| Index | 4 reviews in total |
9 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Confusing and forced, 11 April 2001
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Author:
wbwolf from Everett, WA
It's obvious from the get go that the latest direct to video offering that
some serious troubles plauged this project. Produced by the same team that
made the "Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries" TV series, we know these guys can
do quality work. Sadly, it is not on display here. The video starts off
with a contrived plot, when Col. Rimfire (long time nemesis to Cool Cat who
was a mid 1960s Looney Tunes character and a favorite cameo in SaTM)
challenged Granny (inexplicably in London) that Tweety can out smart 80 cats
and fly around the world in 80 days. We also get a subplot that Col.
Rimfire fortunes when Granny wins the bet will go to saving an adjecent
park. Why the park needs saving is never explained, but doesn't really
matter.
This sets off the main body of the video, where Tweety travels from place to
place, outsmarting the local cat population and Sylvester to boot. Somehow
there is an additional subplot of a London thug wanting to steal
Tweety's royal passport. This again is never really developed and seems
tacked on. Mostly we have Tweety traveling from place to place and
encountering a range of Looney Tunes characters (Bugs and Daffy in the Swiss
Alps, Pepe Le Pew in Paris, Pete Puma in Africa, Rocky and Mugsy in Rio de
Jenerio and so on). It should also be noted that Lola Bunny makes her first
fully animated appearance (as opposed to Space Jam) as a news anchor.
But it is Tweety's travels that the real weakness of the piece shows up.
The trip first of all makes no logical order. Tweety is suppose to go from
London and back in 80 days. Yet, he goes from London to Switzerland and
then back to Paris, then "Africa" to Egypt to Tibet to South America (!)
then back to Yokohama then to Australia then to San Francisco to Las Vegas
to Pittsburgh to Chicago to New York then finally back to London. This
haphazard plotting is made worse by a number of animation mistakes that made
it into the final print. Some were covered by ADR. The most noticable
example was when Sylvester is chasing Hubie and Bertie (two mice) on a ship.
Sylvester gets hit in the face with a frying pan, but after the cut back the
frying pan is gone. In the soundtrack you hear Hubie noting, "Don't ask me
what happened to the frying pan." The end result is an entirely rushed and
under budget product.
Not that the source material was that great to start off with. Tweety, one
of my least favorite LT characters, is even more unappealing in this piece,
given a lot of very lame lines. The new characters, Aooogah, a female
canary that Tweety saves in Tibet, is really cipher; nothing more than
someone for Tweety to save. Thankfully, this piece has a minimum of songs,
but even the normally reliable Randy Rogel can't do anything interesting
here. The same can be said of the voice acting. Joe Alasky
(the voice of Tweety, Sylvester and Daffy Duck) is fine in his core roles,
but he is far overused, doing characters he's not used to doing and it
shows.
Overall, this is a piece that might've been interesting, but instead went
horribly wrong.
Does have its good moments, but it was overall too rushed and episodic, 24 March 2010
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Author:
TheLittleSongbird from United Kingdom
I will start off saying I really wanted to like this film. It sounded
really promising, with a decent voice cast and Tweety, who while I
prefer other toons I actually like. It was just the matter of a good
story and script- sadly while Tweety's High Flying Adventure had its
good moments there were some departments where it was sorely lacking.
ANIMATION: I am not going to lie and say it is perfect, because it is
not. What I will say is that I have seen a lot worse, but I have also
seen better. It lacks the sophisticated and beautiful backgrounds of
those wonderful Looney Tunes cartoons made during the 40s-60s, but some
of the backgrounds here did have a sense of colour and vibrancy
particularly the London watercolours. Tweety's animation is okay, as is
Sylvester's, though Granny especially looks deflated.
MUSIC: The best way to describe the music here is pleasant but
forgettable. By all means children will lap it up, but adults and fans
of the original cartoons are likely not to be as impressed. The lyrics
are cute though and the melodies singable, but forgettable after a few
days. "The Best Thing You Can Win Is A Friend" is surprisingly touching
though.
