Reviewed by Peter
Veugelaers © 2004
- Almost phony baloney
It
is a Christmas movie cliché by now. Frank Capra’s classic It’s a Wonderful Life
has been the exemplar to which all other holiday fare is compared, but which all
contain a similar message: do not doubt, “believe” in what you cannot see
because it is real.
Not in the same league as Steven Spielberg fantasies, such as E.T., The Polar
Express is directed by Robert Zemeckis, who procured work under Spielberg’s
producer mantle with Back to the Future. Now a bonafide box office drawcard,
producer/director Zemeckis’ latest is endearing and sentimental, warm hearted
holiday escapism, and conceived and produced elegantly. Although the surreal
animation is spectacular the movie is a bore.
Zemeckis
is a versatile director. There is usually a good natured feel-good streak in his
films although the subject matter varies: Romancing the Stone, Castaway,
Contact, Forrest Gump and Who Framed Roger Rabbit, to mention several. The Polar
Express is no exception.
Big on ideas and the utilisation of technology, like with his groundbreaking
live action animation in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Zemeckis and the studios
bankrolled a quarter of one million U.S. dollars into the production, marketing
and distribution of The Polar Express.
Over a quarter of that was spent on “performance capture” animation techniques.
This is what Peter Jackson and the Weta special effects team did on The Lord of
the Rings with Gollum, played by Andy Serkis. Sensors are attached to actors
while their performances are captured by camera and tracked by computer, later
to be digitised, downloaded into computers and superimposed into the animated
world. The Polar Express is therefore unique in animation.
It is for this reason that the movie is a milestone technologically although
the story of a boy’s awakening to the spirit of Christmas has trouble convincing
in the facial and bodily mannerisms of its characters.
A train called the Polar Express pulls up outside the boy’s home headed for the
North Pole. The doubting Thomas boy’s curiosity gets the better of him and with
several other children – two of which are prominent supporting players – finds
out whether Santa and the elves are real.
The animation long shots of The North Pole and locomotive hurtling through the
region are stunning and according to Zemeckis the animation was intended to
capture the source material paintings by Chris Van Allsburg. It is visually
memorable.
Tom Hanks plays five roles; his outing as the train conductor disguises the
animation’s faults because of the character’s moustache hiding his mouth. He
also performs the key character – the young boy – the boy’s father, a hobo,
scrooge and Santa.
There is no doubt this is meant to be a fantasy but which offers the allurement
and magic of the premise without letting on it is a fantasy. Perhaps there is a
Santa after all. Perhaps we should believe. In this it is charmingly illusive.
But as a blind faith sermon for movie goers it is blatantly obvious and hardly
in-depth neither brimming with the flesh of theology in spite of its meaningful
intentions or neither resonating as it could.
This escapism is undemanding viewing but the artifice can only go so far.
Zemeckis reportedly said that using computer animation as in the The Incredibles
would have been too cartoonish, and live action as in Dr Seuss' How the Grinch
Stole Christmas would detract from the emotion and charm of the (Allsburg’s)
pictures. What emotion?
After an eventful start and plenty of disorientating shots of roller coaster
rides where the plot moves to a standstill the pace slackens to the flat climax.
The message, sentimentality, and nuances are uninvolving. On one level the
characters are endearing, but that is as close as you can get. It is merely
manufactured (and well meaning) appeal. Still, it is likeable on that level of
artificiality.