The Last Exorcism

The Last Exorcism blends belief, doubt and humour to produce some seriously scary cinema. Until the dubious ending.

The Switch

Ill-conceived but entertaining, the year's second sperm donor rom-com leaves no embarrassing stains.

Brief Encounters: The Last Exorcism

We chat to director Daniel Stamm and producer Eli Roth about religion, possession & bashing cats to death.

Scott Pilgrim vs the World

Mature, childish and one of the most energetic things ever put on celluloid, Scott Pilgrim speaks to its audience. It says words like: Love. Life. Nintendo. And Canada.

The Girl who Played with Fire

The Girl who Played with Fire slightly dampens expectations, but Rapace's fiery heroine stops the thriller fizzling out.

An Education: Cinema's Top Syllabus

With kids back to school and education funding cut, what's the best way to educate your child? Cinema.

Salt

With its ballsy female hero and well-paced hokum, Salt is a high-octane burst of pure nonsense. Sequel please.

Brief Encounters: Noomi Rapace

The real Girl with the Dragon Tattoo chats about motorbikes, piercings and that tattoo...

The Illusionist

A beautiful love letter to old-school magic, The Illusionist is a delicate and bittersweet pleasure.

Bad Science

With The Human Centipede in cinemas, our own Dr Pearson asks if Hollywood’s evil scientists have ever been 100% accurate.

The Expendables

Thick, violent and incredibly butch, Sylvester Stallone has made the perfect action man's movie: a film so bad it's brilliant. If only he could tell the difference.

The Secret in Their Eyes

For all its false hairpieces, The Secret in their Eyes is 11,650 feet of genuinely gripping celluloid. Long-winded, methodical, and completely absorbing.

http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/812106lastexorcism_top.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/139660switch_top.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/78500224c76d86_COTTON_D12_00719_R2.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/578720spilgrim_top.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/130572fire_top.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/191392aneducationstill.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/664790salttop.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/588895Girl_04.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/526709illusionist_top.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/682660mwtwobrains.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/379723expendables_top.jpg http://www.i-flicks.net/components/com_gk2_photoslide/images/thumbm/310926secrets_top.jpg

Star Ratings

Excellent   
Very Good
Good
Average
Terrible

Have Your Say

Scott Pilgrim - an epic of epic epicness?
 

Latest Videos




 

Twitter

Home Reviews Cinema The Princess and the Frog
The Princess and the Frog Print E-mail
Written by Selina Pearson   
Friday, 05 February 2010 14:15
Directors: Ron Clements and John Musker
Cast: Anika Noni Rose, Bruno Campos, Keith David
Certificate: U

When Disney got sucked into CG animation with the rest of the studios, it was looking like the death of hand-drawn stories. Aside from Studio Ghibli, everyone had all but abandoned this beautiful art-form. But lo, even in the wake of Avatar 3-D, hand-drawing has been resurrected by Disney with this joyous New Orleans Jazz fest. Hurrah!


A hard-working ambitious heroine, who is NOT seeking her true love (for once), Tiana (Rose) is working two jobs in order to save enough money to start her own restaurant (does a 5-year-old know what an entrepreneur is?). Meanwhile, royal waste of space Prince Naveen (Campos) has been cut off by his parents (for undisclosed reasons), and shows up in New Orleans to find a rich wife so he doesn’t have to do any of that tedious work stuff.


Tiana’s wealthy air-head best friend, Charlotte, has her heart set on marrying a prince, so Naveen’s appearance in New Orleans is fortuitous. Enter the Shadowman, Dr Facilier - the villain of the piece. Of course, the bad guy has to do some meddling (after all, what are bad guys in Disney films for?) and so the prince gets turned into a frog. Wackiness ensues. Due to a bizarre series of events, we end up in the bayou with a couple of frogs with identity crises, a genius jazz-loving alligator and a Cajun firefly, who isn’t quite all there.


An American fairytale with a happy, if hokey, ending, Disney have done again what they do so well, producing an inspiring lead and a crackpot supporting cast. It’s probably no coincidence that John Lasseter, who is in part responsible for re-opening 2-D studios at Disney, also brought the Ghibli films to Western mainstream audiences.


VERDICT


With a fun soundtrack and engaging characters, Disney regains its hand-drawn soul after selling it for CG farm animals and a shiny Mac. Enjoy it, but don’t get any ideas, kids - kissing frogs gives you salmonella.

 

Your rating

( 2 Votes ) 

 

Add your comment

Your name:
Your website:
Comment:
  The word for verification. Lowercase letters only with no spaces.
Word verification: