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Surf's Up Movie Review
Surf's Up Review

"Surf's Up" Overview

Rating: PG
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Ash Brannon,Chris BuckProducer : Christopher Jenkins,Lydia Bottegoni
Screenwiter : Ash Brannon,Chris Buck,Christopher Jenkins,Don Rhymer,Christian Darren
Starring : Shia LaBeouf,Jeff Bridges,Jon Heder,Zooey Deschanel,James Woods
The passionate pursuit of the perfect wave once inspired Bruce Brown to film
the quintessential surfing documentary The Endless Summer. A loving ode to the
unheralded beach-bum community, Brown's rambling tour of our planet's surfing
hot spots took audiences on a permanent vacation when it opened in 1966.
Forty years later, the art of mastering tubular waves has inspired Surf's Up,
an animated fish-out-of-water story that opens in the summer (great) but feels
endless (groan).
Using penguins as protagonists (yet again), Surf's Up traces a fictional
timeline of surfing accomplishments that places serious emphasis on Big Z (Jeff
Bridges). A dominant wave-runner, the Zen penguin mysteriously dropped off the
competitive-surfing scene during a heated match with his arch-rival Tank Evans
(Diedrich Bader). Now potential heirs to Z's throne are heading to Hawaii for
an open competition.
The unlikeliest of champions is Cody Maverick (Shia LaBeouf), the best -- make
that only -- surfing penguin in the frozen Antarctic community of Shiverpool.
Leaving his ungrateful family in his wake, Cody hitches a ride to warmer
climates to follow in the fin-strokes of his idol Z, but encounters incessant
obstacles that threaten to sink his surfing dreams.
Co-directors Ash Brannon and Chris Buck, veterans of Pixar and Disney
respectively, make two wise decisions. They cast Bridges as Z so the California
golden boy can tap into the cares-to-the-wind vibe he brought to The Big
Lebowski. It's unlikely the Coen brothers would ever film a sequel to their
1998 cult classic, so this might be the closest we'll get to seeing Bridges'
iconic Dude -- albeit in penguin form -- again.
Surf's Up also is the first animated feature (so far as I can recall) to adopt
a documentary-style approach, a move that automatically freshens up the
script's familiar underdog-makes-good material. Characters give interviews to
an unseen film crew -- Brannon and Buck occasionally are heard off screen
asking questions. It's clever, and the movie takes the format about as far as
it will go.
The rest of Surf's Up is as flat as the ocean on a calm day. Musical cues that
transition scenes are horribly moldy and painfully obvious. The familiar riff
of Green Day's 1994 hit "Welcome to Paradise" kicks in once Cody reaches the
beach. What, Guns 'N' Roses wouldn't give up the rights to "Paradise City?"
The rest of the vocal casting is equally predictable. Jon Heder mildly tweaks
his Napoleon Dynamite persona to voice Cody's unlikely friend, a spaced-out
chicken with surfing chops of his own. James Woods rapid-fires lame dialogue as
Reggie Belafonte, a beaver (I think) working as a gun-for-hire surf promoter
with Don King's bravado and trademark spiky coif. And a lackluster line reading
by LaBeouf makes his character, Cody Maverick, anything but.
Maybe I'm just burned out on black-and-white birds after waddling through March
of the Penguins and the musical Happy Feet? Familiarity for the breed seems to
have bred contempt for this movie. But even if Surf's Up built its act around
orangutan, I still would have been turned off by the screenplay's tasteless
humor. For a kid's movie, this one pushes the obscenity envelope. Flatulence
jokes muscle out semi-offensive language -- no blatant curses make their way
into the film, but you wouldn't want your youngest repeating some of the
phrases fed-up Cody uses when he's frustrated. Another scene, in which Cody
injures himself on an underwater urchin, ends with a physician urinating on the
penguin's open wound. The final insult occurs when Tank is caught by his mom
while in the act of "polishing his trophies." Classy, right? Sadly, Cody's
search for his inner dude has produced a dud.
Don King presents his first animated film.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell
personally, I thought the film was pretty good?! lol ....
the animation was awesome! especially the water scenes (travelling through wave
tube was very impressive) ...
as for people moaning about it being penguins (again) ... personally I'm not
sure what you could have had in it's place! .... Trout?! maybe?!?!?!
the characters were awesome! ... Chicken Joe rocked! .... and Big Z had the
whole Jack Johnson thing nailed! lol
personally, it was funny! and so what if there was 'some' adult humour in
there! what's the big deal!? ... I sit and watch kids channels on sky and there
are jokes in those shows that go right over the kids head, but are totally
aimed at the adult audience, who, are more often or not sitting watching these
shows under duress! .....
stop molly coddling kids! .. otherwise we'll have a whole generation of soft
a$$ kids!
anyway! loved the film! ... and it pervays a good message! ... winning isn't
everything! ... and if it ain't fun! DON'T DO IT! .... been saying that for
years with my snowboarding!
enjoi
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