Antz
There's no doubt that the technical advances in the film making
business are downright amazing.
The insects in Antz (don't ya just lurve the spelling???) are
completely computer generated by the Dream Works studio in
association with Jeffrey Katzenberg and Steven Speilberg.
The industry has come a long long way since those few tortuous
bits of bytes in Jurassic Park not all that many years ago.
But sometimes we humans can get just a little bit too clever, or
perhaps not smart enough, and Antz, although commendable, has neither
the fantasy element needed for a good children's film, nor the
realism needed for a decent adults flick.
Antz is pretty entertaining, and visually it is every bit as
stunning as Toy Story, although Antz is more sophisticated and has a
much darker look than the suburban Toy Story.
As you can imagine, much of the action in Antz takes place
underground.
Antz tells of an ant called Z (voiced by Woody Allen) who doesn't
want to just be one of the crowd. He has an illicit romance with a
princess ant (Sharon Stone) and they break the mould and come into
conflict with the status quo.
There are heaps of references to politics, movie genres, sexual
angst and therapy, as you'd expect from a story starring a Woody
Allen type off character.
But can an animated film effectively portray complicated emotions?
Not so far it seems.
The ants in Antz have faces that are almost human, but that then
becomes disappointing, because so far the craft hasn't got any where
near being able to really display the complexities of a human face.
We love faces. We spend our lives studying the extremely subtle
messages a tiny tremor of an eyebrow or lip might portray; to such an
extent that we often don't even consciously realise how subtle we are
as observers.
If film makers are going to step towards trying to depict real
human faces on animated creatures, and not leave animated films where
they have been so far; a film world where it is obvious that the
creatures, the faces, and the personalities are only two dimensional
and shallow, then they will continue to disappoint movie goers.
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