Ice Age [5]: Collision Course (2016) [Blu-ray]
Animation | Adventure | Comedy | Family | Sci-Fi
Your favorite Ice Age heroes are back and cooler than ever in this all-new animated adventure that's mammoth-sized fun for the whole family! Scrat's epic pursuit of the elusive acorn catapults him into the universe, where he accidentally triggers a series
of cosmic events that threaten the Ice Age world. Now the entire herd - including Buck, Manny, Ellie, Sid and Diego - must work together on a hilarious journey filled with nonstop action and colorful new characters, in order to survive the global
Scrat-tastrophe!
Storyline: Scrat's epic pursuit of his elusive acorn catapults him outside of Earth, where he accidentally sets off a series of cosmic events that transform and threaten the planet. To save themselves from peril, Manny, Sid,
Diego, and the rest of the herd leave their home and embark on a quest full of thrills and spills, highs and lows, laughter and adventure while traveling to exotic new lands and encountering a host of colorful new characters.
Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman, October 14, 2016The annals of show business are rife with stories of so-called supporting players usurping the attention from the putative star. There's a fantastic chapter in
William Goldman's superb (if sometimes problematic) journalistic exposé of Broadway, The Season, where he details the travails of the 1967 musicalization of The World of Henry Orient, Henry, Sweet Henry. Goldman documents how the
creative staff behind the musical worked to cast a potential breakout star in the role of Valerie, one of the girls who becomes infatuated with Henry, and that everyone was convinced they had found that star in the guise of one Robin Wilson.
Imagine everyone's surprise, then, when a lot of the reviews singled out a breakout star all right, only not "that" one —most of the critical air kisses went to a complete unknown named Alice Playten, who played a relatively minor role, ending up with the
musical's sole Tony nomination for performing (Playten won that year's Theater World Award). (Trivia lovers will know that Playten went on to a different kind of "fame" as the hapless newlywed whose cooking created problems for her husband in a now iconic
series of Alka Seltzer commercials.) Films are just as redolent a source for this kind of "upstaging," and there's probably no better example than one of my personal obsessions, Frances Farmer, who waltzed into the 1936 film Come and Get It as
little more than an "up and comer" but who ended up stealing every scene she was in from such stalwarts as Edward Arnold and Walter Brennan, to the point that she was proclaimed "the new Garbo." All of that said, there may be no more unique example than
that of Scrat, the odd little creature whose own obsession—with an acorn—created some of the funniest moments in the original Ice Age. It's some indication of Scrat's immediate popularity that he (it?) soon became the mascot for the film's
production company, Blue Sky Pictures. (Another potent example of the character's sway with the public is evident in how much he's featured in this very disc's supplemental content.) Scrat's comedic adventures have tended to act as sidebars to the main
stories in the previous Ice Age films, but again the character's lovability has led to him being starred in a series of shorts as well as other media like video games. While Ice Age: Collision Course once again lets Scrat's predicaments play
out in a kind of parallel universe (an especially fitting term as will soon be discussed) as the simultaneous trials of Manny and brood unfold, the character is perhaps a bit more central to the proceedings in this film than in its predecessors. Talk
about star power.
The Ice Age films have at least attempted to continue an overall narrative through the original film and its sequels. For those wanting to catch up on "the story so far" (there's a supplement on this Blu-ray that attempts to do this, to varying
effect).
The Ice Age franchise has been beset by that hoary law of diminishing returns, and there's little doubt that this tendency continues with Ice Age: Collision Course, with perhaps the most notable example ironically being Scrat himself. Anyone
who has seen any of the Ice Age properties will know going into this film that Scrat's attempts to harness an acorn are going to lead to unforeseen calamaties, and while Ice Age: Collision Course ultimately gets "far out" with regard to
these after effects, the film once again relies on by now tired elements like Scrat sticking an acorn into the ice, only to have whole continents seemingly decay as a result.
The "real" punch line in the film's opening sequence is that Scrat somehow gets his acorn lodged into the control mechanism of a flying saucer buried deep in the ice (it was seen briefly in the first Ice Age), leading to Scrat blasting off into
outer space (hence that "alternate universe" statement in the preceding paragraph). There's some goofy but quite inventive humor here, with Scrat's mad ping ponging between nascent planets ending up creating our solar system as we currently know it. The
laws of physics have never been "obeyed" in the world of classic animation (think of the great Chuck Jones pieces for just one example), and that approach certainly continues here, with some outlandish sight gags offered courtesy of Scrat (and his acorn)
being fitted with spacesuits at one point and then thrust out into the "great beyond". Scrat's antics ultimately lead to a potential catastrophe concerning asteroids sent hurling toward Earth.
As my colleague Casey Broadwater so saliently observed in his Ice Age: Continental Drift Blu-ray review , "By now, we know exactly what to expect—a potential environmental catastrophe, mindless gag-heavy action, dippy jokes, and much life-lesson learning,
particularly regarding the value of family and friendship, and the importance of sticking together." The film may have changed, but the above general plot dynamics and "message" are resolutely the same here as in all of the previous Ice Age
entries. There are certainly laughs here, at least in dribs and drabs, and I'm certain the film will appeal to younger tots especially. But there's a strategy with these Ice Age films that tends to suggest the franchise's creative crew are as much
about keeping the franchise from going extinct as they are about delivering Manny, Scrat "and the rest" from any impending disaster. Undemanding tots and even adults without any undue expectations will get a giggle or two out of Ice Age: Collision
Course, but this latest entry in the franchise seems more than ever like a tired retread of what's gone before. With this series' emphasis on environmental calamities, I guess it's easy to understand why the writers are so into recycling (yes, that's
a joke), but maybe it's time to put Ice Age on ice for a little while. Technical merits are very strong for those considering a purchase.
[CSW] -0.9- No one could have convinced me in advance that I would dislike this film. I loved all the earlier movies, but this one was terrible. The hardest thing to believe was that they took all the fun out of Scrat, drove it into the ground. It was
much more suggestive adult sexual humor and rude/potty humor than the other earlier movies. The first one was wonderful and the second was at least mostly enjoyable but this one I don't believe was even suitable for children. The movie was a messy jumble
of stories that seems like stale leftovers. It's not funny, there's not much plot to speak of, and there's nothing new as far as the animation is concerned. By my estimation this was an absolute looser.
[V4.5-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - D-Box was a little exaggerated.
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