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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Arctic Tale
Whisker-close footage
By
ALICIA POTTER
|
August 1, 2007
ARCTIC TALE
" alt="photo of 'ARCTIC TALE'">
2.5
Stars
ARCTIC TALE: Nothing like whisker-close footage.
Al Gore may know his pie charts, but he’s no baby walrus. Tusk-less Seela and polar-bear cub Nanu take on the mantle of poster mammals for global warming in director Sarah Robertson’s dramatic documentary. As crumbling ice floes force the Arctic tots into danger, the realities of the issue — distractingly called “changing conditions” until the haranguing end credits — hit with urgency. Indeed, don’t get attached to any animal without a name. The whisker-close footage lives up to its
National Geographic
pedigree, and the walruses, braying like broken New Year’s horns, emerge as unlikely stars. In between montages set to disco, the stiffly colloquial narration by Queen Latifah veers from bizarre anthropomorphizing (Sela doesn’t mate until she finds a walrus who respects her) to pseudo-poetic dreck (Gore daughter Kristin helped script). All the same, this effort soundly delivers the inconvenient truth to the generation who’ll inherit it.
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October 26, 2007
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Natural selections
The gorilla is a black blur, out of nowhere, barreling into the cage door — clang! — and then zooming off through the fake rocks and trees.
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As we grind collectively toward the Apocalypse, let us pause for a moment to salute the last-ditch efforts of the Institute of Zoo and Wildlife Research.
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A baby with a brain tumor is no laughing matter.
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| December 13, 2011
A baby, a high school, and esoteric pop culture references once again figure prominently — albeit less glibly — in director Jason Reitman and screenwriter Diablo Cody's first re-teaming since Juno.
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Winter the dolphin gamely plays herself in this loose re-telling of her fight for survival after a crab trap mangles her tail.
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To their credit, directors Alastair Fothergill and Keith Scholey don't cut away from a downed gazelle or a hippo mid evisceration.
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