Delhi safari review
The animation is just OK, a good first effort from small Krayon Pictures, but not close to where it needs to be in comparison to the great work being produced these days by Disney, Pixar, Sony, DreamWorks and Blue Sky. A little tighter editing would have helped. The translation from Indian to English may be to blame for parts of the story that just seem out of place. And some of the characters are pretty bizarre. However, the film could have used fewer songs because they make the journey of these animals go on way too long. And who doesn’t like a good Bollywood production number! It does a nice job of making it’s “save the animals/save the planet” stance clear to it’s target audience – little kids – without hitting them over the head with it. The strong points of “Delhi Safari” are the message and the music.
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But before they can get to have their say the animals go through a series of adventures, and take part in several musical numbers, which, of course, Bollywood films are famous for. But, even though they can all talk to and understand each other, only one of them can speak to humans – a wise cracking parrot named Alex (voiced by Tom Kenny).
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The story of “Delhi Safari” centers around a leopard cub named Yuvi, who witnesses his father’s murder at the hands of construction workers who are knocking down the animals’ forest home to build a luxury apartment complex (just because this movie doesn’t come from Disney doesn’t mean that the filmmakers haven’t watched a lot of Disney films where one of the parents dies in the first act).Īll the animals come together and decide to send a group to Delhi to meet with the country’s political leaders and ask them to stop destroying their land.
The US version includes an all-star American cast, including Jane Lynch, Christopher Lloyd, Jason Alexander and Brad Garrett.
The original version starred the voices of major Bollywood stars. “Delhi Safari” is the first feature-length 3D animated film produced in India. The latest attempt comes, not from Hollywood, but Bollywood! It’s not easy for a smaller studio to break into the world of big-budget animated films.