Yet Another Bulletin Board

Welcome, Guest. Please Login or Register.
Nov 24th, 2024, 9:51am

Home Home Help Help Search Search Members Members Chat Chat Member Map Member Map Login Login Register Register

Metropolis Reality Forums « Review: 'Looney Tunes' manic fun »




Hot Movie News and Reviews at Entertainment Spectrum!
www.EntertainmentSpectrum.com
   Metropolis Reality Forums
   Off-Topic Forums
   Movie Discussion
(Moderators: Heather, yesteach, Isle_be_back)
   Review: 'Looney Tunes' manic fun
Previous topic | New Topic | Next topic »
Pages: 1  Reply Reply Add Poll Add Poll Notify of replies Notify of replies Send Topic Send Topic Print Print
   Author  Topic: Review: 'Looney Tunes' manic fun  (Read 379 times)
Rhune
ForumsNet Administrator
USA 
*****





29289456 29289456   rhune_1971   Rhune1971
View Profile Email

Gender: female
Posts: 292
Review: 'Looney Tunes' manic fun
« on: Nov 17th, 2003, 12:30am »
Quote Quote Modify Modify

Review: 'Looney Tunes' manic fun
Some gags don't work, but there are so many ...
By David Germain
Associated Press
Friday, November 14, 2003 Posted: 12:31 PM EST (1731 GMT)
 
 
(AP) -- "Looney Tunes: Back in Action" is an act of atonement for Brendan Fraser, who makes up for his last cartoon and live-action combo, the awful "Monkeybone," with a family-friendly romp that will appeal to Bugs and Daffy fans of all ages.  
 
It's a tough goal, building a full-length movie out of wisecracks and pratfalls normally confined to cartoon shorts. But director Joe Dante ("Gremlins") and screenwriter Larry Doyle ("The Simpsons") manage to maintain a manic pace throughout. And while "Looney Tunes" lapses into stretches where maybe one in four gags actually works, the filmmakers pile them on so feverishly that the clunkers pass largely unnoticed.  
 
Like "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," "Looney Tunes" presents a Hollywood where real showbiz types co-exist with cartoon characters.  
 
The movie opens with a Warner Bros. executives meeting where boastful windbag Daffy Duck is fired by ambitious Kate Houghton (Jenna Elfman), the studio's vice president for comedy (her research shows that while Bugs Bunny has universal star power, Daffy appeals only to "angry fat guys in basements").  
 
Fraser plays D.J. Drake, an unsuccessful stuntman who loses his job as a Warner security guard after botching Daffy's eviction from the studio lot.  
 
Duck and wannabe stuntman end up as road buddies on a mission to rescue D.J.'s father, Warner's super-spy actor Damien Drake (appropriately played by former James Bond Timothy Dalton), from the clutches of the evil Acme Co. boss (Steve Martin).  
 
Loopy humans
Bugs and Kate, realizing too late that the screwy rabbit's schtick doesn't work without fall guy Daffy, set off in pursuit, tumbling into the chairman's plot to turn people into monkeys to churn out shoddy Acme products, then convert them back to humans so they can buy the merchandise.  
 
Advancements in visual effects and computer animation make "Looney Tunes" a more dynamic mix of live action and cartoons than Michael Jordan's 1996 Warner adventure "Space Jam." The voice work for Bugs, Daffy and other characters also is a step up from "Space Jam," with better approximations of the late Mel Blanc's original intonations for the classic old "Looney Tunes" shorts.  
 
"Looney Tunes" piles on cameos both for live-action celebrities and all the key Looney Tunes characters, including Porky Pig, Speedy Gonzalez, Foghorn Leghorn, Yosemite Sam, Tweety Bird and Sylvester.  
 
The supporting cast includes Heather Locklear as an undercover ally of Damien's and Joan Cusack as proprietor of a spy-gadgets lab.  
 
Crazy Martin
As the stunted schoolboy villain, Martin goes for broke with his wildest and craziest movie role since "The Jerk."  
 
Fraser and Elfman come off as likably bland heroes who, though they take a backseat to the antics of the animated characters, hurl themselves earnestly into interaction with 'toons. Fraser even does double duty, providing the voice of the Tazmanian Devil.  
 
As for Fraser's "Monkeybone," all is forgiven.  
 
"Looney Tunes: Back in Action," a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG for some mild language and innuendo. Warner Bros. is a division of Time Warner, as is CNN.  
 
IP Logged
Back to top
MFC
ForumsNet Administrator

*****




MFC Forums!

  musicfanclubskid   musicfanclubskid
View Profile WWW Email

Gender: male
Posts: 64
Re: Review: 'Looney Tunes' manic fun
« Reply #1 on: Nov 24th, 2003, 7:45pm »
Quote Quote Modify Modify

Another Review:
http://www.entertainmentspectrum.com/Reviews/Movies/LOONEY_TUNES:_BACK_I N_ACTION.html
IP Logged

http://www.MusicFanClubs.org
Back to top
Pages: 1  Reply Reply Add Poll Add Poll Notify of replies Notify of replies Send Topic Send Topic Print Print

Previous topic | New Topic | Next topic »


Metropolis Reality Forums » Powered by YaBB 1 Gold - SP 1.3.1!
YaBB © 2000-2003. All Rights Reserved.