The Angry Birds Movie
Dir: Clay Kaytis, Fergal Reilly
2016
**
It seems that for the last thirty years or so, if anything is
even vaguely successful, no matter what it is, if it has made a lot of money, a
movie will be made of it. Computer games have been adapted into movies far less
successfully than movies have been adapted into games in the past and I'm
afraid the Angry Birds have upheld this time-honoured tradition. For those
living in a cave for the last seven years, Angry Birds is a computer game
available for download on smart-phones and tablets. It involves pulling birds
on a giant catapult and firing them into structures. The aim of the game is to
kill several green pigs that sit within these structures because said pigs have
stolen the bird’s eggs. Why the pigs have stolen the eggs, why the pigs are
green and why the birds explode/drop exploding eggs/enlarge/separate themselves
into three/reverse is never explained, and nor would anyone expect it to be.
It’s a game that is played while waiting, commuting to work or excreting (at
home or at work). Colourful and zany games sell better than ones that look
dull, it doesn’t take a behavioural scientist to work that one out, it is
simple, catchy and very playable. I’ve completed the game several times, each
time I do I wipe my score and play again, it’s timeless much like Tetris, but
with far more variety. It has sold a lot of merchandise and its fifteen minutes
seems to have been extended somewhat, so a film was inevitable. The big
question is, how do you make a story out of such a simple but bizarre game? For
my money Rovio and Sony didn’t pick their best story, in fact, I think it was
most likely their first and only idea. By giving the game a structured story
they really do wander into a misguided minefield of what could be seen as quite
a sinister look at immigration, racism and social uprising based on mistrust
and a lack of faith in leadership. Of course that would be taking it all too
seriously, Rovio and Sony have already made that mistake but the overall
message isn’t great and is somewhat of an oversight. There are a couple of
funny moments that hit the spot but these are few and far between. To be
honest, this film gave me a real headache. It’s all a little too much, a little
haphazard with far too much going on at one time. They almost get the characters
right but the whole idea is as contentious as it gets. It’s too adult for kids
and too childish for adults. My favourite character in the film (The Mighty
Eagle – played by Peter Dinklage) isn’t even in the game and I think I like him
best because he is clearly a copy of Scuttle (The Little Mermaid) and a Jim
Henson creation. The voice work is fine (Sean Penn’s ‘input’ did make me
chuckle) and the animation is good but seeing the two kids sat in front of me
in the cinema, asking their mum if they could play on her phone instead of
watching the film said it all. She was playing Candy Crush.
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