Gallagher’s
Forum
By
Jon Gallagher
The
Good Dinosaur (Pixar/Disney,
2015) – Director: Peter Sohn. Writers: Bob Peterson (orig. concept
& development), Peter Sohn, Erik Benson, Meg LeFauve, Kelsey
Mann, & Bob Peterson (story), Meg LeFauve (s/p). Voices: Jeffrey
Wright, Frances McDormand, Maleah Nipay-Padilla, Ryan Tepple, Jack
McGraw, Marcus Scribner, Raymond Ochoa, Jack Bright, Peter Sohn,
Steve Zahn, Mandy Freund, Steven Clay Hunter, A.J. Buckley, Anna
Paquin, & Sam Elliott. Color, PG, 93 minutes.
When
I was a high school English teacher, I had certain students from whom
I expected exceptional work. I just knew that these few students
would blow me away whenever I assigned a special project. On
occasion, when they didn’t, I was disappointed. The work they
turned in was still top notch, and usually much better than other
students, but there was just something lacking, something I called
the “Wow! Factor.”
Pixar
has always been like those exceptional students. They’ve given us
classics such as the Toy Story trilogy, Finding
Nemo, Up!, and Monsters Inc. They always seem to find
a way to combine a plot driven story with a message with unbelievable
graphics that at times seem realistic rather than computer generated.
They’ve set the bar high.
A
Good Dinosaur doesn’t
come close to the bar.
It’s
still a decent movie, and way ahead of other animated feature movies,
but it doesn’t come close to the Pixar standards. There are many
problems.
The
first is the premise itself. In all previews for the movie, we’re
given a “What if” question: What if the meteor that killed all
the dinosaurs had missed the Earth? That’s an interesting question,
and one that I’d like to see explored. Unfortunately, they did
little to explore it. Instead, they just used it as an excuse to put
dinosaurs and humans in the same movie without having critics point
out that dinosaurs and humans walked the Earth several million years
apart from each other.
It
also allows the artists in the movie to create elegant backdrops in
what looks in parts to be Arizona, with buttes rising skyward in
their magnificence. These beautiful landmasses, of course, would not
have been there during the era when dinosaurs walked the Earth; they
would have just been forming.
The
plot of the movie was nothing new. Arlo is the runt of the litter in
a family of dinosaurs. His father takes him out to hunt down a
critter (an infant human) that is stealing their winter stores, and
ends up getting killed, forcing his son to grow up. Arlo, along with
a brother and a sister, try to help their mother keep up the family
farm, but Arlo gets separated from the family, then tries to find his
way back home.
Along
the way, he discovers he’s being tailed by the feral cave-baby, who
Arlo blames for his father’s death. Naturally, they become friends
(Arlo names him “Spot”) and they attempt to get back home,
fending off dangers and other vicious dinosaurs along the way.
There
are some themes along the way that are laudable. The importance of
family seems to come out of every adventure along the way home as
well as establishing itself as the main theme as well.
The
artwork in this film is absolutely stunning. There are scenes of a
river with its rapids crashing against the bank when one has to
wonder if it was drawn, generated by computer, or filmed live. It’s
that impressive.
Unfortunately,
it seems that Pixar has run out of plots for their films. So many of
their movies have the protagonist struggling to find their way home
(or to a specific destination), meeting with adverse conditions along
the way. They’ve done it with toys, cars, fish, monsters, and now
dinosaurs. I guess they figure “why change the formula for
success?” to which I’d reply, “BECAUSE WE’RE GETTING TIRED OF
IT, THAT’S WHY!”
A
major problem I had with the movie was a three-minute segment when
Arlo and Spot eat some fermented fruit and “get drunk.” They
hallucinate together in what looks like it could have been a bad acid
trip from the 1960s, and show very little in the way of consequences
the next morning. This added nothing to the movie and Pixar should be
ashamed of themselves for including the scene (especially without
consequences). It’s hard enough to be a parent nowadays, and tell
your kids that drinking or doing drugs is bad, and then to go and
have all that erased in three minutes by some irresponsible writers
and artists is inexcusable.
Another
negative from the movie involves the “roller coaster ride.” In
most movies in this genre, the protagonist is presented with a
problem, then the problem escalates (the ride up a roller coaster),
and is then solved (the ride down the big hill). In between problems,
there’s a period of relaxing before starting to climb the next
hill.
This
movie has one downward ride after another. There’s hardly any room
to rest. As a result, it may be viewed as somewhat scary. My grandson
had no problem letting his mom, and for that matter, the entire
theater, know that he was scared. He spent a good portion of the
movie being scared.
I’ll
give The Good Dinosaur a C-.
I knocked it down a full letter grade because of the aforementioned
scene.
I
hadn’t planned to see this movie in the theaters. While sitting
around the apartment, trying to figure out what to do for supper, my
middle daughter called and said that she was bringing her
five-year-old son over to see it at the theater in our small town.
She invited me to go along. Who am I to refuse a chance to see a
movie with my daughter and grandson, especially when she sweetened
the pot by offering to bring pizza from a local and fabulous
pizzeria?
While
chowing down on the pizza, my oldest daughter called and said she’d
be headed over for the movie too. She was bringing her daughter (11)
and one of her sons (1), so we were having family night at the
movies!
Now
if you read my review of The Martian, you’ll know that our
local theater is in some serious financial trouble. Last night on the
local newscast, they said that the theater is going to be put on the
auction block later this week for back taxes. It’s been in
foreclosure since May and time may have finally run out. When we
went, employees at the theater said that they fully expect to be out
of work by the end of the week.
In
all fairness, everyone else – both daughters and two grandchildren
(who are old enough to speak) – enjoyed the movie. The middle
daughter was upset with the fermented fruit scene while the older
daughter missed the scene while tending to the baby. My granddaughter
pronounced the movie “Great!” while my grandson was busy
recalling every scene he could think of in a never-ending stream of
consciousness that slowed down only long enough for him to take a
short breath. One other patron on her way out of the theater
remarked, “That wasn’t nearly as good as I thought it would be.”
The
Good Dinosaur will make
a lot of money for Pixar. It will be a huge seller once it hits the
video market. But as far as I’m concerned, it will rank towards the
bottom of the list of the 16 Pixar movies that have been released.
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