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CARS-LIGHTING MCQUEEN
I loved this movie, and There's
an extra coat of hot wax on Pixar's vibrant, NASCAR-influenced
comedy about a world populated entirely by cars. Lightning
McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson) is the slick rookie taking the
Piston Cup series by storm when the last race of the season (the
film's high-octane opening) ends in a three-way tie. On the way
to the tie-breaker race in California, Lightning loses his way
off Route 66 in the Southwest desert and is taught to stop and
smell the roses by the forgotten citizens of Radiator Springs.
It's odd to have such a slim story from the whizzes of Pixar,
and the film pales a bit from their other films (though can that
be a fair comparison?). Nonetheless, Cars is another
gleaming ride with Pixar founder John Lasseter, who's directing
for the first time since Toy Story 2. There's the usual
spectrum of excellent characters teamed with appropriate voice
talent, loads of smooth humor for kids and parents alike,
knockout visuals, and a colorful array of sidekicks, including a
scene-stealing baby blue forklift named Guido. Lightning's
plight is changed with the help of former big-city lawyer Sally
Carrera (Pixar veteran Bonnie Hunt), the town's patriarch Doc
Hudson (Paul Newman), and kooky tow truck Mater (Larry the Cable
Guy). The Incredibles was the first Pixar film to break
the 100-minute barrier, but had enough story not to suffer;
Cars, at 116 minutes (including some must-see end credit
footage), is not as fortunate, plus it never pierces the heart.
Trivia fans should have bonanza with the frame-by-frame DVD
function; the movie is stuffed with in-jokes, some appearing
only for an instant. Ages 5 and up. --Doug Thomas
DVD features
With the slimmest extras package for a Pixar film debuting on
DVD, Cars still shines for home viewing. As with earlier
digital-to-digital transfers, the film sounds and looks
stunning. There is only one behind-the-scenes feature, a
16-minute cursory but entertaining glance at director John
Lasseter's influences (his dad was a car-parts manager),
including some of the real-life inspiration for the film such as
Michael Wallis's influential book on Route 66 (he also voiced
the sheriff). There's a new cartoon for the DVD, "Mater and
Ghost Light," which is smile-inducing at best. Four deleted
scenes (in storybook format with voices) also show a darker tone
the movie may have taken at one point. Best is the adorable
short "One Man Band" that showed theatrically with the film, and
the film's credit sequence can be seen full screen without the
credits (and find the Easter egg for an extended version). Not a
tricked-out DVD, but still worth a spin. --Doug Thomas
This is a clean awesome movie and I really enjoyed it with the family!