Pirate with a Scarf (voiced by Martin Freeman), left, and Pirate Captain (voiced by Hugh Grant) star in âThe Pirates! Band of Misfits.â
Aardman Animation for Sony Pictures Animation via
Thereâs an inviolable law of animated films â" the more ânamesâ you have in the voice cast, the weaker you know your film is.
Aardman, those meticulous Brits who build clay models and painstakingly animate them into Wallace & Gromit cartoons and the hit âChicken Run,â tip their hand that way with âThe Pirates! Band of Misfits.â A pirate picture thatâs entirely too late to the party to have much in the line of fresh pirate gags, it is stuffed with name voice actors, from Hugh Grant as The Pirate Captain to Salma Hayek, Brendan Gleeson, Imelda Stanton, Anton Yelchin and Jeremy Piven.
And all of them sat in a recording booth and struggled to find funny things to say or funny ways to say the not-so-funny things in the script. Amusing in small doses, âPiratesâ is the first Aardman film to suffer a serious shortage of sight gags, the first where the whimsy feels forced and the strain shows.
Hugh Grantâs Pirate Captain (thatâs his name) is all Hugh Grant stutter and âglittering eyes and glorious beard.â As a pirate, heâs something of a bust, even though his crew adores him. He figures heâs due for the âPirate of the Yearâ award. But heâs always come up short in the booty and pillaging department. Thereâs always a Cutlass Liz (Salma Hayek), Peg Leg Hastings (Lenny Henry) or Black Bellamy (Jeremy Piven) to beat him to the podium.
And so it appears it will be in the 1837 awards, until he captures Charles Darwin (David Tennant), a scientist who craves fame as much as The Pirate Captain. And Darwin recognizes the Captainâs pet âparrot,â Polly, as something altogether more amazing. Sheâs the last Dodo bird.
Darwin talks The Pirate Captain into sailing to Britain, under the nose of pirate-hating Queen Victoria (Imelda Staunton), where Darwin hopes to present the bird to The Royal Society, whose entryway is marked âPlaying God since 1807.â
So youâve got pirates roughly 120 years after their heyday, and a scheming Darwin paired with his evolved chimp pal, a âMan Pan Zee,â he calls him. Youâve got other scientists, hoping to win acclaim with everything from airships to a Rubikâs Cube. You have competing pirates, all swagger and swordplay.
What you donât have is a lot of laughs. Backing the ship up, we hear the âbeep beep beepsâ of every modern minivan.
The Pirate Captain amusingly attacks all manner of un-lucrative prey â" a ghost ship, a school âfield tripâ ship, a plague ship (changed from a leper ship after leprosy-advocacy groups complained).
Those of us who love Aardman will appreciate the gorgeous attention to detail, made sharper (not much sharper) by 3-D. But âPiratesâ plays like a fussy film made by fussy little fussbudgets.
Fans know that the weakest Aardman films are still richer and more rewarding than any âShrek,â âCarsâ or âIce Ageâ picture. But as long as these films take to make, as expensive as they are to do, itâs almost tragic when they spend their efforts rounding up big-name misfits, and then give them so little mischief to get into.
â" Roger Moore is a film critic for McClatchy-Tribune News Service.
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