Two Brothers Movie Review
Two Brothers Review

"Two Brothers" Overview

Rating: PG
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Jean-Jacques AnnaudProducer : Jean-Jacques Annaud,Jake Eberts
Screenwiter : Jean-Jacques Annaud,Alain Godard
Starring : Guy Pearce,Jean-Claude Dreyfus,Freddie Highmore,Oanh Nguyen
Set against the dramatic backdrops of the ancient temples of Angkor in Cambodia
and the jungles of Cambodia and Thailand, Two Brothers is a gorgeously filmed
fable centering on two tiger cub brothers that suffer at the hands of humans,
only to rise up against their captors and overcome. Let's just say that if you
sided more with the tiger in the Siegfried and Roy mauling, this is definitely
the film for you.
Director Jean-Jacques Annaud (Enemy at the Gates, The Lover) returns to wild
animal territory last seen in his film The Bear, choosing to focus his latest
project – a children's movie – on two live, non-talking, non-CGI tigers. The
result is a pleasantly sweet-natured and sometimes remarkable kids' film.
Perhaps the biggest shocker is that, in these days of Babe and Pixar, Universal
let this honest tale get out of the edit room without CGI-ing in even a single
eyebrow-raise on these cubs' faces.
The story begins very simply and wordlessly with the conception and birth of
the cubs, Kumal and Sangha. One is bold and one is timid, but both play happily
together among the ruins of Angkor. Soon, this idyllic scene is shattered by
adventurer Aidan McRory (Guy Pearce) who, while seeking his fortune in looting
the ruins, ends up setting off the chain of events that separates the duo.
After killing the cubs' father, Aidan claims Kumal as a pet, and later he traps
Sangha and his mother, giving Sangha to the young son of a French official
(Freddie Highmore).
As the plot follows each cub from kind human to cruel human, Annaud charts the
ultimate PETA-friendly parable: These tigers turn out to be caring and
understanding, while the humans are the real monsters and murderers. And even
if you're fairly jaded to that party line, it's hard not to get swept up in the
grace of these amazing creatures, especially when the human actor talent is
never all that winning and only tends to bring the production down.
To be fair, it's not really the actors' fault. Co-writers Annaud and Alain
Godard (longtime writing pair) don't give the cast much less the incredibly
capable Pearce (Memento) much to say, except for tear-wringing platitudes like,
"No, I'm the one who is wrong!" Annaud perhaps spends so much time trying to
capture emotions in his tigers' movements and expressions that he forgets he
might want to make the people engaging, too.
While the script and two-legged actors leave something to be desired, Two
Brothers won't disappoint families with young children. Annaud definitely
cranks the "aww" factor to 11, with adorable close-ups on mewing cubs and shots
of them scampering around the jungle playing ball. And with its very natural,
somewhat old-fashioned live-action style, today's unimpressionable kiddie
audiences may actually fall for Two Brothers' charm. And parents will
definitely approve of its simple-natured harmlessness. Plus, the film even ends
with an educational message that tigers like the ones in the film are
endangered. I just wonder if this flick will set off a tiger frenzy like Nemo
did for clown fish.
Ol' blue eyes wants to eat your liver.
Reviewer: Annette Cardwell





