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| Original Title |
Shrek |
| Director |
Andrew Adamson |
| Genre |
Adventure, Romance, Animation, Fantasy, Family, Comedy |
| Released |
2001-04-22 |
| MPAA Rating |
Rated PG for mild language and some crude humor. |
| Rated |
8.1 |
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| In a faraway land called Duloc, a heartless ruler, the midget Lord Farquaad (voiced by John Lithgow) has banished all the fairy tales from the land so it can be as boring as he is. But there are three characters who will stand is his way. The first is a green, smelly ogre with a heart of gold named Shrek (Mike Myers), his faithful steed, a Donkey (Eddie Murphy), who will do anything but shut up, and the beautiful, but tough Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) whom Lord Farquaad wishes to make his wife so he can become king of Duloc. What's to do in a screwy fairy tale like this? |
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| Mike Myers as Shrek/Blind Mouse/Narrator (voice) , Eddie Murphy as Donkey (voice) , Cameron Diaz as Princess Fiona (voice) , John Lithgow as Lord Farquaad of Duloc (voice) , Vincent Cassel as Monsieur Hood (voice) , Peter Dennis as Ogre Hunter (voice) , Clive Pearse as Ogre Hunter (voice) , Jim Cummings as Captain of Guards (voice) , Bobby Block as Baby Bear (voice) , Chris Miller as Geppetto/Magic Mirror (voice) , Cody Cameron as Pinocchio/Three Pigs (voice) , Kathleen Freeman as Old Woman (voice) , Michael Galasso as Peter Pan (voice) , Christopher Knights as Blind Mouse/Thelonious (voice) , Simon J. Smith as Blind Mouse (voice) |
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A new Green Giant for a new millenium
Shrek (Michael Myers) is an ogre who lives in a swamp by himself. He wants
to be by himself because he is very insecure about his looks and the way
he's perceived. Meanwhile, in the kingdom of Farquaad, many of the fairy
tale characters that we all know and love including the three little pigs,
the big bad wolf, fairies, the three bears and snow white are being
banished. On the roster to be banished is one talking donkey by the name
of....well, Donkey (Eddie Murphy). Donkey becomes a sweet and hilarious
thorn in the side of Shrek. While eating, Shrek is horrified when his swamp
is disturbed by the banished fairytale creatures, at the hands of Lord
Farquaad (John Lithgow). Shrek learns that in order to get his swamp back,
he has to talk to Lord Farquaad. Meanwhile, Farquaad keeps one treasured
fairytale item, the magic mirror from Snow White, for himself. He uses it to
find himself a princess. The dialogue between he and the mirror is hilarious
because it switches to an episode of the dating game with the mirror giving
him three choices: Cinderella, Snow "She lives with seven men, but she's not
easy" White and Princess Fiona. The knights in full armor coach the prince
to choose princess number three, the lovely Princess Fiona ( Cameron Diaz).
Fiona is locked in a tower that is protected by a female dragon. When Shrek
finally reaches the kingdom o' Farquaad, he is thrown in a WWF wrestling
parody that is hilarious. Recognizing his strength, Lord Farquaad makes a
deal with the ogre: get me the girl and I will give you the swamp back.
Shrek accepts the deal and begins his journey with Donkey in tow.
Shrek is a very clever film on many levels. It's a fairytale in every sense
of the word. Listen to the way the lines are written, the way the characters
speak, the way the story flows. The guys at Dream Works did a good job with
this in that you could close your eyes and the dialogue flows as though
you're having a story read to you. What makes this movie clever is the fact
that it's a fairytale that spoofs fairytales. For example, in most
fairytales, the prince is a tall, dark, handsome, kind and dashing man that
isn't complete until he finds his one true love to give his heart to. Yet
Lord Farquaad is very short, sort of pale, not attractive, very evil, and
lacking in the dashing department. Even his name is awkward in that he calls
himself a lord when he is just a prince. In most fairytales, the princess is
a beautiful, fragile, dainty and submissive young lady. That isn't the case
with our Princess Fiona. She's an up front talkative young lady that kicks
butt in a hilarious Matrix parody. The fairytale characters, unlike their
particular stories, are at a dead end. Their stories can't end because they
have no where to go.
Shrek is a pure stroke of genius. It's campy for the kids and sarcastic and
hilarious for the adults. It has a voice ( which a lot of movies forget to
include in the recipe these days ) in that it preaches the age-old adage
that you shouldn't judge a book by its cover. From a technical aspect, the
movie pushes the technological envelope. While watching the film and
watching Shrek and the other characters move and frown, I was quickly thrown
back to the time I saw Disney's Dinosaurs. You will notice a lot of the same
computer animation (deep canvas) used in this movie. As for the voice-over
work, the best of the best were assembled. At first, I didn't like Mike
Myers' voice or Scottish accent at all. It didn't it fit the look of the
ogre that was created or the ogre we know from past fairytales. Then I
realized that's what the guys at Dream Works were trying to do. They wanted
an ogre that no one knew someone you would have to get to know. Once you get
to know him, Shrek is very likable. His story is one that has the power to
create sequels and spinoffs. The movie has been in the making for a long
time. It was reported that Chris Farley was originally intended to voice
the ogre. Never the less it is truly a great movie.
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