell degradation desists in all the test subjects (a bullfrog, rats, a chimpanzee, a cobra, and a capuchin monkey), all of these start behaving like dogs. The scientists determine that Khyi-yag-po’s mutation is contagious and transmissible by bodily fluids.

Khyi-yag-po later escapes his cage and is found by Carly Douglas and her friend Trey (Shawn Pyfrom), who are trying to find evidence of the company’s animal testing. They bring him home and dub him “Shaggy”. When Dave returns from work, he objects to the dog’s presence and orders it out, but in the process is bitten on the hand, whereupon Khyi-yag-po’s saliva enters Dave’s veins, infecting him with the mutation.

Dave thereafter begins to exhibit canine behavior such as eating with only his mouth, being territorial in the presence of other dogs, and licking his wife rather than kissing her. When he becomes excited by stimuli associated with dogs, such as the command “Fetch!” or the presence of a cat, he transforms completely into a replica of Khyi-yag-po. This change is reversed only when he has calmed, as during sleep. When the real Khyi-yag-po is caught by Kozak’s lab minions, Dave is mistaken for “Shaggy” and takes his place. His family, ignorant of this, speak freely in his presence, leading Dave to realize that he is estranged from them. In particular, he learns that his son Josh (Spencer Breslin) wants to sing in the musical Grease instead of playing football, but is too scared to tell his father so.

In the ongoing trial, testimony from the activist accused of setting the lab on fire includes a description of the animals behaving like dogs, which sparks Dave’s suspicions about the company he is defending. When his dog-like behavior annoys the judge, Dave is removed from the case. He then decides to take matters into his own hands and infiltrates Grant and Strictland headquarters while in his canine form.

Hidden in the laboratory, Dave witnesses Dr. Kozak injecting the ailing Strictland with a drug that will paralyze him for several months, giving Kozak enough time to usurp control of the company. After viewing security cameras, Kozak and his minions realize that somehow Dave Douglas was able to become the exact copy of Khyi-yag-po.

When Dave comes home, still in his canine form, he overhears a conversation between Carly and Josh that Dave and Rebecca are splitting up. After hearing this Dave then knocks over a Scrabble and then used the letters to spell “I AM DAD” to his children, then spells “GRAND AND STRICTLAND” to them, making them realize the truth. Unfortunately when Dave gets out of the house he is then captured by Kozak’s minions.

After the humans leave, Dave and all the other mutants plan to escape. Acting on Khi-yag-po’s advice, Dave calms himself, then in human form breaks open his cage and opens the others. They all pile into a car and drive to the courthouse, but get into traffic making Dave leaving animals to drive (which then was droved near the courthouse making a scene after Dave said “I don’t know how that car get here!”) while he mets his wife and children in his canine form. When Dave said “I love you” he then turns into his human form.

In the court room, Dave attempts to show the assembly what Kozak has done, but only succeeds in doing so when he tricks Kozak into growing a tail. Grant and Strictland Corporation is thrown into disgrace, and Dave is able to spend more time with his family, though some of his canine habits remain. Hidden in the credits is a scene showing Kozak escaping from jail, to presumably return in a sequel.

Over the Hedge

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Over the Hedge is a 2006 computer-animated film based on the characters from United Media comic strip of the same name. Directed by Tim Johnson and Karey Kirkpatrick and produced by Bonnie Arnold, it was released in the U.S. on May 19, 2006.

It received a PG rating (for rude humor and comic action). The film was released by DreamWorks Animation and distributed through Paramount.

Plot

RJ the raccoon, while foraging for food, encounters the hibernating bear, Vincent and his large cache of food. RJ tries to steal it, but instead causes the food to be crushed in traffic on a nearby road. Vincent threatens to kill RJ, but RJ quickly promises to replace Vincent’s foodstocks within the week, when Vincent is fully awake from his hibernation. RJ discovers a nearby human suburban community, an optimal source for his task, and encounters a group of woodland creatures that have just woken up from their own hibernation in undeveloped forest that is surrounded by the community. The group is led by Verne the turtle, and includes the hyperactive squirrel Hammy, Stella the skunk, father and daughter opossums Ozzie and Heather, and a family of porcupines, Lou and Penny and their children Spike, Bucky, and Quillo. The animals quickly find that a large hedge was put in place while they were sleeping to separate them from the rest of the human development, and are afraid to venture on the other side.

