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RANGO [4 MARCH 2011]

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Post time 2-7-2010 02:33 AM | Show all posts |Read mode
Post Last Edit by eddlisa_uyuk at 14-4-2011 22:05



director: gore verbinski [pirate trilogy]
distributor: paramount pictures/nickelodeon movies
visual effect: industrial light & magic (division lucasfilm) (previous work: the abyss, T-2, POC-DMC, transformers, ironman, avatar etc.)
voice over: JD, abigail breslin, alfred molina, timothy oliphant, bill nighy, isla fisher etc..
sinopsis: rango, sekor famili pet chameleon yg menghadapi krisis identiti pergi merantau...terpakse jd hero dlm 1 pekan dikuasai oleh penjahat...

release date: March 2011....

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 Author| Post time 2-7-2010 09:32 AM | Show all posts
jum tgk....



alamek, tawon dpn br kuar...
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Post time 2-7-2010 09:44 AM | Show all posts
macam x best jer...
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Post time 2-7-2010 12:03 PM | Show all posts
Tahun depan ker ahkak pinoe. Very the lambat lagi tau
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Post time 2-7-2010 12:04 PM | Show all posts
ha'ah la mcm tak best.kalo setakat nak dengar sore johnny deep.hentikanlah.
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Post time 2-7-2010 03:54 PM | Show all posts
mcm bes nie...hehehe harap leh lawan pixar..
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Post time 2-7-2010 03:59 PM | Show all posts
lambat lagi nih, lgpun dapat dengar sore jek
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Post time 2-7-2010 04:00 PM | Show all posts
mcm best laa, dia mcm ala2 koboi tp versi haiwan
-mesti lawak ni
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Post time 2-7-2010 08:17 PM | Show all posts
Layan je.. yang best konsep citer ni pasal chameleon (johnny depp) yg ade identity crisis.. ahhaha!

Nak tengok citer ni dgn Tangled disney, spin off Rapunzel.
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Post time 3-7-2010 01:21 AM | Show all posts
adeh lambatnya lg
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 Author| Post time 12-1-2011 05:41 PM | Show all posts
lagi 2 bulan...

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 Author| Post time 12-1-2011 05:42 PM | Show all posts
letest treler..

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Post time 14-1-2011 03:44 PM | Show all posts
teringat gak filem si johnny nih yg ngan tim burton tuhh..corpse bride kowt tajuk diee...sgt ler tak bestt....apepown harap citer nih bestt....walaupow aku amatler tak berkenan ngan filem filem animasi yg ader makluk makluk pelik nihh
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Post time 16-1-2011 09:07 PM | Show all posts
la ni ... kalo tgk wayang, time iklan... sure ada trailer movie ni ditayangkan....
frankly speaking... memang kelakooo....
dah set nak nengok movie ni... hopefully... jalan citer best cam kat trailer...
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 Author| Post time 5-2-2011 11:15 PM | Show all posts
sebulan lagi...

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 Author| Post time 12-2-2011 04:41 PM | Show all posts
review from early screening..

___________________________________________________

Gore Verbinski's RANGO smart, dark and a kickass western!
Published on: Feb 10, 2011 4:20:30 AM CST

I think it’s safe to say that a subtle shift is occurring in the world of animation. For anyone who has seen Akira, anything by Hayao Miyazaki, or even Fantasia for that matter (just to name a few), it’s pretty clear that animation is capable of being anything, of encompassing any kind of material. And yet still so many people are stuck in the mindset that animated films are “just kid’s movies.” That kind of thinking has always baffled me, even if I understand where it’s coming from. We live in a Disney world, and even though I love classic Disney fairy tales as much as the next guy (possibly even more so) I am deeply aware of the kind of expectations they have impressed upon any animated fare. But with the rise of films like Wall-E, Up, and Toy Story 3, movies that each push the boundaries of storytelling in American animation in different ways, animation finally seems to be to spreading its wings with audiences thankfully eating it up.

Enter Rango, a film I would not ever deem to be a kid’s film in a million years. Sure, it’s about a chameleon going through an identity crisis as he wanders his way into a small western town inhabited by all kinds of desert critters, including a trigger happy Gila monster, a Native American crow, and a tortoise mayor, but in many ways this is the most adult animated film I’ve seen in quite some time. It’s smart, it’s dark, and above all, it’s dangerous.

