Le Petit Dinosaure: L'Invasion des Minisaurus
Les Minisaurus envahissent la Grande Vallée pour donner à Petit-Pied une leçon importante au sujet d'un petit mensonge et lui montrer que héros, amis et familles peuvent se présenter sous un... Tout lireLes Minisaurus envahissent la Grande Vallée pour donner à Petit-Pied une leçon importante au sujet d'un petit mensonge et lui montrer que héros, amis et familles peuvent se présenter sous une multitude de formes.Les Minisaurus envahissent la Grande Vallée pour donner à Petit-Pied une leçon importante au sujet d'un petit mensonge et lui montrer que héros, amis et familles peuvent se présenter sous une multitude de formes.
- Narrator
- (voix)
- …
- Ducky
- (voix)
- Petrie
- (voix)
- Littlefoot
- (voix)
- Spike
- (voix)
- …
- Cera
- (voix)
- …
- Lizzie
- (voix)
- (as Cree Summer-Francks)
- …
- Skitter
- (voix)
- Rocky
- (voix)
- Dusty
- (voix)
- (as Ashley Orr)
- Ducky's Mom
- (voix)
- …
- Tria
- (voix)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis is the only film in the series to not get a HD remaster as of right now.
- GaffesStars in front of the crescent moon.
- Citations
Topsy: Cera, are you awake? Look, I um... it's just... I, um... It's just that... Oh, this is so much harder than yelling. Look, Tria is an old friend and she doesn't have anyone. She needs protection and she's really nice. What I mean is... Well, she likes me and I like her.
Cera: But I want things back the way they were before. When you didn't like anybody and nobody likes you.
Topsy: I don't think things are ever going to be that way again.
Cera: Hmm!
[Cera sniffles and tears come out of her eyes]
- ConnexionsEdited from Le Petit Dinosaure: Petit-Pied et son nouvel ami (1994)
- Bandes originalesCreepy Crawlies
Written by Michele Brourman and Amanda McBroom
Performed by John Ingle, Tress MacNeille, Jeff Bennett, Camryn Manheim,
Kenneth Mars, Miriam Flynn and George Ball
Curiously, the primary trouble to catch my attention here is one of tonal disparity. By and large this flick fits right in with its brethren, certainly - maintaining a light and playful tone; blending notes of adventure and drama with humor; and ultimately serving up some life lessons before all is said and done, including telling the truth and taking responsibility, and disagreements between friends and family. Yet long before those life lessons specifically come into focus, there is a withering darkness visible just under the surface that Grosvenor and Loy try to cloak in the lighthearted tenor. Just listen to the first song "Creepy crawlies," and note the thoughts brought out in the surrounding scenes and dialogue: a core narrative thrust is the intent of the herds of the Great Valley to carry out a pogrom against the tinysauruses, using words like "hunt" and "exterminate." The goose-stepping hyenas in 'The lion king' were on the nose, but the accompanying tone was appropriately harrowing; how is it that, more than ten years later, Grosvenor and Loy thought that sugarcoating the material with jovial merriment was the right course of action? For that matter, is that central thrust not unwisely going far darker than has been the norm for TLBT in the first place?
Granted, it's not as if the whole picture is tightly zeroed in on villagers raising torches and pitchforks in a mob. There is meaningful humor, and more than that, there ARE important themes on hand regarding unjust persecution of a marginalized community, scapegoating, oppressive authorities rewarding ordinary people for betraying the most vulnerable among them, and lies being used to prop up dangerous policies. Not least in 2024, these ideas are entirely too real and relevant, and so is the vitality, innocence, and value of the community in question. I further question the strong secondary story thread of Cera having daddy issues, but it is suitably woven into the proceedings - and anyway, it's possible I'm too being too cynical and jaded. More than not the feature is kith and kin with its antecedents, for better and for worse: uncomplicated writing, but also sincere themes and concepts; somewhat ham-handed songs, but songs that are a little catchy and well done in and of themselves, and a splendid score; and admirable voice acting from a reliable cast, including regulars, industry icons, and guest stars Camryn Manheim and Michael Clarke Duncan. I won't even nitpick the animation this time, and the visual experience is great, including beautiful and detailed backgrounds, character designs, action sequences, and other active elements.
And we do get a suitably compelling story. We get firm scene writing, and characterizations, and a capable blend of that trifecta of adventure, drama, and humor. Loy's writing is swell overall, and so is Grosvenor's direction. I do in fact like 'Invasion of the tinysauruses'; it's solid, with significant notions at play. It's just that it doesn't fully stand out in any way as some of the previous entries managed to do - and when we take into account the severe gulf between the seriousness of the underlying ideas, and the familiar, light-footed vibe the movie otherwise adopts, something critical feels very off. I don't necessarily think that it would have taken much to rework the screenplay into a more cohesive form, either, as the dialogue, characterizations, and scene writing could have been softened without diminishing the weight of the tale and its core themes. Such refinement is a small ask for a readily discernible fault.
One way or another, like most of the 'Land before time' sequels, there's no need to go out of your way for this, and here especially it behooves one to be aware of how it struggles. Despite it all, however, if you do have the chance to watch, there are far worse ways to spend your time, and maybe after all 'Invasion of the tinysauruses' is all that it needed to be.
- I_Ailurophile
- 30 nov. 2024
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Land Before Time XI: Invasion of the Tinysauruses
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 22 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1