RJ uses the opportunity to introduce himself to the group and explain that they could have better food by scavenging off the humans. Though Verne is wary of RJ’s plans and believes he may be using them, the group of animals quickly find that RJ is right, and begin raiding the human development repeatedly for food. The disappearance of food does not go unnoticed, and the development homeowner association president, Gladys Sharp, calls in the help of a pest control specialist, Dwayne LaFontant, aka “The Verminator”, who installs an overpowered extermination system in her backyard while trying to track down all the animals in the world. Despite close calls with Dwayne, the group of animals continues to gather food from the humans, RJ secretly making sure the food collected will replace Vincent’s stock exactly. RJ is brought in as part of the pack’s extended family, making him feel guilty about hiding his true intent from them. When RJ tries to approach Verne about it, RJ cannot help but lie about the situation.

A final raid planned by RJ before Vincent’s deadline involves invading Gladys’ home, which requires someone to distract her persian cat, Tiger; Stella is quickly groomed to look like a cat to draw Tiger’s attention away. Though they are able to collect most of the food in the kitchen, RJ inadvertently reveals the truth to Verne as he tries to get a can of Spuddies, which are Vincent’s favorites. During their argument, the animals are soon discovered by Gladys and Dwayne, and though RJ gets away, the other animals are all captured. RJ takes the food to Vincent, but upon seeing the other animals captured, uses the food to stop Dwayne’s van and knock the human unconscious, allowing RJ to free the animals. After apologizing for using the group to his own ends, RJ helps the others drive the van back to the forest, chased by Vincent. The animals try to take shelter in the hedge, with Vincent trying to claw them out from one side, and Dwayne trying to shock them and Gladys trying to use a weedwhacker on them from the other side. RJ and Verne come up with a plan to give Hammy an energy drink, which allows him to move at light speed, allowing him to safely activate the extermination traps while RJ uses himself as bait to lure Vincent into Gladys’ backyard (and surprisingly lives because of Verne’s shell). Vincent, Gladys, and Dwayne are momentarily confused just before they are seriously injured by extermination system. Animal control is called to take Vincent to a nature preserve, while both Gladys is arrested for the use of inhumane traps, Dwayne having managed to slip away. Stella finds that Tiger still has a crush on her despite knowing she is a skunk, as he has long since lost his sense of smell, and both RJ and Tiger are accepted into the group. When Verne realizes that they still need food for the winter, Hammy reveals that he stuffed their log home with nuts.

Reception

The film’s opening weekend grossed $38,457,003 in 4,093 theaters. As of February 25, 2007, the film had earned $335,204,526 worldwide. Critical reaction was mostly positive with the film being rated 73% on the Rotten Tomatoes movie review aggregate site. Critic Frank Lovece of Film Journal International found that, “DreamWorks’ slapstick animated adaptation of the philosophically satiric comic strip … is a lot of laughs and boasts a much tighter story than most animated features” Ken Fox of TVGuide.com called it “a sly satire of American ‘enough is never enough’ consumerism and blind progress at the expense of the environment. It’s also very funny, and the little woodland critters that make up the cast are a kiddie-pleasing bunch”. Roger Ebert and Richard Roeper of Ebert & Roeper gave the animated movie a “two thumbs up”.

A short film called Hammy’s Boomerang Adventure was released with the Over the Hedge DVD.

Happy Feet

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Happy Feet is an Australian-produced 2006 computer-animated comedy-drama musical film, directed and co-written by George Miller. It was produced at Sydney-based visual effects and animation studio Animal Logic for Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow Pictures and was released in North America on November 17, 2006. It is the first animated feature film produced by Kennedy Miller in association with Animal Logic. Though primarily an animated film, it does incorporate live action humans in certain scenes. The film was simultaneously released in both conventional theatres and in IMAX 2D format. The studio has hinted that a future IMAX 3D release was a possibility. Happy Feet won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature after failing to win the Annie Award for Best Animated Feature.

The film was dedicated in memory of Nick Enright, Michael Jonson, Robby McNeilly Green, and Steve Irwin.

Production

The animation in Happy Feet invested heavily in motion capture technology, with the dance scenes acted out by human dancers. The tap-dancing for Mumble in particular was provided by Savion Glover who was also co-choreographer for the dance sequences. The dancers went through “Penguin School” to learn how to move like a penguin, and also wore head apparatus to mimic a penguin’s beak.

Happy Feet was partially inspired by earlier documentaries such as the BBC’s Life in the Freezer.

The film took four years to make. Ben Gunsberger, Lighting Supervisor and VFX Department Supervisor, says this was partly because they needed to build new infrastructure and tools.