At least it feels that way. The film is full of some surprisingly dark imagery and situations, and even though nothing explicit is ever actually put on screen, it sure as hell feels like it is, which ostensibly gives the film some nice heft. Just look at the main villain of the film, Rattlesnake Jake. The way the townsfolk describe him before he even makes his grand appearance is downright frightening, comparing him to the grim reaper, death incarnate. And once he finally does come to town, he’s terrifying, a humongous beast compared to the small size of the rest of the townspeople, armed with a truly threatening machine gun attachment at the end of his rattler. No, you don’t really see him kill anybody or anything onscreen (not violently, at least), but you don’t have to. He’s a menacing creature, the type of dangerous villain that is hard to come by in family films nowadays, and it’s exactly that sense of danger, the feeling that things may not actually work out, that Rango may just end up losing in the end, that pervades through the film and that made me fall in love with it in such a way that I was not expecting.

But nothing could have done that more so than the way in which the film simply carries itself. There is no doubt about it; Rango is a real western through and through. From the photography, to the thrilling shootouts and chases, to the immersive mystery about the town’s missing water, complete with its surprisingly ballsy reveal, the film takes itself deadly seriously. It does have its fair share of clever gags, but they’re just that: clever. They don’t feel out of place or thrown in just to alleviate the tension, but rather all come across organically, as part of the world and the characters. A couple jokes do fall flat here and there, but those are a small minority, and even then, the film seems less interested in being a comedy than being a kickass western.

Ultimately, though, the heart of the film lies entirely with the character of Rango and his spiritual journey. And yes, you read that right. The film isn’t just about the wacky antics that a chameleon gets into, a la the traditional fish out of water story. The story instead focuses very much on the idea of finding yourself. Rango is a lost soul, literally nameless until he winds up in the town of Dirt, unsure of what or who he is. And when he walks into a saloon full of creatures who know nothing about him, he takes advantage of the opportunity presented to make a name for himself, to finally be someone. It just so happens that in doing so he ends up in over his head. It’s a great story with a great message about finding your place in the world and being who you want to be and as a result, Rango’s transformation by the end of the film feels completely and totally earned.

It’s exciting to see Gore Verbinski back in the saddle and retaking the reins as well as he does. He and his team have created a wonderfully realized world in Rango and the town of Dirt, keeping all of the animals to scale and making the town feel like it came out of a classic western, but with little flourishes that make it uniquely its own thing. Rango will be walking down the road, passing the saloon, the bank, and all of a sudden he passes an outhouse made out of a discarded Pepto-Bismol bottle. It’s little quirks and visual gags like that that really make the film stand out that much more, and thus earning my love that much quicker.

Verbinski never tips his hand with the film though, keeping a very fine balance between the light and the heavy, the real and the surreal, the culmination of which results in the two most beautifully constructed scenes in the film, one involving Rango’s journey across some extremely rough terrain (you’ll know the scene when you see it) and one involving the Spirit Of The West, a scene so delightful that it would be a crime for anyone to spoil it. And it is because of this balance that I would not call Rango a kid’s film in any sense of the term. I don’t even want to call it a family film, though I’m sure it would play well amongst parents with older children. Instead, I would much rather just call it what it is: a western, and a damn fine one at that.

Nickelodeon is taking a ballsy chance with this film. It’s not at all like the trailers make it out to be. It’s a smart film, and even though it’s not nearly as extreme as Akira or Fritz The Cat or any explicitly adult animation, it’s nonetheless an animated film that pushes the boundaries in all the right ways, and I can only hope that enough people will see it so Nickelodeon or other studios might actually continue to take these kinds of chances on animated films. This isn’t your run of the mill animated fluff. Rango is something special.

http://www.aintitcool.com/node/48430
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Post time 12-2-2011 07:12 PM | Show all posts
tgk trailer masa layan citer yogi bear...
best, kelakor...
nak tonton nanti..
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Post time 14-2-2011 05:09 PM | Show all posts
Reply 12# philipinoe2


hahhah..mcm menarik...
adkh ble saing sma kungfu panda???
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Post time 14-2-2011 05:33 PM | Show all posts
wahhhh!!! x sabar nk tgk cite rango nie..preview pun dh lawak giler...
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 Author| Post time 4-3-2011 09:16 PM | Show all posts
rating kt rottentomatoes based on 81 riviu 84%...

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/rango-2011/
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