Earth (3.5 Stars)


Movie Review by Michael Phillips

 

Alastair Fothergill & Mark Linfield in the movie Earth. Movie Review & Trailer. Find out what is happening in Film visit iHaveNet.com

It would be Pollyannish to pretend that the documentary "Earth" is without its problems, but the bottom line is, difficulties be damned, it shouldn't be missed.

What it does well is so remarkable that by the time the credits roll you likely won't want it to end.

Walt Disney Co. is hoping people feel that way because it has a lot invested in this documentary from a corporate point of view, so much so that it has promised to plant a tree in honor of every moviegoer who goes to see it.

Hoping to recapture the audience it had in the 1950s with its "True-Life Adventures" films, Disney is using this doc to launch an entire new label, Disneynature, devoted to the call of the wild.

If the notion of eye-popping, state-of-the-art nature photography sounds familiar, that's because this film is the direct descendant of "Planet Earth," the astonishing 11-hour BBC series that went to more than 200 locations in 64 countries, played widely on the Discovery Channel and sold millions of DVDs.

In fact, though the framework and focus of the theatrical feature is different from the TV series, an estimated 60 percent of "Earth's" footage has already been seen at home.

While this is not ideal, the reality is that so much of that footage is so compelling that it's a pleasure to see it again on a theatrical screen.

Yes, fans of the series will remember the great white shark leaping completely out of the water with a seal in its mouth, as well as aerial shots of caribou without number on their annual migration. There are vistas magnificent enough to give you vertigo, glimpses of a world that human beings almost never go to or even see, and experiencing them for a second time is hardly a hardship.

In keeping with the Disney approach, the nature photography this time around, co-directed by Alastair Fothergill and Mark Linfield and shot by some 60 cameramen, is focused on the trials of three different animal families.

Up in the Arctic, a mother polar bear and her two cubs look for food in the barren snows. In Africa's Kalahari Desert, elephants fight off drought as they head for the promised lushness of the Okavango Delta. And under the sea, a humpback whale and her calf navigate a 4,000-mile migration, the longest of any for a marine mammal.

Though these three family groupings get star billing, "Earth" has room for other animals as well, including several kinds of birds, baboons for comic relief and all those caribou.

No matter what animals are onscreen, the theme of "Earth" is always the struggle of the different species to find enough to eat and survive.

In fact, it is the fang-and-claw stuff that is invariably most compelling, and the infrared nighttime shots of a pride of lions making a rare attack on an elephant are riveting.

One of the interesting tensions in "Earth" is between the implacability of the animal world and Disney's determination to make a family film with a G rating.

So, while it is clear in several sequences that the end of an animal's life is seconds away, the film always cuts away before the actual coup de grace is delivered.

Less successfully negotiated is the tenor of the voice-over delivered by James Earl Jones in what is definitely not his Darth Vader tone.

While the "Planet Earth" narration was crisp and to the point, the talk here is much too cutesy and anthropomorphic for its own good.

These unfortunate lines include describing baby elephants as being on "their first road trip with the family," a bird of paradise portrayed as "cleaning up for the big date tonight" and complimenting obedient baby polar bear cubs by comparing them with "human beings who don't always listen to their moms."

These frequent remarks are an irritant, but they're not deal-breakers. Even if you have to put cotton in your ears when you see "Earth," keep your eyes wide open and you'll be amply rewarded.

 

 

Earth MPAA rating: G.

Running time: 1:29.

Written and directed by Alastair Fothergill and Mark Linfield; produced by Sophokles Tasioulis and Alix Tidmarsh. A Disneynature Films release.

 

ENTERTAINMENT ...

BOOKS | TELEVISION | MUSIC | THE ARTS | MOVIES | CULTURE

 

 

 

© Tribune Media Services