The Wild

:

Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
47
Mixed or Average Reviews
out of 100
'The Wild' Is Familiar but Fun
By John Hartl, film critic, MSNBC

American animation studios are running out of inspiration, not to mention originality. How else do you explain the back-to-back 1998 releases of DreamWorks' "Antz" and Pixar's "A Bug's Life"? Or Pixar's "Finding Nemo" followed so closely by DreamWorks' similar fish story, "Shark Tale"?

And what about Disney's new computer-generated cartoon, "The Wild," arriving on the heels of last year's DreamWorks hit, "Madagascar"? With their astonishingly similar plotlines about New York zoo animals going back to the wild, they can sometimes seem like the same movie.

They do, however, feature different casts and very different narrative approaches. Whereas "Madagascar" was a joke machine that literally ran out of gas, "The Wild" tries to tell a story in which the comic riffs are more organic. Disney claims to have started "The Wild" more than nine years ago, yet it comes off almost as a critique of what went wrong in "Madagascar."

In the new movie, Kiefer Sutherland provides the voice of Samson, a lion king who rules the New York Zoo and brags about his jungle adventures but has little experience in the outside world. Jim Belushi plays his best friend, a fussy squirrel named Benny, and Janeane Garofalo is the voice of a sassy giraffe named Bridget.

Samson and his friends, including the semihysterical anaconda Larry (Richard Kind) and the droll koala Nigel (Eddie Izzard), escape from the Manhattan zoo to track down Samson's restless teenage son, Ryan (Greg Cipes). He's been mistakenly shipped off to Africa, where the zoo folks meet a demented wildebeest, Kazar (William Shatner), who has created a cult around the heavenly visitation of a koala doll they worship as "The Great Him."

In "Madagascar," Ben Stiller was the spoiled lion, David Schwimmer played the giraffe and Chris Rock was the lion's pal, a daydreaming zebra named Marty. Hampered by tired pop-culture gags, they worked too hard at getting laughs. The chief scene-stealers turned out to be a gang of snarky penguins.

In place of the penguins, who weren't around long enough, "The Wild" offers Izzard's hilarious improvisations (he is said to have created 85 percent of his lines) and Shatner doing his self-deprecating thing as a puffed-up religious fanatic who really wants to be a choreographer. There's a touch of Rudyard Kipling's "The Man Who Would Be King" in their relationship, but it never seems like an in-joke. It's a valid extension of the story.

The first-time director, Steve "Spaz" Williams, is a visual-effects veteran ("Jurassic Park") who has no problem with allowing the story, not the effects (which are impressive), to provide the driving force. He wisely allows Izzard and Shatner to go wild, and they reward him with the movie's funniest moments.

"The Wild" isn't a great Disney cartoon. The screenplay is attributed to four writers, whose best-known credits include dim comedies such as "The Santa Clause 2" and "Snow Dogs," and it takes them too long to establish the characters. But once the zoo refugees arrive in Africa, the extended set-up pays off.

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American animation studios are running out of inspiration, not to mention originality. How else do you explain the back-to-back 1998 releases of DreamWorks' "Antz" and Pixar's "A Bug's Life"? Or Pixar's "Finding Nemo" followed so closely by DreamWorks' similar fish story, "Shark Tale"?

And what about Disney's new computer-generated cartoon, "The Wild," arriving on the heels of last year's DreamWorks hit, "Madagascar"? With their astonishingly similar plotlines about New York zoo animals going back to the wild, they can sometimes seem like the same movie.

They do, however, feature different casts and very different narrative approaches. Whereas "Madagascar" was a joke machine that literally ran out of gas, "The Wild" tries to tell a story in which the comic riffs are more organic. Disney claims to have started "The Wild" more than nine years ago, yet it comes off almost as a critique of what went wrong in "Madagascar."

In the new movie, Kiefer Sutherland provides the voice of Samson, a lion king who rules the New York Zoo and brags about his jungle adventures but has little experience in the outside world. Jim Belushi plays his best friend, a fussy squirrel named Benny, and Janeane Garofalo is the voice of a sassy giraffe named Bridget.

Samson and his friends, including the semihysterical anaconda Larry (Richard Kind) and the droll koala Nigel (Eddie Izzard), escape from the Manhattan zoo to track down Samson's restless teenage son, Ryan (Greg Cipes). He's been mistakenly shipped off to Africa, where the zoo folks meet a demented wildebeest, Kazar (William Shatner), who has created a cult around the heavenly visitation of a koala doll they worship as "The Great Him."

In "Madagascar," Ben Stiller was the spoiled lion, David Schwimmer played the giraffe and Chris Rock was the lion's pal, a daydreaming zebra named Marty. Hampered by tired pop-culture gags, they worked too hard at getting laughs. The chief scene-stealers turned out to be a gang of snarky penguins.

In place of the penguins, who weren't around long enough, "The Wild" offers Izzard's hilarious improvisations (he is said to have created 85 percent of his lines) and Shatner doing his self-deprecating thing as a puffed-up religious fanatic who really wants to be a choreographer. There's a touch of Rudyard Kipling's "The Man Who Would Be King" in their relationship, but it never seems like an in-joke. It's a valid extension of the story.

The first-time director, Steve "Spaz" Williams, is a visual-effects veteran ("Jurassic Park") who has no problem with allowing the story, not the effects (which are impressive), to provide the driving force. He wisely allows Izzard and Shatner to go wild, and they reward him with the movie's funniest moments.

"The Wild" isn't a great Disney cartoon. The screenplay is attributed to four writers, whose best-known credits include dim comedies such as "The Santa Clause 2" and "Snow Dogs," and it takes them too long to establish the characters. But once the zoo refugees arrive in Africa, the extended set-up pays off.

More movies on MSNBC 

75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
This is the third animated feature in a row (after "Curious George" and "Ice Age: The Meltdown") which aims at children and has no serious ambition to be all things to all people, i.e., their parents. But for kids, it's OK.Read Full Review »
60
The New York Times: Jeannette Catsoulis
While the kids are giggling at gambling pigeons and psychedelic chameleons, parents can enjoy a screenplay sensitive to the travails of single fatherhood and the evils of oppression. In The Wild, the most valuable weapons are honesty, tolerance and the ability to be oneself.Read Full Review »
50
Village Voice: Jim Ridley
Under Steve "Spaz" Williams' direction, the animation is exquisitely detailed, down to the lions' individually moving whiskers--but when's the last time you enjoyed a cartoon for its realism?Read Full Review »
50
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
Adult humor in kiddie films -- of which there is plenty in The Wild -- is not only welcome but, for many adult viewers, essential.Read Full Review »
50
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
Lifting a concept isn't exactly foreign to the world of animation (what's "The Lion King" if not "Bambi" with manes?), but it isn't often a rip-off gets as blatant as The Wild, a flat-out regurgitation of "Madagascar."Read Full Review »
50
USA Today: Claudia Puig
Just be the most wildly derivative animated movie in ages.Read Full Review »
50
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
Kids under 6 will dig it - though the alligators and wildebeests might scare them. Certainly they scared this groan-up.Read Full Review »
38
Boston Globe: Ty Burr
How's the movie? Technologically incredible, aesthetically pretty hideous, and narratively lumpy: Kids who aren't cynics (i.e., 9 and under) will roll with it.Read Full Review »
See all The Wild reviews at metacritic.com »