Notes: Disney.
Aladar: D.B. Sweeney
Yar: Ossie Davis
Neera: Julianna Margulies
Baylene: Joan Plowright
Eema: Della Reese
Kron: Samuel E. Wright
Plio: Alfre Woodard
Zini: Max Casella
Directed: Eric Leighton and Ralph Zondag
Screenplay: Walon Green
Written: Thom Enriquez, John Harrison, Robert Nelson Jacobs, Ralph
Zontag, et al.
Produced: Pam Marsden, Baker Bloodworth
Music: James Newton Howard
Key Assistant Animator: Yancy Calzada (a guy who e-mailed me about these
pages)
Summary: Dinosaurs frolick all bucolic until a
predator attacks (I thought it was a T-Rex, but Howard and his 4-year-old
daughter tell me it's a Carnotaurus). One egg survives uncrunched but an
oviraptor runs awaywith it, it falls into a river, is eaten and spit out,
it bobs,
a pterodon brings it to its young, but it falls finally into an island
forest where a family of lemurs witness the hatching and consider
adopting what the patriarch calls a "cold-blooded monster." He
thinks it'll be vicious; gently-snarkier-than-thou
mother lemur thinks it's a "baby." Although the father says
"things like that eat things like us as snacks," when he holds
it at arms' length and the thing adorably defecates, he is won over.
Cut to a terrifying chase where a three-ton dinosaur
is chasing young lemurs, finally eating one. Actually though, this is
Aladar, now an adolescent Iguanodon, playing with his adoptive siblings
-- he didn't swallow.
We ritualistically enter into some extreme
gender-separation for love-coaching by the elder lemurs. Aladar trots the
males, a "buffet table of love," over to the prom-tree where
crazed lemurs fling themselves onto various vines
and pair up like panicked freshman the first week and a half of fall
semester. One obnoxious male from the main family remains unmated. Poor
whoever.
A meteor shower in the distance at first is
disturbing and then approaches. Flaming chaos erupts sending Aladar
and his lemur family running off the island into the sea. Afterwards
the island is charred and we all trek to new land where velociraptors
attack. So we join a dinosaur convoy from desert land consisting
of various species, but driven mercilessly by the harsh Kron.
Aladar sympathizes with a few of the older dinosaurs in the back
-- especially Baylene (a brachiosaur) and Eema (who I read was a
tricerotops, but the 3-year-old son of Dr. Michael Ramer correctly
identifies as a Styracasaurus).
Kron's sister Neera considers Aladar a "jerkasaurus"
and the formerly unpaired lemur on his back, as self-appointed
"love monkey," takes a leering interest in the inevitable
match.
The pace is strainful in the hideous sun, and
predators constantly loom. When a promised lake proves dried,
Aladar discovers that by digging a bit and pressing, one can create
puddles. After a greedy stampede, the dinosaurs rest. Aladar continues
helping frightened young Iguanodons, impressing Neera, who we
later see helping stragglers now.
With Carnotaurs as a threat even "this far
north," Kron insists they press on to the breeding grounds.
The old ones can't keep up, come across one of Kron's crabby scouts
wounded, hide in a cave when it rains. The wounded one, formerly
attacked, assumes he'll die and doesn't comprehend
this new welfare system, but allows himself to be helped into
the cave by Aladar where a lemur brings some healing plants. When
the predators attack, the scout allows the others to escape deeper into
the cave and sacrifices himself to a created cave-in.
Our group hits a dead-end deep inside the cave.
A beam of light is discovered, but in Aladar's attempt to bust
through, he brings down a wall of rock. Baylene inspires him and
the others to ram at the wall together, which brings them to the
fertile valley, the nesting grounds. Eema finds that the former
entrance is blocked, so Aladar goes back through the cave to find
the misguided herd.
Kron is outraged at this hierarchical broach
and fights Aladar, but Neera intervenes and the herd prepares to
follow Aladar. A Carnotaur approaches, but Aladar insists that if
they scatter they'll be picked off. They all bellow at the predator,
who is baffled and eventually goes after Kron, who has been trying
to climb the rock pile at the old entrance to the breeding grounds.
Aladar and Neera help and Aladar knocks the attacker into a crevice,
but they are too late to save Kron. After some solemn and bird-like
intertwining of draping necks, we're all back at the nesting grounds,
looking at eggs, hatchlings, and adorable defecations. Also that
lemur finds a batch of females.
A hopeful last voice-over suggests that "our journey's not over ... in some small way our time will be remembered."
Commentary: Believe me, no one is more surprised than I am at the fact that I loved this film. I went in with grim expectations of Land Before Time smarm, and maybe that's why I wasn't shrieking at the modest plot here, which does nevertheless raise some questions:
In any case the film combines computer animation with digitally enhanced live-action backgrounds, and this works fabulously. Here too one is rightfully suspicious. A trailer shown before Dinosaur for an upcoming outer space cartoon film had glorious special effects and the crappiest looking characters since Speed Racer. In Dinosaur too, most effective are the chase scenes, firy explosive meteor showers, cave-ins, and violence of that sort. But even calmer scenes are visually effective and breathtaking here. Textures, colors, shadowing, and all visuals are terrific. Even the opening scene, a close-up of dinosaur skin, was visually magnificent.