In Laman's Terms is a weekly editorial column where Douglas Laman rambles on about certain topics or ideas that have been on his mind lately. Sometimes he's got serious subjects to discuss, other times he's just got some silly stuff to shoot the breeze about. Either way, you know he's gonna talk about something In Laman's Terms!
Twenty years ago, DreamWorks Animation started off with a clear goal in mind: become the first American animation studio that could rival Disney in the realm of animated motion pictures. After all, they had the former of Disney animation Jeffrey Katzenberg, steering the ship, that alone made people think this could work. The studio started off on an ambitious note with grandiose titles like The Prince of Egypt that had a scope of storytelling and darker tone separated from animated fare from Disney. But ambitious dramatic fare (as well as using hand-drawn animation) was put on the backburner once Shrek became easily their biggest movie. Suddenly, comedies crammed with celebrities and bathroom humor were the go-to movies for the studio and there was no going back.
Welcome to Land of The Nerds, where I, Lisa Laman, use my love of cinema to explore, review and talk about every genre of film imaginable!
Showing posts with label Kung Fu Panda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kung Fu Panda. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
The Angry Birds Movie Is A Dream Come True For Marketers And Tedious For Everyone Else
One day, we'll get a good video game movie. Hell, we've gotten multiple high-quality movies using video game iconography like Scott Pilgrim vs. The World and Wreck-It Ralph. But as for direct film adaptations of video games? We're still not there yet. The Angry Birds Movie does nothing to reverse this trend, though its flaws aren't so much related to the failings of other video game movies as they are about this movie clearly trying to imitate conventional tropes of major American computer-animated family movies without understanding how to make these storytelling staples work in a remotely successful manner.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
How DreamWorks Animation Lost Its Way
Last night, I gave one of 2014's most delightful films, Big Hero 6, a rewatch, and found it be such a glorious experience, especially since I watched it with two viewers who hadn't seen the film in theaters. That rewatch got me thinking about the American animation landscape, and my mind eventually turn it's attention to one particular studio that's been facing some "troubles", to put it lightly, lately: DreamWorks Animation.
Labels:
2010,
2012,
2013,
2015,
2016,
Big Hero 6,
DreamWorks Animation,
Editorial,
How To Train Your Dragon,
Kung Fu Panda,
Mr. Peabody & Sherman,
PIXAR,
Rise of The Guardians,
Shrek 2,
The Penguins of Madagascar,
Turbo
Monday, December 15, 2014
Kung Fu Panda Continues To Defy Expectations With Its Christmas Special
Here's another exciting entry in this Holiday themed column, 25 Days Of Christmas Pop Culture! From now until Christmas Eve, I'll be tackling one piece of Christmas pop culture! It could be a book, movie, TV special, song....so long as it's festive for this time of the year, it'll be checked out in this daily column!
Kung Fu Panda shouldn't work. On any level. But the entire endeavor made one crucial decision that changed everything; they got Jack Black to play the titular kung fu warrior. Black plays Po with undying eagerness that's always fun to watch, especially when his exuberance has to be used against tremendous antagonists. Even after two movies (the second of which hadn't come out when the subject of this review came out) that were excellent, a Christmas special should have simply a cash grab, not a reaffirmation of the franchises quality.
Kung Fu Panda shouldn't work. On any level. But the entire endeavor made one crucial decision that changed everything; they got Jack Black to play the titular kung fu warrior. Black plays Po with undying eagerness that's always fun to watch, especially when his exuberance has to be used against tremendous antagonists. Even after two movies (the second of which hadn't come out when the subject of this review came out) that were excellent, a Christmas special should have simply a cash grab, not a reaffirmation of the franchises quality.
Monday, June 16, 2014
Box Office Analysis: The Problem With DreamWorks
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| Poor little Toothless probably won't be so happy when Shareholders start getting mad at DreamWorks this week |
Labels:
2004,
2014,
Aardman,
Box Office Analysis,
DreamWorks Animation,
How To Train Your Dragon 2,
Kung Fu Panda,
Kung Fu Panda 2,
MegaMind,
Rise of The Guardians,
Shrek,
Shrek 2,
Shrek 3,
Shrek 4,
Wallace & Gromit
Friday, June 13, 2014
The List!!!: Five Great Animated Sequels
In The List!!!, I do a list that just reeks of being click-bait, analyzing a particular topic or subject that pertains to something major occurring in pop-culture. This week, in honor of How To Train Your Dragon 2, I take a look at five great animated sequels.
Labels:
1991,
2004,
2010,
2011,
2011 Summer,
2013,
Jeff Bennett,
Kung Fu Panda,
Kung Fu Panda 2,
Littlefoot,
Monsters University,
Rob Paulson,
Shrek,
Shrek 2,
The Land Before Time,
The List!!!,
Toy Story,
Toy Story 3
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