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I mentioned this in Fear of Rain, but it’s still rather odd to me how quickly films come out on home video now that theaters are in a post Covid-19 era. The sequel to the 2013 film The Croods hit theaters and PVOD for a few short weeks, only to jump straight to home video as quickly as possible so that Dreamworks and Universal could cash in as quickly as possible. For those who watched the gorgeously animated 2013 original, A New Age is really more of the same, just with a slightly less heart than the nearly 8 year old original. It’s an excuse to hang out with our neanderthal characters and have some goofy fun. It’s never top tier Dreamworks movie making, but everyone involved is obviously having a blast, and the movie is never bad in any way.
Grug (Nicolas Cage) and his family have moved on from meeting Guy (Ryan Reynolds) last movie. Eep (Emma Stone) and Guy are now madly in teenage angsty love (lovingly lampooned throughout the film) and driving Grug nuts. Grug is coming to the ever so common fatherly realization that his family is going to be a person shorter as Eep is approaching the age where she and Guy will want to start their own “pack” as Grug so abrasively yells at the screen. His worry turns into a nightmare for everyone when he tracks down a utopia of fresh food in a walled off garden where he can be the hero for everyone. Sadly for Grug things turn out the exact opposite he intended. Instead of unifying the pack it makes things worse when they run into the Bettermans (played by Leslie Mann and Peter Dinklage), a modern couple who have moved on from caves and sloped foreheads to a more evolved state.
As I said above, The Croods: A New Age is more of the same. The film blends cheeky humor with over the top familial strife and basically replicates many of the themes of the first movie. Nicolas Cage is still over the top as the patriarch of the family, and Emma Stone and Ryan Reynolds ham it up with their awkward teen romance. That being said, the film is a little TOO much of the same thing. The crow-magnon family squabbles was fun the first time around, but this time it feels a bit too much like an Ice Age sequel. A bit thin, a bit rehashed, but still fun enough to chuckle at while stuffing popcorn down your face (which I actually did, you can’t watch a movie without popcorn in my opinion).
The best way of describing The Croods: A New World is a film that is designed strictly to hang out. The over arching plot of the two dads dealing with their children’s growing up is pretty typical, but most of the time we’re just spending time with the Bettermans and the Croods and chuckling at antics while enjoying a pretty picture. It’s not offensive, it’s not boring, but it’s never overly exciting either. It’s just plain popcorn fluff with great animation.
Rating:
Rated PG for peril, action and rude humor.
4K Video: Video:
Audio:
Extras:
• DEAR DIARY: WORLD'S FIRST PRANKS - In this exclusive original short film, Eep reveals how a comical accident led her and Dawn to discover the joys of tricking their families and set about performing "the world's first pranks"
• FAMILY MOVIE NIGHT: LITTLE RED BRONANA BREAD - In another exclusive original short, join the Croods as they settle down for a very prehistoric family movie night experience. With shadowy figures around every corner, Eep must keep Gran and her delicious Bronana Bread safe from punch monkeys.
• GAG REEL
• TO: GERARD - In this original DreamWorks animated short, an elderly man brightens the day of a little girl through magic.
• DELETED SCENES
• THE CROODS' FAMILY ALBUM - Meet the actors who portray the Croods and their new cast members, the Bettermans. What makes them tick, how do they resemble their characters and what lessons have they learned from making the film.
• THE EVOLUTION OF... - In this fun making of, we hear from the filmmakers and stars of THE CROODS: A NEW AGE about the evolution of the Croods franchise.
• HOW TO DRAW: CAVEMAN STYLE - Join one of DreamWorks talented illustrators inside the cave as they demonstrate how to draw our favorite characters.
• FAMILEAF ALBUM - Inspired by the prehistoric family album given to guy by the Betterman's, we create a fun video showing you how to make your own using real leaves or green construction paper for pages and string (or even dental floss!) to hold it all together.
• STONE AGE ATTACK - A three-part featurette highlighting fun, easy to make recipes that kids and parents can make together.
• Optional English, French Canadian, and Latin American Spanish subtitles for the main feature
Final Score:
The Croods: A New Age is an unassuming and unoffensive effort from Dreamworks that really doesn’t aim all that high. I’m not saying it’s bad by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s not aiming for Shrek or How to Train Your Dragon heights. The cast are having a ball with the animated flick, and the 4K UHD disc is a solid entry, especially with all of the extras that the disc gets. Worth a solid rental at least.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Emma Stone, Ryan Reynolds, Catherine Keener, Leslie Mann, Peter Dinklage, Kelly Marie Tran
Directed by: Joel Crawford
Written by: Kevin Hagerman, Dan Hagerman, Paul Fisher, Bog Logan
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 HEVC
Audio: English: Dolby Atmos (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 Core), Spanish DD+ 7.1, French DD 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, French, Spanish
Studio: Universal
Rated: PG
Runtime: 96 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: February 23rd, 2021
Recommendation: Decent Rental
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