The film tells the story of The Crood family (duh-doy!) who are living a simple and desperately frustrating life in a cave where there day-to-day routine consists of hunting and sitting in the dark listening to the same stories from family patriarch and all-round fuss-pot father Grub (Nicholas Cage). All of this changes however when an earthquake destroys there cave and they must travel across the new and fantastic planes of a land they have never explored. Along the way the Crood family pick up Ryan Reynolds’ character Guy who shows them that there is more to their caveman lifestyle than simply surviving and forms a romance with the adventurer of the family Eep (voiced by Emma Stone). This romance instigates the anger of a figure we all recognise and have faced at one point in our life – the over-protective father. The scenes in which we bear witness to Grub’s attempts to keep these budding young-romantics apart are hilarious and endear us to the characters’ situations – making them more real and giving the older members of the audience something to chuckle at (either from fond recollection or Fatherly understanding). Aside from the conflict that naturally arises from Grub’s determination to keep Guy and Eep away from each other there is also conflict caused by Grub’s prehistoric and ultimately futile lifestyle and the rules he ‘implements’ to ensure this lifestyle does not change. For example anything new is viewed as dangerous and must therefore be destroyed, darkness equals danger and my personal favourite - curiosity killed the cat (he doesn't say it like that, but you get my point). When Guy shows up though he interrupts the status quo and shows the rest of the Crood family that things can be different, that new ideas and using your brain over your brawn are good and that living that caveman lifestyle is no longer necessary. Not when you've got a genius inventor/entrepreneur such as Guy in the family anyway.
Guy's sudden and commanding entrance into the Crood family sets in motion a host of themes within the film which in turn allow the characters to develop and understand a new world they have never been exposed to. While they learn these lessons however the earth that they have had so little interaction with (prior to the events of the film) is crumbling and moving beneath their feet, even as they seek homage elsewhere. We in the audience of course know that the reason for this crumbling earth is the creation of the many countries that make up Earth today, but the Croods and their tag-along idea man Guy think that the world is ending and that there only chance for survival is to seek the Sun. In their journey to find the sun and a new home the Crood family are brought together through the many struggles that they face which highlights the films main message – the importance of family.
The trivial frustrations and family-dynamics that we're all so familiar with in our day-to-day lives has been captured rather convincingly in this film. I mean, just look at their faces - awkwardness and good-natured ribbing is plain to see (especially in that sneaky old grandma!). |
All-in-all this film is a fun family affair which will be sure to keep both the kids and the adults of the audience very happy. The lessons of love and family make it a heart-warming addition to the animation box-set, with the added bonus that the film does a good job at providing a fun history and science lesson. The films encouragement of innovation and teaching of the inevitability of evolution make it seem slightly smarter than your average animation movie. But, then again, each animation has an important message to offer. That is, after all, why we all love Disney and Pixar even as adults – they never fail to teach us something very important. And on that note, I’ll stop because I can feel myself getting cheesy, and nobody wants that.
To cut a long story short…
Would I recommend this film? Yes. Its kinda like The Flintstones for the kids of the 21st century and who would we be to deprive them of that awesomeness?!
A film ramblers star rating?
That's it for now folks...
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