STORY: I think this was the biggest failing here. Now I liked the idea,
but the story structure was too episodic. There are parts where either
little happens or there is a lot happening. Pacing will come under this
as well, because there are parts that drag quite badly, but some of
Tweety's adventures are rushed and sometimes underdeveloped and
unexplained.
LENGTH: The film is too short, because of that we don't empathise with
the characters that much.
SCRIPT: Kids like with the music will appreciate it, but being a
teenage fan of the original cartoons, I missed the razor-sharp dialogue
and the witty exchanges. There are one or two gags that are mildly
interesting but somehow it didn't feel the same.
CHARACTERS: I love the Looney Tunes characters in general, but without
the script and story being as good as it could've been, they felt
somewhat stranded. I like Tweety a lot, I think he is cute, but as a
lead even I have to admit he is pretty bland. Bugs and Daffy are much
stronger lead characters, and some of my favourite Looney Tunes
cartoons(ie. What's Opera Doc and Duck Amuck) have them in. It really
is fun seeing these zany characters here, but that's the problem, they
aren't zany enough, and there are some scenes where there are two
characters put together and it doesn't work. Taz works better with
Bugs, who can manipulate him easily, than with Sylvester, who works
better as the toon who gave the laughs. Same with him and Yosemite Sam
together. Plus I don't think the contemporary references worked well
either, it felt quite jarring to be honest with you. Awooga, Tweety's
girlfriend, is very cute and beautiful on the other hand.
VOICES: Pretty decent. June Foray is delightful as Granny, then again
Foray is a brilliant voice actress who can act anything and do it well.
Jeff Bennett does well, as does Jim Cummings, however Joe Alaskey was a
disappointment. Don't get me wrong, Alaskey is a great voice actor, but
he was over-used. If the producers had given him less to do, he
wouldn't have felt so overwhelmed. And I have to confess, sorry, I miss
Mel Blanc's fiery delivery that made the original cartoons so
enjoyable.
OVERALL: Cute for kids, and pleasant to watch, but too rushed, episodic
and bland to be any more than that. 4/10 Bethany Cox
not as high flying as Tweety would have it, 17 May 2009
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Author:
lemoviecritic from United States
As another reviewer noted - with the jumbled cities in the different
countries. This story missed a great teaching lesson to children on
geography. It actually hinders a child's geographical knowledge. A real
shame. The story skipped along too fast on more interesting scenarios
in favor of less interesting ones that it seemed to drag on. The script
wasn't sharp and up to feature length standards. So is more suitable
for kids than adults.
I found it very annoying that so many of the flying scenes and even
scenes on the ground showed Tweety without his passport which had to be
with him at all times to have it stamped by the consul representative
and of course the required 80 cat paw signatures. Terrible continuity
on that. The passport appeared and disappeared at will so many times.
Tweety just wasn't all that character driven - we didn't' see him flex
his acting muscles as he does in his better cartoons. I'm an adult fan
of animation. I would not view this a second time, barely held some of
my interest.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
High Flying fun!, 2 July 2006
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Author:
Brian T. Whitlock (GOWBTW) from WILMINGTON, NC
Out of all the Looney Tunes possible, Tweety deserve a chance in a adventure. He gets to go on a bet to save a park made by Col. Rimfire. Granny(June Foray) is always confident on what Tweety can do, but beware of Sylvester The Cat, he always had his beady eyes on that canary, however when Tweety had to get 80 paw-prints, Sylvester must prevent the other cats from having him. Going from country to country is a risky, yet fun task for Tweety, then he meets this other lady canary named Aoogah! Sounds funny, but that's her name. She helps a lot through the trek and keeps Sylvester at bay. Other than that conniving feline, there's this thief who stole a Royal Passport resembles The Shropshire Slasher! He gets the passport, but should kept track on where he places his fish-n-chips. Friends and foes sing along, but it's always the hero who makes all the way. If it hasn't been for Aoogah, Tweety would have tasted defeat, and would have been chow for Sylvester. If it haven't been for Sylvester, Tweety would have been chow for the other cats. A very fun, but moving cartoon, way too fun for commercial interruptions. I don't need that. Rating 5 Stars!
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