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Latest ‘Ice Age’ franchise misses former fun

Film’s flat acting, visuals on par with straight-to-video

By Katie Walsh, Tribune News Service
Published: July 22, 2016, 5:37am

Fourteen years after the first “Ice Age” animated film was a hit, the fifth installment in the franchise, “Ice Age: Collision Course,” rolls into theaters. Is it inevitable? Yes, 2012’s “Ice Age: Continental Drift,” was the highest grossing animated film that year. Is it necessary? Absolutely not. “Collision Course” is simply a perfunctory, watered-down entry in the series that feels like it should have been released on home video.

In this world of ancient animals — woolly mammoths, saber-toothed tigers, flying dino-birds — facing apocalyptic, era-shifting, asteroid-borne problems, it feels profoundly odd that the emotional stakes of the film are centered around the wedding of Manny (Ray Romano) and Ellie’s (Queen Latifah) daughter Peaches (Keke Palmer). Not to get too nit-picky about a fantastical film for children where a group of animals blow up a bunch of crystals in a volcano to set an asteroid off course, but the concept of marriage is decidedly anachronistic here. Also, they’re animals. When anything’s possible, centering a story around something as mundanely heteronormative as a wedding feels wildly unimaginative.

Romano’s Manny remains the heart of the group, but the chemistry and the writing between the characters is profoundly lacking. It’s almost as if they seem to be on separate, equally underdeveloped storylines. The most time is given to Manny’s issues with his immature future son-in-law, Julian (Adam DeVine), who plans to move away with Peaches after their wedding, in a sort of “Father of the Bride”-style storyline. The other characters are granted tossed-off story scraps as they are led on a hunt for magnetic crystals by the swashbuckling Buck (Simon Pegg).

Nothing comes together in “Ice Age: Collision Course,” which feels like the franchise grinding to a disappointing halt. Despite all the star power involved, the voice acting performances don’t inspire, the visuals are basic, and in 3-D, dark and dim. This would work much better as weekend background home entertainment, where the patchwork story and humdrum design can be easily looked over.

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