Rango Blu-ray Review — Rango, Django, Bingo, Bongo, this animated film is a real treat
Posted on : 11-07-2011 | By : admin | In : Blu-ray movies
Tags: Blu-ray Ragon on HD Media player, Critic Reviews for Rango, Ragon Blu-ray Playing back Solutions, Ragon Blu-ray Reviews
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Rango Blu-ray Review
Genre:Action & Adventure, Animation, Kids & Family
Blu-ray Rating:
4.5
>>>Ragon Blu-ray Movie info:
Source: Ragon Blu-ray Review
Just when a pet chameleon (voiced by Johnny Depp) with dreams of making it big in show business finally figures out what his stories need to succeed — an unexpected event leading to great conflict — he suddenly finds his life imitating would-be great art. He’s accidentally ripped away from his human family of caregivers and left stranded in the middle of the dry and practically inhospitable Mojave Desert, and he assumes the worst when his first encounter is with a flattened armadillo (voiced by Alfred Molina) and a hungry hawk who sees in the chameleon a satisfying dinner. The pet-turned-wanderer survives the ordeal and happens upon a poor iguana rancher named Beans (Isla Fisher) who’s stricken with a particular problem but takes pity on the lost, lonely, and thirsty chameleon and takes him back to her hometown of Dirt where water is a prized commodity. Unfortunately, the local bank’s running low on the precious liquid, and the town’s on edge. When the chameleon — who’s chosen to take on the name Rango — tells tall tales of his make-belive heroics and manages to kill a flying menace out of sheer dumb luck, he’s named Dirt’s newest sheriff, a job he accepts, may not be very good at, but that promises to teach him a few things about himself while, just maybe, he can use his newfound clout to pull Dirt back from the brink of thirsty despair while he’s at it.

>>> Critic Reviews for Rango
Rango is a great success for a myriad of reasons, though all generally fall under either the “story” or “technical” umbrellas.Just when you thought you’d seen everything, here comes Chinatown, the animated version. With his first animated feature, Pirates of the Caribbean director Gore Verbinski shows ambitions considerably beyond producing the usual standard of most children’s fare. To put it plainly, Rango is one weird movie.Indeed, the film can get away with its structural irrelevancy and thematic vacancy because of both its visual separation from the crowd and its total commitment to playing things as tonally straight as possible. At its most fundamental level, Rango in no way separates itself from the pack with a core that delivers a true but very broad and way overused theme that espouses self-respect, commitment to a goal, finding courage from within, standing up for what is right, and coming together as a community to overcome even the most difficult obstacle. While all of these give Rango both an admirable purpose and a terribly generic feel all at once, the themes, like the recycled plot and various genre homages, actually work to the film’s benefit because they are so perfectly integrated into a whole that’s as charming as it is action-packed and as funny as it is at times darkly serious and even downright frightening.
Rango is without a doubt one of the finest looking digitally-animated movies ever made, and one could easily make a case for it being the absolute best of its kind. Even audiences becoming accustomed to brushing off the leaps and bounds by which the technology continues to impress with every yearly onslaught of digital films will be forced to marvel at the dazzling details and lifelike textures that abound in Rango. The movie is even worth seeing twice just give it its due on a purely technical level. Most of the film borders on fooling the brain into believing that it’s live action; the textures on everything from reptilian skin to the smallest little wooden nuances within the town of Dirt are simply dazzling. Digital hairs and dusty terrains flow with startling realism, and even the “flat” 2D image takes on a perceptible shape and life all its own. Debate the merits of the movie all the livelong day, but there’s absolutely no denying the visual splendor with which it plays out, and only theater patrons and Blu-ray viewers traveling back in time from ten years into the future could legitimately gripe at the level of technical proficiency evident in every frame.

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