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'Spark: A Space Tail': No future

Edited by Sonious, GreenReaper as of Tue 19 Sep 2017 - 09:30
Your rating: None Average: 3.7 (14 votes)

Spark, A Space Tail"Ever get the feeling you've been cheated?"
- John Lydon, singer/songwriter

"God Save the Queen is the actual worst song, let's not argue."
- Guy Lodge, again

To be perfectly honest, I was a bit excited for this movie, when I first heard of it, if only because furries in space is a concept that has worked in the past; and, hey, vixen right there.

I kept plugging it quietly in the background all throughout 2015 and early 2016 (and you guys thought I only covered Zootopia that year). I mean, what if 2016 had been a year where we had six wide release, fully anthropomorphic world movies ranging in genre from buddy cop, to martial arts, to backstage musical, to crime caper, to space opera, and also Rock Dog?

As it ended up, we got, by my count, one great movie, one good movie, one movie that was kind of meh, one movie that turned out to not exist, one terrible movie and also Rock Dog.

This movie was more or less dumped into select theaters back in April, where it bombed hard. Really hard. I'm not sure what the plan was, here. It had a limited release with very little publicity, and honestly should have gone straight to video. I guess the surprisingly starry voice cast made a theatrical release seem more feasible, but Patrick Stewart hasn't exactly made the best vocal performance choices this year. And it's not like former captains of the Enterprise haven't gone straight to video in the past.
Vix
They definitely overspent on the voice cast and tried to make up for it with unbelievably cheap looking animation. It just felt slow. Which is disappointing because this is the same studio behind the Nut Job movies, and those movies, despite also obviously not working on a big studio budget, really have a sense of movement about them. Yes, I'm not exactly on the same page with that franchise as most film critics, but one of the things I enjoy about those movies is the wonderfully timed slapstick. Now, you have Spark, which even tries to up the ante with scenes that are meant to be exciting as well as funny, and the sludgy movement is just off.

There was a lot of budget cutting. For instance, the majority population of the main world featured, Bana, are monkeys. So, there are a lot of monkeys, and to be fair, they do go out of their way to differentiate the monkeys, somewhat. However, the planet also has minority populations of foxes and pigs, and these are clearly the exact same models as major supporting characters Vix and Chunk (you figure out which one goes with which species), just grey-er. As an aside, I kind of enjoyed that aspect; hey, here's a society with definite immigrant minorities (a few scenes incidentally make clear they originated from different planets) who are treated with respect, and even given missions of utmost importance.

The movie also has tonal issues, like it couldn't decide if it wanted to be Star Wars or Spaceballs. On one hand, the evil villain's plan involves holding planets to ransom with a kidnapped space whale known as the Kraken which can create black holes. Though it's obviously modeled after a whale, it also has very cephalopodian features; the characters describe the black hole generating material produced by the Kraken as slicks, and to get the creature to create black holes the villain uses explosions to scare it. I believe, as originally written, this is a benign squid-like creature that produces a dangerous ink-like substance when threatened; unfortunately, at some point, it was decided that the "slicks" should come from the back end of the creature. It feels like a lack of confidence that the plight of the Kraken is not enough to hold the interest of the audience, so, uh, poop joke.

You may have noticed that, even setting aside the toilet humor, the above scenario is not very original. But this is a major problem with the movie. In fact, it's two major problems. Most of its ideas seem borrowed, and it doesn't seem to know why the ideas it is borrowing worked in the first place. There's a lot of scenes involving the villains talking about dinner plans or something else equally banal, and this is a great source of comedy; space opera is operatic. It's about grand gestures that can be seen across the room, or even across the galaxy.

Undercutting that with a reminder that these people still have to get lunch, just like everyone else, can be funny; but the problem is, it undercuts. Also, it's been done before, and way better, by people who actually seem to know what they're doing. When Dr. Evil in the Austin Powers movies has trouble connecting to his estranged son, Scott, it's saying something about the James Bond movies (and something about fatherhood). When Spark has Spark pretend to be a plumber during an infiltration mission, it's another poop joke. It also doesn't help that this kind of humor requires good timing, which is not helped by the sludgy animation.

Even the part I liked, Vix the vixen (so if you haven't figured out which species Chunk is yet, I've narrowed it down for you), is basically Master Tigress with Vasquez from Aliens' fashion sense, except for some reason a fox. Which is a great combo, I mean, I don't like this movie, but I like this character. Not bad character design, either (checking in with e621 seems to confirm, yes, she's about the only thing any other furry liked about this movie). But there's a reason Tigress hugging Po is a major character moment in the Kung Fu Panda series, while at the end of this movie, when Vix kisses Spark's head affectionately, it just felt like they needed something for her to do.

An odd thing about this movie is that it seems to have a complete lack of moral or lesson it's going for. At no point is our hero urged to do anything, really. I mean, people like to complain that a lot of these types of movies have the lesson "be yourself", but that's better than nothing. Spark, the protagonist, is the hero because he's a prince. That's our vision of the future. Who says the monarchy's dead? We replaced the uncle with the nephew. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

Hey, maybe it seems petty to tackle a silly kid's cartoon for it's support of monarchy as a viable system of government, but if you don't have anything to say, at least make sure you're not not-saying something stupid.

