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Battle for Terra Movie Review

Battle for Terra Review

"Battle for Terra" Overview

** stars

Rating: PG
2009


Cast and Crew

Director : Aristomenis Tsirbas
Producer : Keith Calder,Jessica Wu,Dane Allan Smith
Screenwiter : Aristomenis Tsirbas,Evan Spiliotopoulos
Starring : Justin Long,Evan Rachel Wood,Brian Cox,James Garner,Chris Evans,Luke Wilson

 
Justin Long picture 2619381 Justin Long picture 2619423
 

 

Click for the JUSTIN LONG Gallery

In this day and age, you simply cannot produce unsophisticated animation like the kind on display in the campy Battle for Terra and hope to compete.

Pixar's industry pioneers push the envelope with each new cartoon, while their closest rivals at DreamWorks Animation have narrowed the quality gap. Even Xbox and Playstation video games boast superior visual sequences to those found in Terra, which chokes on its competition's digitally animated dust.

Canadian filmmaker Aristomenis Tsirbas' story, itself, isn't much better. Set in a future where colonists on Venus, Earth, and Mars waged a war that destroyed all three, Terra finds humanity's dwindling survivors seeking a new planet capable of sustaining life. They discover Terra, which is occupied by worm-ish (though intelligent) slug creatures who live a peaceful existence. Not for long. The covetous astronauts -- led by General Hemmer (Brian Cox) and Lt. Jim Stanton (Luke Wilson) -- disrupt Terra's serenity with plans to forcibly colonize.

Terra may be set in the future, but its story is as old as time. Tsirbas' overly familiar plotting matches his subpar animation. (The film is presented in 3-D, but does nothing out of the ordinary to compel you to see it in that format.) Terra liberally cribs from science-fiction both classic (Star Wars, Aliens) and modern (WALL-E, Delgo). Evan Spiliotopoulos' script alternates obvious environmental lessons and overt Biblical symbolism with blatant anti-war propaganda, shoveling all three with heavy-handed zeal.

But the final strike comes in the voice casting, which hits its mark once (Evan Rachel Wood is passionate as Mala, an feisty teenage Terra resident) but is frequently misguided (fey Wilson as a hulking military hero) or forgettable (Chris Evans, Justin Long, and a wasted Dennis Quaid). If you're desperate for stimulating science-fiction, wait for J.J. Abrams' Star Trek reboot.

Aka Terra.







Why the long neck?



Review by

Sean O'Connell


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