Ice Age: Continental Drift. Rated PG (Mild animated violence and coarse language). 92 minutes. Directed by Steve Martino and Mike Thurmeier. Screenplay by Michael Berg and Jason Fuchs.
Verdict: The Ice Age gang are back in a virtuoso display of
3D action and adventure.
It’s hard to believe that
it is ten years since the lovable characters in Ice Age (2002) burst onto the screen. The original’s
mammoth success spawned two sequels – Ice Age: The Meltdown (2006) and Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009) – and now the gang are reunited in a
virtuoso display of 3D action and adventure. The 3D format is so successful
here in fact, that it makes the 3D version almost compulsory.
When Scrat the squirrel
(Chris Wedge) decides to bury his beloved acorn in the ice, he inadvertently
triggers a cataclysmic chain of events that reshapes the continents and
separates Manny (Ray Romano) the mammoth from his partner Ellie (Queen Latifah)
and their daughter Peaches (Keke Palmer). With the constant threat of
environmental and ecological disaster inching ever closer, the characters must
fight the elements (and some classic foes – including Game of Thrones’ Peter Dinklage’s marauding, swashbuckling pirate Captain Gutt) in
their desperate race to be reunited.
Sid the sloth (pictured, voiced by
the brilliant John Leguizamo) remains a masterpiece of character animation and
voice work, while the debut of his Granny (Wanda Sykes), is nothing less than
inspirational. Granny’s idiosyncratic zeal for life gives the film a
much-needed thread of almost surreal absurdism – keeping it well away from The Lion King and Happy Feet 2
territory when it matters most.
What is obvious from the
first frame of this fourth instalment in the Ice Age franchise, is the immense
amount of skill and confidence behind the scenes – led by directors Martino (Horton
Hears a Who!) and Thurmeier (Ice
Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs). The
voice work – without exception – is spot on, while Renato Falcão’s (Rio) cinematography and James Palumbo (Ice Age 3:
Dawn of the Dinosaurs) and David
Salter (Finding Nemo, Toy
Story 2) editing are all
faultless.
Environmental issues have
been a constant feature of the recent Hollywood studio output for their young
audiences, and if Mr Berg and Fuchs’s occasionally brooding and intense
screenplay plays it with a capital D for Disaster, it also manages to offer an
important sense of hopeful optimism. Integral to the film’s entertainment
value, too, are the messages about the critical importance of family, great
friends and the rightful place that life-changing adventures have to play in
our lives.
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