Mars Needs Moms (2011)
Full BluRay 1:1 | 1080p MPEG-4 AVC @ 28864 Kbps | DTS-HD MA 7.1; AC3 5.1/2.0 (Details see below) | 01:28:04 | 37,03 Gb
Audio: English; French; Portuguese; Spanish | Subtitles: English, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Genre: Animation, Action, Adventure, Family | USA
Full BluRay 1:1 | 1080p MPEG-4 AVC @ 28864 Kbps | DTS-HD MA 7.1; AC3 5.1/2.0 (Details see below) | 01:28:04 | 37,03 Gb
Audio: English; French; Portuguese; Spanish | Subtitles: English, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Genre: Animation, Action, Adventure, Family | USA
The film follows a boy named Milo. Milo is just beginning summer but his mother gives him chores and tasks like weeding the garden or eating his vegetables. But after Milo tints his sister's face purple, his mother sees no humor in this. She orders him up to his room. After an argument with his mother in which Milo says "I don't see what's so special about mothers!", Milo goes to his room. After falling asleep, Milo does not hear the rumble of the rocket landing outside. After, Martians enter Milo's house and take away his mother. Milo realizes that he has to rescue her. Milo embarks on an adventure to rescue his mother.
The film is based on a children's picture book by Pulitzer Prize winning cartoonist Berkeley "Berke" Breathed, author of the comic strip Bloom County.
IMDB
NB! All screenshots are Enlargeable!
“Mars Needs Moms” is a peculiar moviegoing experience where its least effective element boils down to a single obnoxious performance. Lively, richly animated with intriguing motion capture fluidity, and pleasingly designed with special attention to sprawling Martian environments, the film is nearly sunk by the efforts of co-star Dan Fogler, who’s biologically incapable of delivering funny business, squirting his spastic funk all over this nifty CG-animated chase film.
A young boy tired of his domestic duties, Milo (performed by Seth Green, voiced by Seth Dusky) has grown to resent his mother (Joan Cusack). When Martians bent on finding human mothers to help raise their newborns come to Earth and kidnap his parent, Milo is accidentally whisked away on the ship, taken to a subterranean alien kingdom, where he meets Gribble (Dan Fogler), a daffy Earthling who found himself in the same predicament in the 1980s. Eager to save his mother before the matriarchal Martian society steals her parental knowledge, Milo sets out to infiltrate this strange world, using Gribble’s technical knowhow and help from Ki (Elisabeth Harnois), a sympathetic Martian who’s learned broken English via a colorful 1970’s sitcom.
“Mars Needs Moms” is the latest production from ImageMovers Digital, the mo-cap animation squad (led by Robert Zemeckis) behind such films as “The Polar Express” and “A Christmas Carol.” Adapting the 2007 book by comic strip icon Berkeley Breathed, the producers bring a fresh fantasy world to life, staging a large-scale comic adventure with swooping camera moves, towering vistas, and some extra dimension with its 3D presentation.
Director Simon Wells (2002’s “The Time Machine,” “Prince of Egypt”) exploits the detailed animation splendidly, deploying performance movement thoughtfully, while arranging a merry visual scheme that finds Ki (a disgruntled Martian soldier) spreading color around the steely Martian landscape, creating a look that deploys bold hues carefully for a more substantial impact. The design of the alien nation is also quite compelling, with the Martians boasting big eyes and wide hips, resembling an upside down tuning fork with hooves, supporting both imposing and endearing facial qualities. Technically speaking, I was consistently delighted by the picture and its graceful movement (the mo-cap aesthetic provides a unique dance to the animation), watching it joyfully erect its version of Mars and the playful community of oddballs within.
While “Mars Needs Moms” is a feast for the eyes, it’s a little rough on the ears, working from a script that contains a “Who Let the Dogs Out?” reference and generally prods Fogler to screech his way around the frame. There are dark shadings to the Martian parental kidnapping plan that are most welcome, and a few tender beats of personal loss are felt, but the jokes are moronic, with most gags playing up Gribble’s lost childhood – the doughy man-boy is trapped in the 1980s, dreaming of “Top Gun” and the comfort of Smurf-Berry Crunch cereal. The cast is skilled enough to sell the wonder and suspense of the moment, with Fogler being the obvious cancer. He delivers a strident performance of adolescent excitement, shaping Gribble into a breathless monster with extreme mucus issues, destroying the engaging sense of discovery the film builds wonderfully. Gribble instantly annoys, which might’ve been the intention, but I could think of several other actors who could nail those same notes of destructive excitement with some sense of boundary while displaying effortless comedic skills.
It’s a bumpy ride for “Mars Needs Moms,” but the effort is appreciable, often thrilling when Milo is flung and dropped around the Martian city. A final summation of parental appreciation is also a splendid touch, helping to wash away the less savory elements of the production. Energetic and inspired (sans Fogler), the picture concludes on a high note, providing the intergalactic goods with spirit, only one critical miscasting away from true satisfaction.
brianorndorf, eFilmCritic
Mars Needs Moms is hardly in the same league as Pixar or DreamWorks Animation, but then, it doesn’t really seem to be going for that kind of a feel. Instead, Wells and his team have crafted a fun, consistently entertaining adventure film that feels like a throwback to the summer movies of the 1980s – including The Goonies, Gremlins, and Back to the Future. And while the film is by no means perfect – it does feel a little long at times and Gribble’s lair is almost oppressively grungy – Mars Needs Moms is a solid computer-animated flick that should leave adults just as satisfied and entertained as kids.Excerpt from David Nusair's Review on About.com
Disc Title: Mars.Needs.Moms.2011.BluRay.1080p.AVC.DTS-HD.MA5.1-CHDBits
Disc Size: 38,576,139,276 bytes
Protection: AACS
BD-Java: Yes
Playlist: 00051.MPLS
Size: 30,675,629,184 bytes
Length: 1: 28 :04
Total Bitrate: 46.44 Mbps
Video:
Video: MPEG-4 AVC Video / 28864 kbps / 1080p / 23.976 fps / 16:9 / High Profile 4.1
* Video: MPEG-4 AVC Video / 5918 kbps / 480p / 23.976 fps / 16:9 / High Profile 3.2
Audio:
Audio: English / DTS-HD Master Audio / 7.1 / 48 kHz / 5747 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 5.1 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
Audio: French / Dolby Digital Audio / 5.1 / 48 kHz / 640 kbps
Audio: Portuguese / Dolby Digital Audio / 5.1 / 48 kHz / 640 kbps
Audio: Spanish / Dolby Digital Audio / 5.1 / 48 kHz / 640 kbps
Audio: English / Dolby Digital Audio / 2.0 / 48 kHz / 320 kbps / Dolby Surround
* Audio: English / Dolby Digital Audio / 2.0 / 48 kHz / 320 kbps / DN -4dB
* Audio: English / Dolby Digital Audio / 2.0 / 48 kHz / 320 kbps / DN -5dB
Subtitles:
Subtitle: English / 30.894 kbps
Subtitle: English / 38.382 kbps
* Subtitle: English / 86.642 kbps
Subtitle: French / 28.855 kbps
* Subtitle: French / 68.465 kbps
Subtitle: French / 0.139 kbps
Subtitle: Portuguese / 30.826 kbps
* Subtitle: Portuguese / 71.345 kbps
Subtitle: Portuguese / 0.287 kbps
Subtitle: Spanish / 26.882 kbps
* Subtitle: Spanish / 63.247 kbps
Subtitle: Spanish / 0.289 kbps
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