Plot

Set in an Antarctic emperor penguin colony, the film establishes that every penguin must sing a unique song called a “Heartsong” to attract a soul mate who will know how to complete their heartsong. This is based in fact, since emperor couples court each other and recognize one another by their unique calls. One penguin, Norma Jean (Nicole Kidman), sings the song “Kiss”, whereupon a male penguin named Memphis (Hugh Jackman) sings “Heartbreak Hotel”. Norma Jean chooses him as her mate. They couple and Norma Jean lays an egg. The egg is left in Memphis’s care while Norma Jean and the other females leave to fish for several weeks. While the males are struggling through the harsh winter, Memphis drops the egg, briefly exposing it to the freezing Antarctic temperatures. The resulting chick – the film’s protagonist, Mumble (Elijah Wood) – has a terrible singing voice. However, Mumble has an astute talent for something that none of the penguins had ever seen before: tap dancing.

This ability is frowned upon by the colony’s elders, who don’t tolerate deviance of any kind. As a result, Mumble is ostracized throughout his childhood, with only his mother and his friend Gloria to turn to for help. Mumble then grows to an adult, still half-covered in fluffy down. Through a series of mishaps – mainly getting chased by a hungry leopard seal – the penguin finds himself far from his home and within the carefree colony of adelie penguins – penguins small in stature, but fiercely loyal to those they call friends. He quickly befriends a small group of bachelors who form a club of sorts called the Amigos: the leader, Ramon (Robin Williams), the brothers Raul and Nestor, and twin brothers Rinaldo and Lombardo. The Amigos quickly embrace Mumble’s dance moves and assimilate him into their misfit group.

Mumble’s joy at finding acceptance for his difference is cut short when strange “alien discoveries” occur; after his accidentally starting an avalanche a long-frozen human excavator tumbles out from a glacier, and Mumble is intrigued. Driven by curiosity, he sets out to find the “aliens” responsible for the machine.

In Mumble’s old home, it is mating season, and Gloria is the center of attention, as was Mumble’s mother, though no other penguin knows the next verse to her heartsong. However, although she is surrounded by a large horde of suitors, none of their Heartsongs interest her what so ever. At this point, Ramon stands behind a newly come Mumble and sings a Spanish version of My Way. Gloria likes the song to a degree, but is only fooled for a moment, for she knows that Mumble can’t sing. She pushes him forward, revealing Ramon. Though Gloria doesn’t want Mumble to live life alone or even care much for the other penguins or their songs, Mumble unfortunantly has no heartsong at all and she turns back to the other males, leaving Mumble temporarily heartbroken. He then tries to persuade her to sing along to his tapping rhythm. Gloria is reluctant at first but complies, finding that Mumble’s rhythm fits with her melody. As Mumble’s beat speeds up Gloria finds the chorus to her heartsong, and realizes her song is “Boogie Wonderland”, a dance song. Gloria’s heartsong fits with Mumble’s dancing talent. Both Gloria and Mumble are exhilarated, and the other penguins are equally worked up; they all begin dancing along to him, much to Mumble’s delight.

Noah, the elder, sees the lack of fish as punishment from the Great ‘Guin, their god, regarding Mumble’s dancing. Noah exiles Mumble from the colony as a result; before Mumble leaves, he vows that he will find the real cause of the famine, and travels across vast territories with the Amigos and Lovelace, a self-worshipping rockhopper. Gloria tries to help him; Mumble, out of fear for her safety, does whatever it takes to get rid of her – namely, insulting her singing talents.

The Amigos, along with Mumble and Lovelace, travel many miles under harsh conditions. During their journey, they meet a group of elephant seals, who warn of “Annihilators”, who are presumably the same “aliens” Mumble seeks. After narrowly escaping from two killer whales, the penguins finally come face to face with a legion of huge commercial trawlers, all laden with fish caught around the Antarctic coast. Mumble follows after them fearlessly, leaving his friends behind to bear testament to his legacy.

After swimming and being tossed around by sea currents, Mumble ends up in a penguin exhibit at a marine park (closely resembling the Penguin Encounter at SeaWorld, a massive zoom-out hinting at the one in Orlando, Florida), and fervently tries to communicate with the “aliens” (humans) who surround him. When his pleas fail, Mumble nearly succumbs to madness after three months of confinement in the sterile glass prison. When a child taps on the glass wall one day, Mumble is woken from his stupor and dances in response, whereupon the child appears to run away. He becomes disappointed until she comes back with her mother. Soon, a large crowd gathers around the exhibit, taking pictures and telling their friends of this marvel. He is released to the wild, now with fewer of his fluffy down feathers and a tracking device strapped to his back, and leads the “aliens” home to his native colony. The other penguins, formerly skeptical, are now convinced that the aliens do exist.

