Thursday, June 7, 2012

The Wild Review







The Wild


Release Date: 28th September 2006 - Australia


Production Companies
C.O.R.E. Feature Animation
Contrafilm
Hoytyboy Pictures
Nigel Productions
Sir Zip Studios
Walt Disney Pictures (presents)

Distribution 
Walt Disney Studios Motion 
Pictures Australia


Genre: Animation/Family/
Comedy

Rating: G

Runtime: 94 minutes


Budget: $80,000,000

Box Office Gross:
$102,338,515 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
When Ryan, a lion cub
living in a zoo, wants to go
to the wild, where his dad
Samson once lived. One
night, he wanders off and
accidentally gets shipped
to Africa, where animals
get released into the wild,
his father, Samson, gathers
some animal friends and
sets out to save his son. But
when they reach Africa,
the animals find themselves
in danger. They have to do
battle with an evil wildebeest
by the name of Kazar.

But that's nothing compared
to the island's other danger -
a volcano on the verge of
eruption. With so little time
left, can the animals find
Ryan and escape Africa
before the volcano erupts?


Voice Cast
Kiefer Sutherland - Samson
the Lion
Dominic Scott Kay - Young Samson
Jim Belushi - Benny the Squirrel
Greg Cipes - Ryan the Lion Cub
Janeane Garofalo - Bridget the Giraffe
Richard Kind - Larry the Snake
Eddie Izzard - Nigel the Koala
William Shatner - Kazar the Wildebeest
Patrick Warburton - Blag the Wildebeest
Kevin Michael Richardson - Samson's Father
Chris Edgerly - Cloak
Colin Hay - Fergus Flamingo
Miles Marsico - Duke
Jack De Sena - Eze
Don Cherry - Penguin MC
Christina Argueta - Hamir
David Cowgill - Hamir
Lenny Venito - Stan
Joseph Siravo - Carmine
Colin Cunningham - Hyrax
Jonathan Kimmel - Scab
Eddie Gossling - Scraw
Clinton Leupp - Mama Hippo
Nika Futterman - Dung Beetle #1
Julianne Buescher - Dung Beetle #2
Chris Edgerly - Cloak
Bob Joles - Camo/Ringleader
Steve 'Spaz' Williams - Guard Dog (Cameo)

Crew
Additional Story Material/Director -
Steve 'Spaz' Williams
Story/Screenplay - Mark Gibson
and Philip Halprin
Screenplay/Co-Producers - Ed Decter
and John J. Strauss
Additional Story Material - Bill Wolkoff,
David Collard, Matt Lopez and Lloyd Taylor
Executive Producers - Kevin Lima,
Stefan Simchowitz and Will Vinton
Producers - Beau Flynn and Clint Goldman
Co-Producer - Jane Park
Production Designer/Art Director - Chris Farmer
Visual Development - George Hull
Art Director - Michael E. Goldman
Additional Art Director - Gary Mundell
Supervising Character Designer - Erich Rigling
Character Designers - Marshall Almeida
and Eirik Paye
Character Supervisor - Ken Ouellette
Lead Story Artist - Jeff Dickson
Lead Character Modeller - Ian Hulbert
Supervising Producer: C.O.R.E. Feature
Animation - Bob Munroe
Supervising Lead Animator - Warren Leathem
Lead Animators - Stephen Barnes,
Rob Bekuhrs, Andrew Grant, Paul Hunt
and Glenn Sylvester
Animation Supervisor: Reel FX - Ken Duncan
CG Supervisor: C.O.R.E. Feature Animation -
John Mariella
Animator/Layout Supervisor: Reel FX - Bryan Engram
Editors - V. Scott Balcerek and
Steven L. Wagner
Additional Editor - Robert Fisher Jr.
Sound Designer & Supervising Sound Editor -
Andy Newell
Additional Sound Design - Robert L. Sephton
Co-Supervising Sound Editor - Larry Schalt
Re-Recording Mixers - Terry O'Bright
and Keith Rogers
Dialogue/ADR Editor - Bruce Lacey
Additional ADR Editor - Michael Silvers
Foley Artists - Ellen Heuer and
Marnie Moore
Foley Mixer - Frank Rinella
Music - Alan Silvestri


Review
THE WILD had some good humour, but unfortunately, the movie was way too similar to Madagascar, which the former came out one year before THE WILD. The plot had low originality, taking some ideas from The Lion King and Finding Nemo. The animation is fine but a bit too uncanny and uninspiring. It had a terrific voice cast, particularly Eddie Izzard, who did a fantastic job voicing the koala, and even Jim Belushi (whose voice sounds almost like Seth Rogen) does the same for the squirrel.

I'm pleased Disney didn't make this film, as they only distributed it. This movie could have been a disadvantage for C.O.R.E's animation studio. However, it is their only animated feature to date. THE WILD should have been in the hands of Pixar or Blue Sky. This movie would have been more appealing if it had a better storyline and humour with more punchlines or sarcasm. In recommendation, it is a below-average animated flick only for one-time viewing.

Star rating: (3/5) Average

Back to Home

No comments:

Post a Comment