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If
Al Gore can have his Power Point, Queen Latifah has her baby
polar bear and walrus. Capitalizing on the successes of both
March of the
Penguins and An Inconvenient Truth, the sappy
Artic Tale is more akin to a commercial for a McDonald's
Happy Meal.
Set
in the northern most reaches of the world, Arctic Tale
traces the life path of a polar bear dubbed Nanu and a
walrus named Seela. It begins with their births and their
struggles to survive on the desolate tundra. And right when
you think that it's March
of the Penguins Redux, we're presented with a more
pressing matter that any of the producers and marketers failed
to mention, nor one that is hinted at even at the beginning
other than in one passing remark. It turns out the ice is
melting and the cute little baby animals were merely a ploy
to offer up some conservationist fear mongering.
The
message I got from Arctic Tale was, "If you don't
fix things, this cute little polar bear is going to fall in
the ocean and die." Don't get me wrong - global warming
is a very real problem that must be addressed. Our world is
screwed up and unless we correct our path, baby polar bears
will drown. What I've got a problem with is the approach the
film takes to present its case.
Arctic
Tale
was clearly aiming at kids and families as its target audience.
Every ad I saw for it announced it was from the people who
brought you that penguin flick. And by all counts the film
aims to please. It starts out with a colder version of The
Lion King's "Circle of Life" with a birth. And
just when you get to know Nanu, Seela and their friends and
family - WHAM! They got you. Nope, this is just a cutesy educational
film. It's got some propaganda behind it. And now that your
kids are firmly entrenched in the fuzzy baby animals, they're
going to get sucked into the preaching whether you like it
or not. Again, education is a key to working towards a better
future. But after watching Arctic Tale I felt like
a rube sucked in by the carnie speak. So just imagine how
the wee tykes are going to react. By not being up front about
its propaganda side, Arctic Tale is a lot like a commercial
geared at children. It's going to have them making demands
to their parents whether they want to hear it or not. Yes,
that might be a way to turn inaction into action. But wouldn't
a more meaningful strategy be to have people openly change
rather than begrudgingly do it.
Politics
shouldn't make or break a film and with an Arctic Tale
it didn't. I didn't like it much to begin with. It comes too
close after March
of the Penguins and feels more like an uninspired
sequel than a fresh take on stories usually left to PBS and
boring science classes where the teacher hasn't got a lesson
ready so they slap on a movie. The lifecycle story has been
told over and over again.
Queen
Latifah's street-talk narration further adds to a sense of
desperation in which the filmmakers are trying to connect
with an audience. The problem is that when you obviously strive
to be cool you're automatically uncool. That's Grade 8 Anthropology
101.
All
griping aside, Arctic Tale does have a gorgeous backdrop
to it. Perhaps if you play some relaxing music (or better
yet Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon") you might
give yourself a whole different outlook on the film. Me -
I just prefer when I don't feel duped when I'm watching a
movie.
DVD
Features
Considering
Arctic Tale is meant to open viewers' eyes to global
warming, you'd think there'd be some outreach on the DVD.
Instead what you get is a very basic DVD release that offers
very little of anything other than a decent-quality presentation
of the film itself.
The
film is shown in an enhanced widescreen picture. I noticed
some problems with the very dark colours, but these are laregely
limited to fade ins. The primary audio track is in Dolby Digital
5.1 Surround. There's also a stereo track and French and Spanish
Surround tracks. Subtitles are offered in English, Spanish
and French.
"Making
of Arctic Tale" runs almost a half-hour and shows
some gorgeous footage about how the film came together. Interesting,
but what about this global warming stuff you speak of? "Are
We There Yet? World Adventure: Polar Bear Spotting" is
a mini episode from the popular children's program in which
a trio of youngsters travel the globe. Also included on the
DVD are the film's theatrical trailer and previews of An
Inconvenient Truth, Shrek
the Third and The Spiderwick Chronicles.
Buy
the DVD.
©Movie
Views; December 9, 2007
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