Soon, a research team arrives and films the penguins dancing, and dances along with the rhythm. They bring this footage back to the human world. Different governments debate what to make of this footage and a worldwide debate ensues. They soon realize that they are overfishing the Antarctic waters, and conclude that perhaps the penguins were trying to communicate that to them. Antarctic fishing is banned, and the fish population recovers. At this, the Emperor Penguins and the Amigos dance and celebrate their triumph. A dancing baby penguin seen at the end is implied to be the child of Mumble and Gloria.

In the credits, the characters reunite to dance for the final number “Song of the Heart.” During the credits, it could be said that the characters appear and disappear based on the relationships between each other.

Eight Below

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Eight Below is a Walt Disney Pictures film directed by Frank Marshall and written by David DiGilio, which was released on February 17, 2006 in the United States.

Plot

In 1993, Jerry Shepard (Paul Walker) is a guide at an Antarctica research base under contract with the National Science Foundation. UCLA professor, Dr. Davis McClaren (Bruce Greenwood) arrives at the base and presses Shepard to take him to Mount Melbourne to attempt to find a rare meteorite from the planet Mercury. Shepard does so against his own intuition, which tells him that it is too late in the season (January) to complete such a treacherous route. Worried about the snowmobiles breaking through the thinning ice or falling in a crevasse, Shepard tells his boss and McClaren that the only way to get to Mount Melbourne is by dog sled.

Shepard and McClaren make it to Mount Melbourne but are immediately called back to base camp due to an approaching storm. McClaren begs for some time, and Shepard gives him half a day. McClaren finds what he was looking for and the two head back to the sled.

Shepard pauses to patch up one of the dogs (Old Jack) whose paw is bleeding. McClaren, while walking around to get a better radio connection with base, slides down an embankment when a soft ledge gives way. His landing at the bottom cracks the thin ice and McClaren ends up breaking through. Shepherd is able to get his lead dog Maya to bring a rope to McClaren and the dog team pulls him from the water.

Now, battling hypothermia, frostbite and near whiteout conditions, it is the dogs’ stamina and keen sense of direction that get Shepard and McClaren back to base. They are immediately evacuated, along with all other personnel, due to the storm, which is expected to intensify. With too much weight in the plane to carry both people and dogs, the human team medically evacuates Shepard and McClaren with a plan to return later for the dogs. The dogs are temporarily left behind, but the storm is worse than expected and it soon becomes apparent that no rescue will be attempted until the next spring.

Back at home, Shepard experiences angst about leaving his dogs and stops working as an Antarctic-conditions guide. Five months later, and after a heart-to-heart session with an older, veteran guide, Shepard decides to throw his all into rescuing the dogs. Before leaving for the trip, Shepard patches things up with McClaren, and tells him about his intentions to rescue the dogs. McClaren learns that Shepard does not have enough money to pay for the trip, but tells him that he cannot help him. Soon afterwards, McClaren sees a drawing of the dog team made by his young son, with the title: “My Hero is… THE DOGS WHO SAVED MY DADDY.” McClaren realizes the magnitude of his ingratitude and uses the remaining balance of his grant money to finance a rescue mission.

Background

The 1958 ill-fated Japanese expedition to Antarctica inspired the 1983 hit movie Nankyoku Monogatari. Eight Below is the fictional adaptation of the events of the 1958 incident moved forward to 1993, the last year that sled dogs were used in Antarctica.

Lassie

Saturday, December 13th, 2008
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Lassie is a family-based British/Irish/French 2005 film directed by Charles Sturridge. When a family hits financial crisis, they have no choice but to sell Lassie. Hundreds of miles away from home, Lassie sets out in a thrilling adventure to reclaim what is hers — her family.

Synopsis

Sam Carraclough, a miner who struggles to earn enough money to feed his family, sells the family’s collie, Lassie, to the Duke of Rudling, leaving his young son heartbroken over the loss of his canine companion. The film follows Lassie on the collie’s 500-mile journey from the Duke of Rudling’s estate in the Scottish Highlands to the Carraclough home.

Production notes

This is the 11th movie about Lassie, according to the producers. It is a remake of the 1943 film, Lassie Come Home, and is based on Eric Knight’s 1940 novel Lassie Come-Home.

The movie was filmed in Scotland, Ireland and on the Isle of Man, and though acclaimed by a number of critics, was generally poorly received at the box office. A New York Times reviewer praised the film, saying it “…balances cruelty and tenderness, pathos and humor without ever losing sight of its youngest audience member” and also exclaimed, “This ‘Lassie’ exhibits a repertory of facial expressions that would put Jim Carrey to shame”.