Movies

38° F Overcast

Central Oregon Forecast

Articles Restaurants Web Newsprint Archive 1907 — 1994

The Croods

A caveman (Ryan Reynolds) catches the eye of a less-evolved female (Emma Stone), as she and her family seek a new home. ... read review »

MPAA Rating:
PG
Running Time:
1:31
Genre:
Comedy, Adventure, Animated
Trailer:
View Trailer »
Starring:
Nicolas Cage Grug
Emma Stone Eep
Ryan Reynolds Guy
Catherine Keener Ugga
Cloris Leachman Gran
Clark Duke Thunk
Chris Sanders Belt

show additional movie details »

hide additional movie details

Crew:
Chris Sanders Director
Kirk De Micco Director
Kirk De Micco Screenwriter
Chris Sanders Screenwriter
Kristine Belson Producer
Jane Hartwell Producer
Darren Holmes Film Editor
Alan Silvestri Original Music
Christophe Lautrette Production Design
Paul Duncan Art Director
Dominique Lewis Art Director
Leslee Feldman Casting
Christi Hilt Casting
Movie times and tickets
All movie times are updated each morning at nine o'clock.
(bargain shows in parentheses)
open captioned shows in bold

Buy tickets from Fandango by clicking a linked showtime

Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX

680 SW Powerhouse Dr., Bend, Oregon | 541-382-6347

review

The Croods

Michael Phillips, Chicago Tribune

rating: By Michael Phillips

Tribune Newspapers Critic

2 1/2 stars

It's "Ice Age" with humans and less ice. "The Croods" began life nearly a decade ago as "Crood Awakening," a collaboration of DreamWorks Animation and Aardman Studios, with a script co-written by John Cleese. Then Aardman, creators of the great Wallace & Gromit and the very good "Chicken Run," fell out of the development.

Years later, here we are: Another DreamWorks movie perpetually on the run, desperately full of action because slapstick violence translates more easily to a global marketplace than the artifact known to the old folks as "a joke" or, rarer, "wit."

Cleese retains a story credit, but "The Croods" is strictly in the manic vein of the "Ice Age" movies, box-office forces of nature and exercises in perpetual bickering and wall-to-wall, cliff-to-cliff cliffhangers. The modest satisfaction provided by "The Croods" comes from listening to Nicolas Cage have some fun with the voice of Grug Crood, married to sensible Ugga (Catherine Keener) and father of three. There's little Sandy, a feral, pre-verbal Bam-Bam type; her thick-headed older brother, Thunk (Clark Gregg); and the story's narrator, the eldest, Eep (Emma Stone).

Co-director and co-writer Chris Sanders worked on DreamWorks' high-water mark of late, "How to Train Your Dragon." As with "Dragon," "The Croods" rests on the notion of the patriarch who must learn to adapt and let go. (I resent this storyline, for the record.)

Earthquaked out of their cave dwelling, the Crood brood embarks on a search for a new home. There's an interloper: Eep encounters an advanced caveboy with impressive low body fat (Ryan Reynolds, voice). The caveboy, Guy, is not just a pinup; he's a harbinger of humankind's future. He knows about fire, for example ("the sun is ... in his hands!") and has things called "ideas." These nomads must learn to learn from each other as they dodge attacks waged by such fanciful species as Piranhakeets, deadly, toothy flying creatures who can strip a carcass faster than you can say "potential new animation franchise."

Grug and Guy and Eep and Ugga and Thunk and Sandy and Ugga's flinty mother (Cloris Leachman, stuck with a one-note mother-in-law joke for material) search for a place Guy calls "Tomorrow," somewhere just over there, by the mountains, where survival lies and a generation gap can be breached.

To justify the 3-D, directors Sanders and Kirk DeMicco shape "The Croods" as an extended peril seminar. As usual with this photorealistic animation style, the digital crispness comes at a cost: Each smack in the head or fall from a great height, landing in a "OOOOmmmmmkkph," doesn't really play like a sight gag. It's closer to action-movie violence, slightly toned down. The landscapes, desert to tropical, certainly are varied, which is more than you can say about the characters. At least there's Cage, who has become an astute voice actor, finding some odd, clever, energetic line readings consistently fresher than "The Croods" itself.

MPAA rating: PG (for some scary action).

Running time: 1:31.

Voice Cast: Nicolas Cage (Grug); Emma Stone (Eep); Catherine Keener (Ugga); Ryan Reynolds (Guy).

Credits: Written and directed by Chris Sanders and Kirk De Micco; produced by Jane Hartwell and Kristine Belson. A Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation release

The Bulletin