Movie Review: Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole

— In the Guardians of Ga’Hoole novels of Kathryn Lasky, owls have mastered fire and metallurgy and have been known to play the lute as they sing their epic poems about epic battles from days of yore.

And in the film about them, they all speak with Australian accents.

Zack Snyder’s film Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole is a gorgeously animated combat fantasy - The Lord of the Ringsmeets Happy Feet - with cute cuddly owls of every description flashing their talons and sometimes donning metal talon-tips as they battle for control of the owl kingdoms.

There’s a good brother and a bad brother, a battered war hero, a steely queen and her megalomaniac mate, kidnappings, escapes, treachery and heroics. There’s much talk of gizzards, as in “I’ll tear out your gizzard” or “I can feel it in my gizzard” or “That’s showing some gizzard.”

And there’s a seer, an Australian porcupine that blurts out “it was foretold” at everything that happens.

Yes, this is a kids’ cartoon as visualized by the director of 300.

Jim Sturgess voices Soren, an owl just on the cusp of “branching,” learning how to fly. Kludd (Ryan Kwanten) is his competitive brother. They have grown up on tales of the exploits of “The Guardians,” owls who right wrongs, defend the weak and stand up to tyranny. But is their father (Hugo Weaving) making this legend up?

A tumble out of their tree and the brothers find out soon enough that the villains of these tales are real. Soren and Kludd are owl-nappedand forced into a martial culture that is preparing for war. Helen Mirren is the queen, a Tyto (barn owl), a member of the race she calls “The Pure.” She separates soldiers from pickers, who pick through owl pellets. Only the Guardians can save the owl kingdoms from this evil. Finding those Guardians becomes Soren’s quest.

Ga’Hoole is a gorgeous and occasionally exciting movie that loses some of its heart and forward momentum inclutter, laborious title included. Still, this variation on a theme by J.R.R. Tolkien is pretty daring, more demanding than your typical film for kids. In an age of “let’s all get along” pabulum, there’s much to like in a cartoon not afraid to show its talons.

MovieStyle, Pages 33 on 09/24/2010

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