Arctic Tale tries to be everything to everyone but fails at all.
Arctic Tale (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:95
Fresh:59
Rotten:36
Average Rating:5.9/10
Consensus: Arctic Tale features breathtaking nature cinematography, but is undone by its over-cutesy narration.
Theatrical Release:Jul 25, 2007 Limited
Box Office: $598,103
Synopsis: This heartbreaking documentary puts a face on the sad statistics of global warming--and though it's not a human face, it's the perhaps even more effective face of an adorable polar bear cub, Nanu,... This heartbreaking documentary puts a face on the sad statistics of global warming--and though it's not a human face, it's the perhaps even more effective face of an adorable polar bear cub, Nanu, along with her mother, her brother, and her natural enemy, the equally heart-melting Seela the walrus. With breathtaking footage of life on the arctic tundra, the directors spin a highly emotional tale of the melting ice caps and the effect of their disappearance on every species in the ecosystem. Since the film is essentially aimed at children, the cuteness factor is off the charts, aided by the slightly grating use of sound effects, a slangy voiceover by Queen Latifah, and a kid-friendly pop/folk soundtrack. And, as in a National Geographic special, viewers learn some interesting and neutral facts about polar bears, walruses, narwhals, foxes, and other northern creatures. The narrative, however, returns repeatedly to the grim conditions that are killing off our planet's wildlife, one family at a time. The directors take pains to create a hopeful ending, with a sweet pair of life-goes-on epilogues and a closing credit sequence featuring conservation tips, but the message of the film is sobering and hits its mark with kids and adults alike. [More]
Director: Adam Ravetch, Sarah Robertson
Director: Adam Ravetch, Sarah Robertson
Producer: Adam Leipzig, Keenan Smart
Composer: Joby Talbot
Studio: Paramount Classics
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Reviews for Arctic Tale
(like) those cunningly engineered Disney 'True-Life Adventures'... in which scorpions appeared to dance... and supposedly lovelorn squirrels awaited what the narrator called their 'moment of fulfillment.'
I'm willing to overlook some lowest-common-denominator idiocy in favor of some well-produced nature photography.
A well-intentioned film that isn’t a documentary and isn’t a very good adventure story.
Some kids at the screening I attended were growing restless ... and so was I.
Child-pandering and overly anthropomorphized, Arctic Tale is a blatant cash-grab by National Geographic Films.
The heavy-handed ideology and flawed narration don't commend Arctic Tale as a movie I would care to watch repeatedly, but I'm glad I saw it once, for the spectacular photography.
Make no mistake, Arctic Tale is a stunning film, full of all the astonishing, even breathtaking nature photography we've come to expect from the folks at National Geographic.
It's aimed at kids, and it hits them squarely: My 6-year-old and his friend sat stock still, hypnotized.
Arctic Tale does afford us some beautiful landscape cinematography and up-close looks at creatures in the wild...
There's no Jane Goodall required. And the absence of humans proves we needn't be onscreen to make our presence known.
So the film's visual elements suggest a documentary, but it's a carefully fictionalized narrative. Some folks will thus dismiss it as a fabrication, but it still packs a profound emotional wallop.
Obviously, the producers have decided to gear this movie to the very young, but even kids don't like to have their soul food come to them predigested.
More than once I found myself thinking: What a planet! Which means the movie did its job.
Warm and fuzzy despite its frigid locale, Arctic Tale is the huggable nature film many people expected from March of the Penguins, but didn't get.
No, it doesn’t stand up to March of the Penguins or soar like Winged Migration, but this family-friendly flick does manage the happy feat of raising eco-awareness.
Husband-and-wife filmmakers Ravetch and Robertson capture some breathtaking images. And a global-warming warning, which is saved for the end, is much subtler than the one in last year's animated hit Happy Feet.
Latest News for Arctic Tale
April 29, 2008:
Disney, Warners Taking Filmgoers Back to Nature ![]()
No longer the sole domain of Marlin Perkins and Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom, nature documentaries have become big business at the box office -- a business that Warner Bros.... More...
July 26, 2007:
Critical Consensus: Woo-Hoo! Simpsons Is Certified Fresh; No Reservations Is Bland; Rescue Dawn Shines
This week at the moves, we've got America's favorite family in their long-awaited big-screen debut (The Simpsons Movie); a tale of two chefs (No Reservations, starring Catherine... More...
July 22, 2007:
The striking visuals that sweep across both the landscape and awesome natural world beneath, compete for center stage with the film's critical ecological cautionary warning pertaining to the careless harming of the planet. ![]()
More...
June 13, 2007:
Trailer & Poster review. ![]()
More...
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