Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs Movie Review
Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs Review

"Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs " Overview

Rating: U
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Carlos SaldanhaProducer : John C Donkin, Lori Forte
Screenwiter : Michael Berg, Peter Ackerman, Mike Reiss, Yoni Brenner
Starring : Ray Romano,Queen Latifah,John Leguizamo,Denis Leary,Simon Pegg,Seann William Scott,Josh Peck,Bill Hader,Kristen Wiig
A slightly more adventurous story breaks the trequel curse: this film is
actually better than its predecessors. In addition to astoundingly eye-catching
animation, this one also has a driving (albeit corny) narrative and some snappy
new characters.
Mammoth Manny (voiced by Romano) is so preoccupied with the pregnancy of his
mate Ellie (Latifah) that he hasn't noticed that his sabre-tooth pal Diego
(Leary) is thinking of leaving to regain his mojo. Meanwhile, goofy sloth Sid
(Leguizamo) wants a family of his own. So when he finds three eggs in a cavern,
he decides to raise the hatchling dinosaurs as his own. Then their T-rex mother
arrives, taking them and Sid into a lost underground world populated by
dinosaurs, hungry plants and a swashbuckling eye-patched weasel named Buck
(Pegg).
The screenwriters casually brush off the anachronism with one line ("I thought
these guys were extinct!"), then merrily throw their ice-age characters into an
oozing primordial rainforest. This lets the animators run wild with lurid
colours that don't exist in the icy world above, plus lots of adorable baby
creatures. But even as they're animated with terrific inventiveness, the action
scenes feel familiar (balancing rocks, rushing water, snow slides). And while
the 3D is sharp, the film would look better without it. Strangely, nothing ever
leaps off the screen at us.
The best thing about this series is that the comedy and action are centred on
the likeably oddball characters. And while the returning cast (including Scott
and Peck as Ellie's possum brothers) get a chance to expand their roles, the
film is stolen by Pegg's wonderfully mad Buck, a Captain Ahab character
desperate to catch the legendary albino dinosaur that haunts his nightmares.
Of course the film is also punctuated with the hilarious antics of Scrat and
his elusive acorn, and this time the filmmakers have given him a rival for the
nut, the female Scratte, who also offers a romantic distraction. Like the rest
of the script, this subplot is also simplistic and syruppy, especially when the
abandoned acorn sings Alone Again (Naturally). But the film is such a colourful
rush of action and comedy that, like the 65 million-year dinosaur anomaly,
we'll let it slide.
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Review by Rich Cline
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