DINOSAUR
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 2000 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****): ***
In an era of rapid technological change, the film industry stands out as
a veritable dinosaur. So it is all the more noteworthy when a film like
Disney's DINOSAUR makes such a stunning visual achievement through
radical blending of technologies. Combining some of the most
sophisticated computer-generated animation that you've ever seen with
(digitally enhanced) live-action backgrounds, the ground-breaking film
becomes a dinosaur documentary on steroids. It is the sort of picture
that has you sitting there going, "Wow!"
What are sorely absent, however, are Pixar and their band of merry men
to craft a script that can hold your attention. Instead, Disney relies
on writers John Harrison, mainly a television writer known for his dark
pieces in series like "Tales from the Crypt," and Robert Nelson Jacobs,
whose only other released script is the senior citizen comedy OUT TO
SEA. The result is a story that is a pale imitation of THE LAND BEFORE
TIME, which had more endearing characters and more effective humor. In
THE LAND BEFORE TIME, the big reptiles were off to find the legendary
"Great Valley." In DINOSAUR, they are migrating to a similar looking
locale, but this time the lush and peaceful valley is referred to simply
as the nesting grounds.
Still, it's not that the script bombs, but that it fizzles. There are
several nice sections of dialog, and some imaginative characterizations.
But when a Disney film leaves one nostalgic for THE LAND BEFORE TIME,
that's not a good sign. They want the kids to come back and see their
movie a second time, not go rent the competition's videos.
The way to approach DINOSAUR, however, isn't to ponder how good it could
and should have been, but to enjoy what it does best, which is to
recreate the world of the dinosaurs toward the end of their reign on
earth. Best of all is the realism shown in the skin of the dinosaurs,
which has a texture so life-life, that you'll swear they've located real
dinosaur flesh and digitally imposed it on computer generated
wire-frames. This magic extends to all of the textures including those
of the dinosaur's comical sidekicks, a group of lemurs, whose fur can be
seen convincingly blowing in the breeze as the lemurs leap from tree to
tree.
The story concerns an Iguanodon, Aladar (D.B. Sweeney), who is raised on
an island without other dinosaurs by a group of little lemurs. When the
matriarch of the lemurs discovers the newly hatched Aladar, the elder of
the lemur clan, Yar (Ossie Davis), warns them about Iguanodons. "Things
like that eat things like us for snacks," he admonishes them. Zini (Max
Casella), soon to be Aladar's best bud, laughs off old Yar's admonition.
"This monster's got no teeth," Zini points out. "What's he going to do?
Gum us to death?" Soon, Aladar is a thousand times their size, but he
is still his original playful self.
After meteors rain down from the heavens, turning the world into
something akin to a huge battlefield, Aladar and his "family" end up
swimming to the mainland, where Aladar finally gets to meet dinosaurs of
various species, not all of them friendly. He is first chased by a pack
of blood-thirsty Raptors with some really ferocious teeth and claws.
Scariest of all are some chillingly realistic Carnotaurs, which look
like T-Rexs, who roar a lot and eat everything in sight.
This brings us to the issue of the film's rating. Disney's animated
motion pictures are almost always rated G. In order to make the movie
as authentic as possible, Disney allowed the filmmakers to bring
DINOSAURS in at a PG rating. But it is an extremely intense PG that has
significant potential to scare little ones. These Carnotaurs would have
been happy to nosh on little humans, something that the small fry will
easily be able to imagine. And when the meteors hit, it may look like
the end of the world to impressionable youngsters. After all, for the
dinosaurs the event was the start of the end of the line for them.
The body of the story concerns the herd of dinosaurs, as well as
Aladar's lemur pals, migrating to the dinosaur's breeding grounds.
Along the way, our hero finally meets an eligible female, who at first
refers to him as a "Jerkasaurus." The rest of the storyline follows a
formula so cast in stone that it could have been written by a computer.
Maybe it was.
The movie's press kit proudly brags about what a technical tour de force
it is. And rightly so. There were 70,000 lines of software code
written by the "Dinosaur software group," it tells us. Since software
designers use the word "dinosaur" as a derogatory term, the irony of
this claim has a delicious charm to it. Although one can argue whether
knowing the amount of code means anything, it did bring to mind the
technical genius that went into the production of DINOSAUR. Even if the
film has shortcomings, its visuals are nothing short of incredible.
DINOSAUR runs 1:24. It is rated PG for intense images and would be fine
for kids around 8 and up. Parents with kids who frighten easily should
carefully consider whether their children are ready for this picture.
My son Jeffrey, age 11, loved the movie, giving it a full ****. He
particularly liked the computer generated animation. His favorite
characters were Aladar and his lemur friends. He said that he enjoyed
it when the movie scared him a little bit.
Email: Steve.Rhodes@InternetReviews.com
Web: http://www.InternetReviews.com
Have I seen this movie: No
Will I see It: On Video