Alpha & Omega (2010/Lionsgate Blu-ray w/DVD) + Black
Panther (2010/Marvel Knights/Marvel Comics/Shout! Factory DVD) + Charlie Brown’s Christmas Tales (Warner
DVD)
Picture: B-
& C/C+/C+ Sound: B- & C/C+/C+ Extras: C-/C/C+ Features: C-/C/C+
Animation
is all over the place, but that does not mean it is good. It remains a big market and an expensive
proposition to produce, so despite the advent of digital animation and what
would seem to be other cost-cutting innovations, we are getting many animated
releases that are really not that much better than the limited kind that TV
brought in. A look at three new releases
shows us this.
Lionsgate
has issued a new computer animated feature Alpha
& Omega (2010) that is yet another animal-gets-lost-and-needs-to-get-home
parable. We have seen this a ton of
times and at least doing a charming job would help, even if the CG animation is
not the best, but the script has lame dialogue and the whole production relies
too much on being a feel-good comedy that never works. Justin Long, Hayden Panettiere, Danny Glover
and Christina Ricci are among those who do voices, but the highlight is some of
the last work ever by Dennis Hopper, who steals his voicing scenes and makes this
more of a curio that it otherwise would be.
Too bad this is not too memorable.
Extras on this Blu-0ray release include the DVD with Digital Copy for PC
and PC portable devices, animal fun facts trivia, Personality Test, Deleted Scenes, “Log Sliding” interactive game
and four featurettes including Wolves In
The Wild, The Alpha Of Animation,
Voicing The Wolves and From Alpha To Omega.
Shout!
Factory continues their Marvel Knights animated DVDs with Black Panther, voiced by Djimon Hounsou in a Reginald Hudlin/John
Romita Jr. piece set in WWII with the older, original Panther including
encounters with invading Nazis and a young Captain America. This is not bad and I wish it had been
longer, but I also thought it was better than the previous Iron Man installment (reviewed elsewhere on this site) and fans
will be happy enough. Extras include
trailers, a Music Video and a Looking
Back featurette with Hudlin, all worth seeing after watching the main
program.
That
leaves us with Charlie Brown’s Christmas
Tales, which offers more holiday fun with the Peanuts gang, though only the
main program, an amusing 2002 follow up to the 1965 classic A Charlie Brown Christmas (on Blu-ray
and DVD elsewhere on this site). Fans
will note that It’s Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown is another sequel
that is included on both format versions of that release. Like that sequel, this has fun with the gang
trying to find more happiness during the holiday and sometimes stumbling, but
it is done in the tradition of the others and is entertaining, if short. Longer is the bonus program, Is The Goodbye, Charlie Brown? (1983), in
which Linus and Lucy are on their way to moving out of the neighborhood for
good. An interesting bonus and one worth
seeing. Trailers for other Peanuts on
DVD are the only extra.
Alpha’s Blu-ray offers a sort of soft
1080p 1.78 X 1 digital High Definition image that is like Legend Of The Guardians (reviewed elsewhere on this site), but
worse with styling marred by a lack of definition. The DVD of Alpha (watered down and weaker still than the Blu-ray) and Panther are anamorphically enhanced 1.78
X 1, but Panther looks a little
better, though it too can be soft, the animation is simpler and actually is a
little more effective. That leaves the
two 1.33 X 1 transfers on the Peanuts
DVD that have good color, but can lack definition and detail, though it may be
more so after seeing how decent some of the classics on Blu-ray look. They also have the best color of these three
releases.
Alpha has a limited DTS-HD MA (Master
Audio) 5.1 lossless sound mix that does not have a consistent soundfield and is
too much toward the front speakers, made worse in the thinner Dolby Digital 5.1
mix on the DVD. Panther has a Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo mix that is not bad, but
could be better, while the Peanuts
installments have Dolby Digital Mono that is as clean as can be expected for
the format.
- Nicholas Sheffo