REVIEW

Movie Review: Cars - Not As Bad As Made Out To Be

October 12, 2006
Nandhu

A few months ago, Cars, the latest movie from Pixar was released to mixed reviews. It was not received by reviewers with the same enthusiasm and glee that preceded movies made by the studio in the past.

Finding Nemo and The Incredibles are just a few in the unbroken series of remarkably successful films made by Pixar. So when Cars, which features no animals or humans, came out, everybody wanted to jump on it and say that this was Pixar's first failure since 1995 when it made Toy Story.

But that was good in a way because I went to the movie with low expectations. This is how the movie begins, with brief shots of a car race that keep fading to black (between the punctuations):

"Okay. Focus. Here we go. Speed. I am speed. One winner. 42 losers. I eat losers for breakfast. Breakfast? Sounds good. Maybe I should have had breakfast? Breakfast could be good for me. No no no. Focus. I am faster than fast, quicker than quick. I am Lightning."

That is Owen Wilson, who voices Lightning Mcqueen, the rookie racecar - brash, arrogant and ambitious, and with no friends.

The opening sequence is a grandly picturized sequence, with cars watching cars racing. Mcqueen ties the race with two cars and has to travel to California for the decider. But, in a cruel twist of fate, he gets stuck in Radiator Springs, a town that has gone off the map after the interstate highway was built in US in the 1960s.

Jesus Chrysler, ladies and gentlecars...the movie's endless puns on our common usages are funny and a bit excessive. Veteran actor Paul Newman is the car that won the Piston Cup three times in the 60s. He becomes Mcqueen's mentor, teaching him the finer points of racing.

In the forgotten town of Radiator Springs, Mcqueen will learn about racing and working, will form friends and fall in love. All the while the rookie car has to lay a road, which he accidentally ruined.

Sally, a Porsche, voiced by Bonnie Hunt, in a superbly envisioned sequence, tells him how Radiator Springs, once a boom city, had now become yesterday's story.

In this story lies the theme of the movie. Of unbridled development and the American dream gone wrong. (There are now officially more movies where the American dream goes wrong, starting with Citizen Kane). She also tells him of the need to slow down and enjoy life. As Sally puts it, before the interstate was built, "people didn't drive to make good time. They drove to have a great time".

I am a Chennai-based journalist writing on film and Tamil Nadu politics.
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Movie Review: Cars - Not As Bad As Made Out To Be

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#1
neville
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October 25, 2006
05:07 PM

i loved the movie and its sentiment. i agree it may not be as super as "finding nemo" as its easier to relate to father and kid than to someone else's way of life in the US. sorta like an animated swades ?

it has super animation and also Micheal Schumacher gives his voice as a Ferrari

#2
nandhu
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October 26, 2006
11:45 AM

i remember everybody cheered when michael shumacher appeared!

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