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Flushed Away
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A previously pampered society mouse must fight his way back to the comforts of Kensington after he is sent spiraling into an underground world filled with scavenger rats and villainous toads in a fun-filled family adventure produced by DreamWorks Animation and Aardman Features and featuring the voices of Hugh Jackman, Kate Winslet, Ian McKellen, and Jean Reno. Roddy (Jackman) was living the high life when he first met Sid the sewer rat (Shane Richie), but that's all about to change when Sid decides to send the hapless mouse down the pipes and stealthily take his place in the lap of luxury. Though the bustling sewer city of Ratropolis isn't without its fair share of kind citizens, it is certainly no place for a pampered mouse with a taste for life's finer things. Upon making the acquaintance of scavenger rat Rita (Winslet), Roddy is certain that the pair can navigate their way back to the surface in Rita's trusty boat, the Jammy Dodger, but Rita's help doesn't come cheap, and the nefarious Toad (McKellen) is determined to rid Ratropolis of all things rodent. When Toad's hapless hench-rats Spike (Andy Serkis) and Whitey (Bill Nighy) fail to achieve acceptable results, the green meanie is forced to call in the cavalry in the form of legendary French mercenary Le Frog (Reno) to get the job done. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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JJ79JJ79 Flushed Away (2006)
by JJ79 in JJ79 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Released: November 3, 2006Directors: David Bowers, Sam Fell*****Armed with an all-star voice cast, the stop-motion studio behind the Wallace and Gromit adventures and the production studio which brought Shrek to life, Flushed Away was supposed to be a big hit, a film for all ages to laugh at, enjoy and share together. Someone obviously missed that memo in fall,2006, as the story of a well-to-do rat who gets mixed up in a seedy underworld flopped-relatively speaking-at the box office.In a (relative) spin on The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse tale, Roddy (Hugh Jackman) is literally flushed down the toilet when interloper Spike (Andy Serkis) finds his way to Roddy's Kensington home. Once in the sewers and tunnels under London, Roddy meets up with the vile criminal lord The Toad (Ian McKellen), beautiful Rita (Kate Winslet) and a host of other characters in the search for a ruby from the Queen's crown. A ruby which will put Rita's family on easy street...though, in the end, the st ... " [More]
usesoapusesoap Stratham's 'Bank' shot
by usesoap in usesoap Blog
liked it.
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"Jason Statham is not a name that exactly inspires confidence in moveigoers.He was director Guy Ritchie’s lapdog for “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” and “Snatch,” before boxing himself in to roles that played up his martial-arts prowess, squelching any dramatic potential that nuanced his performances.Starring in a string of empty-calorie cinematic Twinkies (“The Transporter” films, “Chaos,” “War” and “Crank” were all designed solely to accentuate his pugnacious proclivities) only kept him out of the direct-to-video purgatory that befell fellow fighters Steven Segal and Jean-Claude Van Damme.He’s often dismissed as the British version of Bruce Willis (balding, gruff on-screen demeanor, characters of few words and a cupboard filled with cans of whoop-ass), but he has the potential to bring on more than brawn to his roles.His followers may be small, but they are loyal, and he has staked his claim ... " [More]
CinemaLeviathanCinemaLeviathan DreamWorks is the New Disney
by CinemaLeviathan in CinemaLeviathan Blog
loved it.
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"As Roddy the mouse sleeps peacefully in his owner’s mansion, a sudden explosion of water spits up through the drains revealing Sid, a sewer rat who reflects the average male in today’s world. Sid takes over the joint, turns the television to the World Cup. Roddy has enough, and attempts to outsmart Sid by insisting he gets into the swirling ‘Jacuzzi’ before the game. Sid suddenly shoves Roddy into the toilet and Roddy is Flushed Away to the underground sewers. As Roddy swirls down the drains toward the sewer, he hits corner after corner in an old-fashioned kind of comic humor, catches an orange fish who asks, “Have you seen my dad?” and finally falls into a river of sewer water where he encounters sewer slugs. Originally the slugs only had the bit part during Roddy’s intro to the sewer but because of their popularity and laugh-out-loud visual and audible humor, the slugs appear again and again through out the movie. The movie is outr ... " [More]
QFLWQFLW Sort of a much lighter "Ne ...
by QFLW in QFLW Blog
liked it.
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"Wasn't exceptionally keen on seeing this; since it's set in a sewer, was expecting a lot of gross humor. But I've a soft spot for Hugh Jackman so gave it a chance. Much better than expected; rather cute, if not necessarily laugh-out-loud funny; good cast of voices. I do get tired of the scenario in which nice-guy heros are made out to be nerds whom nearly everyone makes unkind fun of or dismisses as useless. But it wasn't too bad here. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
It's no surprise you won't find Nick Park's name anywhere on Flushed Away, other than a "special thanks" in the closing credits. Anyone acquainted with Park's beloved ambassadors, Wallace and Gromit, will recognize the London sewer rats in Flushed Away as descendents of that animation style. But when these characters -- with their familiar big eyes and smiling teeth -- are created digitally, rather than using Park's trademark stop-motion animation, it feels like a cheat. Wallace and Gromit were hand-crafted labors of love, designed as they were for the ease of repositioning their clay features. Mimicking them digitally feels like Dreamworks' cold attempt to reel viewers in through familiarity. No doubt Park would have also written a much more understated script than the breathless, manic effort churned out by the myriad of scribes given screenplay and story credits here. While having rats as main characters would not end up being a problem for Pixar's Ratatouille, it doesn't work so well on this excursion -- in part due to the whole icky toilet-flushing concept, but mostly because the rats aren't part of any real London a person can relate to. In some ways they do interact with the discarded refuse of a modern society, such as using a plastic bag as a parachute. But because they wear little tiny rat clothes, and have little tiny rat forks and rat spoons, the illusion of reality is shattered -- leaving Flushed Away as full-on kiddie entertainment, lacking the cleverness an adult requires. It doesn't help that Hugh Jackman's Roddy and Kate Winslet's Rita are being chased by a tiresome bunch of Cockney-accented rat hoodlums, who seem better suited to a Guy Ritchie movie. Just because you have a faster animation process at your disposal, doesn't mean you need to shortchange writing a story with heart. ~ All Movie Guide
 



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