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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Author
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Topic: Happy Feet (2006)
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Brian Michael Weidemann
Expert cat molester
Posts: 944
From: Costa Mesa, CA United States
Registered: Feb 2004
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posted 11-15-2006 05:04 AM
This needed to be 3D. It was begging for it, many times. Without the 3D, I'd say the IMAX version is not particularly worth catching, unless you think a kick-ass sound system is worth it for such a music-based feature. When I actually see it in the auditorium, I can confirm or deny that. Even though it was 2D, it still seemed rather flat. It could have been crisper, but I think they DMR'd it like with any live action 35mm. The top of the image where it's masked off had this halo streak (digital sharpening side effect) through most of the feature. I wasn't too impressed.
And now on to the movie itself: I wasn't too impressed. Moral of the story (spoiler): It's okay to ostracize those different than you until it's to your benefit not to do so any more, because they'll save the day for you, despite the fact you never accepted them for who they are. Oh, no, wait, I looked at it from the wrong perpective ... let's rephrase: it's okay to be different, if you're true to who you are, and if you persist you can change the minds of those who never accepted you.
(More spoiler!) Mumbles NEVER learned to sing, yet everyone else learned to dance. Was he being ostracized because of his evil dancing? He never learned a lesson. He never changed. Who's the hero here? I guess stubborness will eventually pay off because once you show those elders that times have changed, they'll agree and go along with you.
The ending seemed quite out of place, but I guess they had to end it somehow. The movie was a tad long, and slightly slow in some parts, for a movie of this type. I'm not sure what to think of it.
The CG team has probably been patting themselves on the backs the whole time they worked on this. The choreography was involved, and the camera never stopped moving, panning, sliding, turning, spinning, whathaveyou. The lighting was neat. I was afraid the whole movie would look static, what with sky and snow and ice and water, forever. They did a good job bringing color in and out. Visually, I didn't get bored nearly as soon as I thought.
There were a LOT of songs in the arrangements and medleys. People will say this is cute. At least, that's what they'll be thinking they'll tell people, before the end of the movie, at which time they'll change their minds and think they'll instead tell people it WAS cute until the end, where it hits you across the head with a message.
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James R. Hammonds, Jr
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 931
From: Houston, TX, USA
Registered: Nov 2000
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posted 12-08-2006 04:55 PM
quote: Yet another movie gratifying in the newest "hey kids, it's OK to be a deviant!" manner. Blech [puke]
Not sure I follow you there Kyle. When I think of a deviant, I tink of someone who INTENTIONALLY tries to be different from everyone else. Mumble just couldn't sing, but had a talent that no one else had which is that of dance. He was merely trying to be accepted by everyone else in spite of being different. What's wrong with trying to teach kids to accept people for who they are?
As for the movie itself...
Happy Feet is marketed as a cute little movie about dancing penguins. From the previews and commercials, you would think that this would be the focus of the movie.
I was not surprised to learn that Happy Feet would have a message of accepting others as they are. After all, it is a good lesson to learn. I'm all for teaching children that not everyone will have the same talents and abilities and that just because someone is unable to do something that most others can does not mean that that person will not be useful in other ways. That should have been the main focus of the movie. Instead, Happy Feet turns into an environmental propaganda piece, which is not what one would expect from watching the commercials. Don't get me wrong, I don't have a problem with the message. There is nothing wrong with advocating against pollution and suggesting that we change the way we fish, but it almost seems like the viewer was intentionally mislead by Warner Bros. not being open in its advertisements that it would be propagandizing our children. I can't really put my finger on it, but the more I think about it, something just doesn't seem right about the whole thing.
I guess the bottom line is that this movie should have picked one direction and went with it. If it wanted to be environmental propaganda, it should have focused on that and should have been marketed that way. What I would have preferred is what actually WAS marketed. Happy Feet should have been a cute, fun little movie about dancing and singing penguins with a little lesson about accepting others for who they are.
2.5 out of 5 stars
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