Babe: Pig In The City
Babe: Pig In The City is captivating; a triumph. It's
right up there with other subversive, surreal masterpieces
like Delicatessen and The Cook, The Thief, His Wife And
Her Lover, but in spite of what you might have heard
Babe 2 isn't too dark for children, or for any older
human.
It's full of many wonderfully melancholy moments but
it's not nasty. Above all Babe: Pig In The City is a
triumph for gentleness and a plea on behalf of the
marginalised; the weak in our community. It's one of the
best films yet made and an ideal film for children to
see.
What did Hollywood expect? Writer/director of Babe:
Pig In The City, Australian George Miller couldn't be
expected to roll over and produce a sweet (read
merchandisable) sequel to the original Babe. He's far
too human and thoughtful for that.
George Miller for heaven's sake has been intimately
involved with The Mad Max Films, Lorenzo's Oil, Flirting,
Dead Calm, Bangkok Hilton (TV), The Year My Voice Broke
and The Dismissal (TV) a list that has no hint within
it of a thoughtless panderer to the consumer society.
The Witches Of Eastwick was the only aberration and
Miller reportedly hated that experience, swearing to
never work with Hollywood again, not on their terms
anyway.
But then there was the phenomenon of Babe which made
a fortune. Miller consented to do a sequel but demanded
final cut and dismayed the toy makers when they found
that Babe 2 didn't fit in with the money machine.
So Babe: Pig In The City was dumped, with bad reviews
generated probably from people who haven't even bothered
to see it.
Babe: Pig In The City sees James Cromwell as Farmer
Hoggett dumped (down a well) early in the film and the
famous sheep-pig heading off to the city with Mrs
Hoggett (Magda Szubanski) to earn some money to save
the farm.
The Pig gets separated from Mrs Hoggett and becomes
aligned with a set of urban frighted animals who are
threatened with being evicted from their homes. Babe
saves the day by means of his sweet, giving nature.
This film looks wonderful. The same digitalised
mouth movements to match speech are used as in the
original movie. Similarly amazing animal training has
the stars doing wonderful things as they tell the story
and the sets are simply superb.
The city is a composite of Sydney, New York , Paris,
London and others with the copperplate ETERNITY graffiti
well known by older Sydneysiders sitting gently above it
all; an appropriately sensitive emblem for the world
Miller has created.
Babe 2 is about innocence; about children. Some would
say that the film is concerned with Animal Rights but I
don't think it's drawing to long a bow to say that the
film is commenting on the loss of power and self
determination many millions are feeling in the western
world as their jobs are disappearing.
The lost, threatened animals in Babe have an aura of
hopelessness, or at least helplessness before the bright
and brave Babe shows them the way to assert themselves.
Babe: Pig In The City is also often very funny, very
human, even if animals are the stars. It's an absolute
must see for all animal lovers, of any age. And if you
think it's too dark, well grow up. That's life.
4 And A Half Astonished Flys
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