Comments

Your rating: None Average: 4.5 (2 votes)

Both "The Nut Job" movies had lots of South Korean money in their production budgets. "Spark" didn't. It showed.

Fred Patten

Your rating: None Average: 2.5 (2 votes)

Another important difference between "The Nut Job" movies and "Spark" is that both "The Nut Job" movies had good stories and identifiable characters. "Spark" didn't. Even Precious the pug dog in "The Nut Job" was sort-of likable despite herself, which takes careful characterization. All of the characters in "Spark" are bland.

Fred Patten

Your rating: None Average: 4.8 (5 votes)

One of my problems with this film (I had several) had to do with the fox and her design. Once again we have a character designed with ridiculously TEENY tiny feet, like their legs are a pair of sharpened pencils. (As much as I liked the film, "Sing" had that same annoying problem.) Why why WHY has this become a thing???

Also, there's that weird "space is full of air" thing. In Disney's "Treasure Planet", it felt like part of the magic they were creating for their science-fantasy world. Here, it felt more like someone just wasn't paying attention.

Your rating: None Average: 1.7 (3 votes)

Weird, I was just about to comment that I liked that fox character's design.

Your rating: None Average: 3.7 (3 votes)

I like her design too -- from the knees up.

Your rating: None Average: 3.7 (3 votes)

That fox is so hot.

Man, I'm like the king of furries.

Your rating: None Average: 2.5 (2 votes)

Somehow, I knew you would shit all over it.

I thought it was a solid 7/10. But hey, it's not like anyone cares what I think.

Well, I'll be...

Your rating: None Average: 3 (1 vote)

Enjoyed the movie but what's up with the genders like you only get a female fox or you only get a male whatever chunk is and I only see to female monkeys in the movie the queen and please correct me if I'm wrong coco

Your rating: None

I love how both Vix and Andie have the same general design and expressions. It's like you can tell they're made by the same person/group within the RedRover/Toonbox/whoknowswhat character-dev pipeline. They made substantial improvements as the older concept art (now gone but once [2020 I think] hidden deep on the redrover.co.kr website along with sample animations contained some rudimentary colored designs of Andie, Buddy, and Raccoon) is far less detailed and beautified than the end result. Even from incomplete animations where the eye textures haven't yet been added, the models are absolutely stunning (found from a YouTube uploaded demo of the camera animation work).

One thing they got down are the eyes. Really expressive, beautiful, characteristic eye shapes. I can see it in parts of pretty much every Redrover film I watched. I wish I could meet these talented folks who got their reputation smeared by some bad departments and lack of funds, but there are so many names in the credits in all three movies that it feels like it's impossible to find the true master modellers/riggers/animators/design-engineers.

One can only dream.

Your rating: None

-- continued:

And also the flow of animation! It's so smooth, very elegant. Yeah, Spark overused slo-mos, the NutJob and Spark suspended and disregarded physics for whatever reason, plenty of continuity was lacking between shots, but overall it had a pretty large positive impact on me. It's more than just watching a movie, absorbed in the plot. No, I *FELT* the movie. Each one was incredibly beautiful in its own way, which really has me believe that it would have been a far greater success if some members worked as hard as/ were paid as well as the truly talented folks who brought these characters alive and made such a gorgeous environment. I felt inspired to take up animation solely because I was inspired by these films! Now that's something that you don't need a high box office to be at least somewhat proud of, and I know I'm not the only one.

Even the VFX like that fancy double-blade neo-saber winged thing that Spark attained was such an epic design choice. The cloning tech was also really clever, especially considering how cool it looks and how logical the mirroring was for such a simple "clone the rig keyframes and rotate the duplicated model" operation. Shading, albeit not very detailed, was likewise really good at making the scene feel alive. Peregrine Yeti was a solid plugin choice for the fur/hair, and gave it that final "pop" factor.

Your rating: None

Holy cow, just occurred to me that the last comment was from almost 7 years ago. Feels like yesterday but wild how quick time passes. I'm not even sure everyone who commented is still alive.

Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)

Actually, yes, one above commenter is, in fact, no longer with us.

That being said, I'm glad you enjoyed the movie, even if I didn't!

Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)

Seriously? Who? Everybody in this fandom dies at rates that make us almost like a different country.

Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)

Fred Patten, whose death at 77 was sad but perhaps not too surprising considering other health factors.

Your rating: None

Holy cow, that's so sad. Rest in peace Fred.

I'll be honest, I was not expecting any replies, let alone 3 within 2 hours! Great to see you guys are still active.

Also yeah there were definitely parts that I heavily disliked as well, so I think to some degree I didn't enjoy the movie as much as I think I did when looking through the rose-colored nostalgia lenses.

I do appreciate your honest review, we need folks who say it like it is!

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