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[[Category:Blue Sky Studios films]]
 
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Revision as of 00:25, 19 August 2013

Ice Age is a 2002 American computer-animated adventure comedy film created by Blue Sky Studios and released by 20th Century Fox. It was directed by Carlos Saldanha and Chris Wedge from a story by Michael J. Wilson. The story follows three Paleolithical mammals attempting to return a lost human baby to its parents. The film stars Ray Romano, John Leguizamo, and Denis Leary.

The film was met with mostly positive reviews and was a box office success, starting a series with three sequels, Ice Age: The Meltdown, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, and Ice Age: Continental Drift.

Plot

The film begins with a saber-toothed squirrel (known as Scrat) who is trying to find somewhere to store his prized acorn. Eventually, as he tries to stomp it into the ground, he causes a large crack in the ground that extends for miles and miles and sets off a large avalanche. He barely escapes, but finds himself stepped on by a herd of prehistoric animals. The animals are trying to avoid the ice age by migrating south. Sid, a clumsy Megalonyx sloth left behind by his family, is attacked by two Brontops whom he angered. Sid is soon saved by Manfred ("Manny"), an agitated mammoth who fights them off. Not wanting to be alone and unprotected, Sid follows Manny. Meanwhile, Soto, the leader of a Smilodon pride wants revenge on a group of humans by eating the chief's baby son, Roshan, alive. Soto leads a raid on the human camp, during which Roshan's mother is separated from the rest and jumps down a waterfall when cornered by Soto's lieutenant, Diego. For his failure, Diego is sent to find and retrieve the baby.

Sid and Manny spot Roshan and his mother near the lake, having survived her plunge. The mother only has enough strength to trust her baby to Manny before she disappears. After much persuasion by Sid, they decide to return Roshan (nicknamed "Pinky") but when they reach the human settlement, they find it deserted. They meet up with Diego, who convinces the pair to let him help by tracking the humans. The four travel on, with Diego secretly leading them to his pack for an ambush. While having small adventures on their way, they reach a cave where Sid and Diego learn about Manny's past and his previous interactions with the humans, in which his wife and son were killed, leaving Manny a cynical loner. At one time the group passes a flying saucer frozen in the ice, while Sid comes upon a display showing the evolution of sloths.

At the end of the film, Diego, Manny and Sid battle Soto's pack and a short fight ensues. As Soto closes in for the kill on Manny, Diego leaps and stops Soto, who wounds Diego in the process. Manny, in vengeance, knocks Soto into a rock wall, causing several sharp icicles to fall on Soto, killing him. Manny and Sid manage to return the baby to his tribe, and Diego rejoins them, as the group begins to head off to warmer climates.

Scrat subplot

There is also a subplot where Scrat the squirrel makes many comical attempts to bury his beloved acorn. His misfortunes include getting chased by an enormous glacier, being struck by lightning, attempting to thaw out the acorn by using a fire, but roasting it too long, causing it to turn into a large popcorn kernel, and finally getting frozen an icecub along with his much sought after nut. In the epilogue, 20,000 years later (the present), Scrat is frozen in an ice cube that washes up on the shore of a tropical island. The sun slowly melts the cube, bringing Scrat back to life but the acorn, which is just out of his reach, ends up being washed away by the tide. Scrat then explodes out of the ice cube in anger and hits his head repetitively on a tree, which drops a coconut. Believing it to be a giant acorn, Scrat's anger immediately turns to glee at this new find. He tries to pack it into the ground as he did previously with his other acorns, but in the process causes a large crack in the ground that makes its way up the side of a volcano and causes it to erupt, mirroring the opening scene when Scrat causes a break in the ice with an acorn.

Cast

Main article: List of Ice Age characters

The characters are all prehistoric animals. The animals can talk to and understand each other and are voiced by a variety of famous actors. Like many films of prehistoric life, the rules of time periods apply very loosely, as many of the species shown in the film never actually lived in the same time periods or the same geographic regions.

  • Manfred "Manny", a woolly mammoth, is voiced by Ray Romano
  • Diego, a Smilodon, is voiced by Denis Leary
  • Sid, a giant ground sloth, is voiced by John Leguizamo
  • Scrat, a "saber-toothed" squirrel, is voiced by Chris Wedge
  • Soto, a Smilodon, is voiced by Goran Višnjić
  • Zeke, a Smilodon, is voiced by Jack Black
  • Oscar, a Smilodon, is voiced by Diedrich Bader
  • Lenny, a Homotherium, voiced by Alan Tudyk
  • Carl, a Brontops, is voiced by Cedric the Entertainer
  • Frank, a Brontops, is voiced by Stephen Root
  • Rachel, a female sloth, is voiced by Jane Krakowski
  • Jennifer, a female sloth, is voiced by Lorri Bagley

Reception

Critical reception

Ice Age was released into theaters on March 15, 2002 and got a 77% approval rating on the film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, based on 164 reviews. The site's consensus reads: "Even though Ice Age is treading over the same grounds as Monsters, Inc. and Shrek, it has enough wit and laughs to stand on its own."[1] Similar site Metacritic had a score of 60% out of 31 reviews.[2]

The film was nominated for AFI's 10 Top 10 in the "Animation" genre.[3]

Box office

The film had a $46.3 million opening weekend, a large number not usually seen until the summer season, and way ahead of Fox's most optimistic projection of about $30 million. Ice Age broke the record for a March opening (first surpassed in 2006 by its sequel, Ice Age: The Meltdown) and was the then-third-best opening ever for an animated feature—after Monsters, Inc. ($62.6 million) and Toy Story 2 ($57.4 million).[4] Ice Age finished its domestic box office run with $176,387,405 million and grossed $383,257,136 million worldwide, being the 9th highest gross of 2002 in North America and the 8th best worldwide at the time.[5]

Production and development

The film was originally to be directed by Don Bluth and Gary Goldman, and produced in traditional animation by Fox Animation Studios, but the rise of CGI animation and the failure of Titan A.E. destroyed Fox's traditional animation division; hence, Bluth and Goldman transferred their duties for Chris Wedge and Carlos Saldanha from Fox's CGI division Blue Sky.(citation needed)

Video game

A video game tie-in was published by Ubisoft for the Game Boy Advance, and received poor reviews.[6][7]

Sequels

  • Ice Age: The Meltdown was released on March 31, 2006. The film focuses on the melting of a dam (due to, as Sid puts it at the end of the first film, global warming) and the impending flood.
  • Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs was released on July 1, 2009. The film focuses on dinosaurs being discovered underground.
  • Ice Age: Continental Drift was released in July 13, 2012. The film focuses on the continental drift on Earth.

References

  1. Ice Age (2002). Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on October 18, 2012.
  2. Ice Age. Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved on 2009-07-23.
  3. AFI's 10 Top 10 Ballot
  4. Ice Age enjoys mammoth opening weekend. Entertainment Weekly (2002-03-18).
  5. Ice Age (2002). Box Office Mojo. Box Office Mojo, LLC. Retrieved on 2009-07-23.
  6. Ice Age (gba) reviews. Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved on 2009-07-23.
  7. Ice Age for Game Boy Advance. GameRankings. Retrieved on 2009-07-23.

External links

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This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original article was at Ice Age. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with MOVIEPEDIA, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.