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Ice Age (2002)
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The hilarious trailer for Ice Age stars Scrat,
a hapless little prehistoric rodent who triggers disaster by trying to bury an acorn in a
glacier. It's a bit of a bait-and-switch,
since the character is only shown periodically after the trailer footage is used as the
first five minutes of the film itself. But
even without Scrat and his elusive acorn providing much of the action, Ice Age entertains.
In several ways it's a perfect "family" film: kids will have fun, there's
enough humor periodically aimed at adults to keep parents amused, and at only 75 minutes
in length it's short enough to be tolerable even if they arent.
Like Disney's Dinosaur, Ice Age is a CGI-animated road movie starring
creatures on a quest. But unlike the previous
feature ponderous and preachy Ice Age
uses a much less literal visual style and keeps the action moving and the dialog light. It never forgets that the age range of the
audience is likely to be very broad, and effectively mixes physical comedy for the kids
with enough wry asides about Stonehenge and evolution to keep parents awake.
The odd troupe on this particular journey is made up of Manfred (Ray
Romano), a curmudgeonly wooly mammoth, Sid (John Leguizamo) a smooth-talking sloth, and
Diego (Denis Leary) a scheming saber-toothed tiger. All
of their cohorts are headed south to avoid the encroaching cold and snow, but this trio is
bravely headed north - to reunite a human baby girl they've rescued with the people of her
tribe.
Sid's a clumsy doofus, causing Manfred to do numerous variations on the
Slow Burn--they're an animal version of Ed Norton and Ralph Kramden. Diego's a covert operator, claiming to be along to
help but really there to lead Manfred and Sid to a dinner party - where they're the first
two courses. Michael Wilson and Michael
Berg's script throws in enough variations on the basic mismatched-pals-on-a-mission theme
to keep things interesting, including one madcap sequence showing how the Dodo became
extinct. And every time the action lags a bit
Scrat and his acorn are pushed back onstage for some added comic relief.
Director Chris Wedge is mostly content to have things happen in
straightforward fashion there's little here to evoke wonder - but he does take
advantage of the medium. There are a few
sequences where the animators were allowed to have a field day, most notably a scene when
cave paintings of a hunting party spring to life. And
a few visual pranks pop up in the background at times, letting the audience in on the joke
even if the characters aren't.
The film is rated PG for "mild peril", but contains nothing
for parents of even preschoolers to be concerned about.
While not quite on a par with the very best of recent animated features, Ice Age is nevertheless a pleasant enough way to
spend a matinee afternoon with the children in your life.
- Bob Aulert