Review
Escape from Planet Earth is the theatrical debut from a little studio called Rainmaker Entertainment and shows a tad more promise than the wealth of uninspired animated sequels such as Ice Age Continental Drift that families have been forced to sit through this past summer. It concerns a place called Planet Baab where a pair of brothers named Gary and Scorch Supernova (voiced by Rob Corddry and Brendan Fraser respectively) work for a space program. Gary is the head of mission control frequently pressing buttons and maintaining different technical jobs while Scorch has the luxury of experiencing everything firsthand given his role as the astronaut. One day Gary gets tired of Scorch's carelessness for assignments and his runofthemill planning thanks to his ego and Scorch is tired of Gary's sophistication and smothering seriousness. To show gumption bravery and selfreliance Scorch decides to venture to a place called "the dark planet" (Earth) where not long after he is kidnapped by a group of humans and locked in Area 51. It's up to his brother Gary who leaves behind his wife and kids to save his brother's backside yet again.
Just within the first half of Escape from Planet Earth we see how this film came to fruition. When Scorch lands on Earth he noticed a waving balloon in front of a store and mistakes it for another lifeform. The waving balloon is a doorgreeter for a 711 perfectly adjacent to Area 51. Inside the 711 where Gary stops upon his arrival to Earth two geeky employees try to get him to drink a gorgeous blue Slurpee shoving more product placement in our faces. Escape from Planet Earth doesn't have the budget of many CGI features (and I highly doubt it will make anywhere near the money they are known for either) so much of the profit and spending money was likely built because of unnecessary unsubtle advertising.
Aside from that fact this animated feature isn't half bad. It's first half is slow methodical and a tad too chaotic where its second and third half are a delightful mix of humor and colors. At least for me. The rows in front of me which were occupied with about fourteen kids rarely chuckled or even so much as laughed. I fear that kids are reaching a phase where they've "seen it all" what with being bombarded by constant new animated programs and films and because of that this film inevitably feels like a genial yet uninspired rehash of material. This I can agree with my chuckles never stemmed past that nor were my smiles held for very long. There was no gripping attachment to these characters unlike what I've seen in Disney Dreamworks or Pixar films and because of that this falls flat in the impact and character departments.
Yet I still can't neglect the high level of imagination this film possesses and the overall smoothness of its production. Rainmaker Entertainment has long produced directtoDVD features that have been met with mixed public reception. Scrolling through titles like Scary Godmother Stuart Little 3 Call of the Wild and a neverending onslaught of Barbietrademarked films gives the impression to an unfamiliar consumer that they specialize in digital babysitters rather than impacting adventures. However if there's one thing they seemed to hit home with here it's the level of surprise style and motion that was put into picture. This doesn't quite look like a directtoDVD movie and its adventure translates nicely to the big screen. Even the animation doesn't seem like it would blend in with other mediumbudget CGI features often found on Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. It's a surprisingly very tasteful endeavor.
As far as the storyline which seems reminiscent of a film called Planet 51 unseen by me there's not enough interest to make you analyze every possible outcome the characters could end up in but there's not enough distance to where you absolutely don't care either. By the final act of the film I wasn't deep into the mindset of loathe and actually found myself giggling at plotpoints and certain details. Take for example the justification for imprisonment one of the aliens makes when Gary is thrown into Area 51 while trying to rescue his brother he states that it was aliens who created revolutionary technology like the smartphone the computer the search engine and even animated films. The reason we weren't told that was the evilhead of Area 51 named Shanker (William Shatner) imprisoned the aliens and gave credit to men like Steve Jobs Bill Gates and John Lasseter. Ȭ'mon man do you really think a human could've made all that stuff" one alien asks.
Escape from Planet Earth isn't really the most ideal viewing for children especially considering even at eightynine minutes it treads the fineline of being much of a muchness. But there's a good heart a somewhat interesting story solid visual flair tolerable characters a recognizable and capable cast of voices and the generic but welcomed warmth animated films so innocently bare. If it's the worst animated film I'll see this year I'll be quietly content if it's the best I'll be concerned.
And do I even need to conclude with a statement about the inert and mediocre nature of the 3D
NOTE Escape from Planet Earth marks the first film of the year that I will do a companionvideo review for on Youtube httpwww.youtube.comwatchvmH0WOZfi9Y
Voiced by Rob Corddry Brendan Fraser Sarah Jessica Parker Jessica Alba William Shatner Craig Robinson George Lopez Jane Lynch Sof Vergara Jonathan Morgan Heit Ricky Gervais Steve Zahn and Gregg Binkley. Directed by Cal Brunker.