Ferngully: The Last Rainforest with Tim Curry: DVD Cover

    Ferngully: The Last Rainforest Director: Bill Kroyer Cast: Tim Curry, Robin Williams, Samantha Mathis, Christian Slater

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    Editorial Reviews

    Nature calls in Ferngully: the Last Rainforest, one of the best of the non-Disney animated features of the 1990s. Based on the Ferngully stories by Australian writer Dian Young, and directed by Disney-trained animator Bill Kryor, Ferngully is set in a magical world within the rainforest, where dwells a race of winged tree fairies who are responsible for nurturing “the harmony of all living things.” Crysta, the most fetching fairy since Tinkerbell, defies orders to not fly above the treetops. Much to her amazement, she discovers that humans are far from extinct, as she had been led to believe. They are, in fact, poised to strip-mine Ferngully and obliterate any vegetation standing in the path of a massive tree-clearing machine called the Leveler. Crysta is compelled to save one of the humans, Zak (Jonathan Ward), from a falling tree by shrinking him down to fairy size. From this new perspective, he gets a change of attitude about the forest he was thoughtlessly destroying. The stellar voice cast includes a pre-Aladdin Robin Williams as the aptly named Batty, a scramble-brained fugitive from a science testing lab (giving Williams wide license to riff). Tim Curry gets down with his bad self as Hexxus, a demon spirit of pollution unwittingly liberated by the humans (his song, “Toxic Love,” is a stylized animated tour de force). The Jimmy Buffet-penned food chain anthem, “If I’m Gonna Eat Somebody (It Might as Well Be You”), is sung by a striped lizard voiced by Tone Loc. Christian Slater is the voice of Pips, Crysta’s fairy boyfriend, who gets unexpected competition from Zak for Crysta’s affections. The Family Fun Edition is a two-disc set geared both to children and to animation buffs, with games and music videos as well as “making of” segments, audio commentary, and script-to-screen comparisons. Ferngully is an ever-timely ecological fable. It’s ironic, though, that the traditional cel-animating process used to produce it is now as endangered as the rainforest. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    Ferngully: The Last Rainforestby Anonymous

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    February 11, 2007: It's amazing how the writers of this movie were ahead of its time. It talks about so many world issues right now such as pollution, depletion of the ozone and rainforest and the destruction of children's imaginations (fairies and everything magical). A wonderful movie that I'd recomend to everyone!

    This review was written about the DVD Family Fun Edition / Wide Screen / Full Frame edition.

    Ferngully: The Last Rainforestby Anonymous

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    June 02, 2006: But I think this show rox! This show blows! No show is like this!

    This review was written about the DVD Family Fun Edition / Wide Screen / Full Frame edition.


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