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Rating out of 5 stars: Director: Producer: Screenwriter: Stars: MPAA Rating: Released: |
Cars
At the Movies with Mike Lippert:
Cars is one of those "in-the-moment" films. It's the kind
of thing that makes us realize that sometimes we have to slow down,
take a break from Fellini and Bergman and Kurosawa, and just let reality
slip out from underneath us for a few hours so that we can enjoy ourselves.
I mean, isn't that this film's very message to begin with? After a history making three-way tie, a make-up race is scheduled to take place in California in a few days. After a freak accident late at night occurs on the interstate, Lighting unknowingly falls out of his transport truck Mack, and finds himself on Route 66 to Radiator Springs, whose main street he destroys in a panic. From here, the story proceeds to become such standard fare that if Cars were not a creation of first rate three dimensional animated from Pixar Studios, one would probably feel obliged to criticize its redundancy. In Radiator Springs, the cocky Lightning meets an array of colourful characters after he is forced against his will to stay and repave the road that he destroyed. The residents believe that a freshly paved main street will bring tourists. They have not seen many a traveler through their little town since the interstate was built, bypassing the town in order to save ten minutes or so. People would rather save the time than waste it on sightseeing in the small mountain town. Cars is not social commentary though, and so whether or not Lightening will come to his senses, realize that life is about the friends who you share it with not individual glories, and if he will make it to California to compete in the big race I will leave for you to discover. One of the cars, which Lightning meets, is Mater, a tow truck who runs a towing business called Tow Mater. Get it? Maybe it would help if I told you that Mater is voiced by the increasingly popular comic Larry the Cable Guy. Larry the Cable Guy has become a unique entertainer who has found success in the humor of everyday blue-collar life, a lifestyle to which many folks can relate. As Mater, just as all of the other performers, the Cable Guy is given the freedom to tap into his genuine likeability to create one of the films most lovable characters. A character, who also gets the biggest laugh as he and Lightning sneak into a resident field for a late night game of tractor tipping. As mentioned before, it is in the third act when the film gives up
on simply being cute and clever and finds its emotional centre. And
let me tell you, redundant as it may be, by the end, Cars had me hooked,
as I was surrounded by so much joy and humour and good spirits that
I smiled my way to the finish line. Excuse that pun as well. Cars may
not be Pixar's greatest achievement, but it manages to be sweet and
touching and funny by taking a cast of recognizable talent and using
them to create lovable individuals who we can relate to and care about
out of something as everyday as a car. And sometimes my friends, that
is simply all it takes. Copyright © Greg Roberts |
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