A Bug's Life
Whereas Antz finds some of its edgy inspiration in Kafka by way of Woody
Allen, A Bug's Life is mired comfortably in the pastel mediocrity of
Gumby. Made by the same people behind the tauter and more entertaining Toy
Story, Life re-creates the treacly, sunlit world of a colony of
Pez-colored, four-limbed ants whose workers' paradise is besieged by the
ravages of a gang of freeloading grasshoppers. As in Antz, it's the
non-regimented misfit who proves the hero. Bland Flik (voiced by Dave Foley),
whose labor-saving inventions invariably backfire, seeks respect when he
volunteers to journey beyond the colony to enlist some warrior insects to
combat their foe. He returns instead with a company of flyspecked carnies who
think they are hired to put on a show.
Shades of The Seven Samurai and The Three Amigos. Unfortunately,
the film matches the panache of those two classics only when it sheds its
G-rated timidity and spreads its wings a little. The carnival sequence shares
some of the funky humor of the bar scene in Star Wars, but the carnival
performers -- a venomless Black Widow, a Lady Bug uptight about his
masculinity, a tiresome Praying Mantis magician -- have little bite. The less
wholesome bugs have a lot more sting -- Hopper, the Grasshopper chieftain, is
suavely articulated by Kevin Spacey. And the houseflies end up with the best
line -- "Who ordered the pupu platter?" At the Harbour Mall, Holiday,
Lincoln Mall, Warwick Mall, Westerly, and Woonsocket cinemas.
-- Peter Keough
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