Badmouth.net

Ratatouille (2007)

June 29th, 2007 by Brian McDonough

rat-01.jpg

Rating: ★★★★★
Director: Brad Bird
Starring: Patton Oswalt, Lou Romano, Janine Garafolo

After the disappointing detour into mediocrity that was “Cars,” one could fear that perhaps the Disneyfication of Pixar meant that a great era of animation was ending prematurely. This would appear to not be the case, because “Ratatouille” is an enchanting cinematic experience on a par with “Toy Story,” “The Incredibles,” and even “Finding Nemo.”

Writer-director Brad Bird, who also did “The Incredibles” and the beloved under-the-radar hit “The Iron Giant,” creates a compelling tale from not the likeliest of subjects: A French rat who finds a way to become a top Parisian chef. Bird’s story bounces all over the place with well-placed surprises and diversions. He masterfully finds ways to give us familiar and satisfying confrontations with catalogue bad guys that feel fresh and surprising, partly because he lets his plot pinball around a bit, making its essential progressions feel unforced.

rat-03.jpg

As a director, Bird amazes with breakneck action sequences. There’s an early bit where our rat hero, Remy, is swept down a sewer in a — literally — breathtaking rush of water. I had visceral flashbacks to being caught in big waves at the beach, thrown around for several disorienting seconds before recovering myself. The film is that good at putting that kind of action on the screen. There’s also the character design — vermin both endearing and creepy, humans caricatured in a way that looks classic, French and just oddball enough to remind us that we have a rat’s-eye view of life. The quality of the animation is stunning: Sweeping vistas of Paris, difficult details like the sway and sweep of hair, or the nearly translucent edges of a torn piece of baguette.

Bird also manages a nice bit of romance between Remy’s human puppet, the untalented kitchen boy Linguini, and a struggling chef, Colette, voiced by Janeane Garafolo. The film touches on romance, dreams, family, and the struggle to prove oneself, in a satisfying mix that should affect children and adults alike.

rat-02.jpg

This film hits the multiplexes at the same time as “A Mighty Heart” and “Live Free or Die Hard.” It is more masterful and magical than either, but it creates a triumvirate of new releases meaning, for a short time, Hollywood has something truly compelling to suit any taste.

Several years ago, I saw “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” and “O Brother, Where Art Thou” within a month or two of each other, and the strange combination had been a revelation, both films leaving me feeling renewed in my love of movies, in the possibility of what can be done on the screen, the possibility of a movie, as the lights go down, to transport you into another, more marvelous world. I came out of “Finding Nemo” amazed at how perfectly a story could be crafted to hit every emotional note. “Ratatouille” also provides that kind of experience. Anyone who loves movies should see this film. Anyone who doesn’t, will by the time the lights go back up.

rat-04.jpg

This entry was posted on Friday, June 29th, 2007 at 10:21 am and is filed under Reviews. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

2 Responses to “Ratatouille (2007)”

  1. 1
    Ratatouille (2007) (://URLFAN) Says:

    Kramer auto Pingback[...] (2007)Source: http://www.badmouth.net/ratatouille-2007/Displaying mentions in this article, for full text please visit source. [rating:5] Director: Brad [...]

  2. 2
    Wall*E (2008) » Badmouth Says:

    [...] marred only by the execrable Cars, a misstep already made up for with last year’s charming Ratatouille. Wall*E does right exactly what Pixar always (minus one) does [...]

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Remortgages - Hotel Las Vegas - Wills - Credit Card Consolidation

Recent Posts

Blogs

  • Random Muse » Hey, a Movie Review

    Posted 46 hours ago

    Ghost Town Every now and then I get to see a free movie down at the local art house. ‘Free’ and ‘movie’ are two words that really go together well. I will see almost anything, any piece of crap, if it’s nearby and at no charge. I got to see Ghost Town, the new Ricky Gervais film, last night. It’s ... [Link]

  • The Stew » Sacrifice bunt.

    Posted 3 days ago

    I know, I know — wrong Palin. I wish this were the one running for vice president, but that wouldn’t be legal. I’ve got a theory about the choice of Sarah Palin to be John McCain’s vice president. I haven’t seen this theory blogged about elsewhere, so I know I have to be off my rocker. I think they’re trying ... [Link]

  • The Stew » Biden his time.

    Posted 13 days ago

    It’s official — Obama’s VP choice is Sen. Joe Biden. There are a couple of reasons why vice presidential nominees get picked. They can help deliver that person’s home state in the Electoral College — but let’s assume for the moment that Delaware’s 3 whopping electoral votes were not the reason for Biden’s selection. The other major reason is to ... [Link]

  • Random Muse » What Ever Happened to Worship of the Almighty Dollar??

    Posted 6 weeks ago

    I mean seriously, people. It’s been like 100 degrees with the heat index lately, but I haven’t seen the ice cream man in over a week. What happened to American entrepreneurial spirit? What happened to cruising around, smoking pot and making a few bucks? What happened to my soft-serve sundae??!!!! All I know is someone is falling down on the ... [Link]

  • Random Muse » Bye Baby Daddy

    Posted 7 weeks ago

    We’re done. From myspace: Him: lost yr number, gimme a call. sorry i didn’t make that date, I have been ill. Me: Had appt Fri, baby’s heartbeat is strong and just the right speed, he is getting VERY big. Can see him moving under my skin now, it’s a little ‘Alien’-y, and he kicks too. No gestational diabetes but we ... [Link]