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An enormous robot has come from deepest space, crash-landed on Earth, and followed eleven-year-old Hogarth Hughes home. Now, young Hogarth has one big friend and an even bigger problem: How do you keep a secret that's 50 feet tall? Especially when a paranoid government agent is on the "alien invader's" trail, bringing with him the full might of the U.S. military to destroy the giant.
Set in the 1950's, Hogarth, a young boy from Maine, befriends a massive robot that crashed onto Earth, the Iron Giant. While developing a friendship with it, Kent Mansley, a government agent, will stop at nothing to destroy it, and will not change his mind. Because of the boy's attachment with the robot, he'll try to stall Kent's progress, such as using a different chocolate for Kent's sundae. He's also kept the robot at Dean's scrapyard, despite his reluctance to keep him there. But their mutual hatred of Kent's cruel intentions might just keep the friendship between them.
I've just watched the DVD version of "Iron Giant." I found the story line to be one of the most cliche' plots in all of animation. There is an obvious anti-gun message that is rather silly and ineffective. Then there's the all too familiar "kid without a father" theme that Hollywood beats like a dead horse. Hardly the sort of stuff that makes for a great film. But, worst of all, it is filled with logical and factual errors that stretch the already thin credibility of animated flicks.
Despite all that, I just loved this movie!
Of all the films I've seen in 1999, this is definitely the best of the lot-- animated or live action. And I say this just having seen "Toy Story 2" a few weeks back, which is now my second favorite film of '99. "Iron Giant" kicked it out of first place. (You know it's a bad year for movies when your top two favorites are animations...) Flaws and all, this film has more heart and emotion than any other 10 Hollywood films of 1999 combined.
The film takes place during 1957. We have a story about a boy named Hogarth (without a father, of course...) who finds a giant iron robot from outer space while searching the woods for invaders from Mars. After being initially scared to death of the creature, he quickly realizes the robot is not out to harm him- and so, in short order, the boy befriends him. The rest of the movie deals with the boy's efforts to hide a 100ft. tall robot from the local townspeople of Rockwell, Maine and the United States government.
While there's nothing cliche' about a boy taking a walk in the woods and discovering a huge metallic robot suffering from amnesia munching on the local electric power plant, the "...boy meets awesomely powerful yet benign creature and quickly befriends him while everyone else wants to kill him..." plot has been done too many times to count. Yet the film's writers, directors and animators take us down this well-traveled path in such a way that new life is breathed into this most ancient of fairy tales. For that feat alone, the movie is deserves every drop of praise it gets.
The film is a parable of the atomic age. The fears and paranoias of the time are summed up in the government agent sent out to find the giant robot, "Kent Mansly." He's a walking, talking tribute to the "red under every bed" mindset. The innocent and fun loving target of his paranoia, the boy Hogarth, contrasts Mansly. Hogarth is about the best portrayal of a red blooded 50's era American boy that's ever been put to screen, despite the fact that he's a simple drawing.
"Iron Giant" should not be mistaken for a mere kid's flick. Parents will like it as much if not more than their children. The message of the film is one of love and self-sacrifice, the kind of thing most of us want to instill in our kids. In it's own way, "Iron Giant' is a kind of "Saving Private Ryan" for children.
Ultimately, this is a love story between a boy and his robot. Yes, it sounds silly, but you'll have to see it yourself to understand how the writers & directors pull it off. There is a moral to this film, or I should say, "morals." The morals are not heavy handed or preached, but they are expounded upon by the actions of the characters themselves. My favorite lesson had to do with "peace through superior fire power!"
But don't take my word for how good it is. My four-year-old son watched the DVD three times in a 24-hour period, and watched it every day we had it for the seven-day rental period. I believe it's now his new favorite film. We judge how much he likes a film by the amount of times he asks to see it again. The last movie he wanted to watch as much as this one is "A Bug's Life."
Interesting note: "Iron Giant," along with "Toy Story 2," both pay homage to good old "Sputnik" -the first ever satellite launched into earth's orbit. It's neat how these two rather unrelated stories both deal with the significance of that event.
Don't bother renting this film. Just buy it the next time you see it on sale. We've already decided to make the "Iron Giant" DVD a permanent part of our collection.
I fondly remember watching this when I was about 12 or 13 and like 'The Magic Sword: Quest for Camelot,' this is another animated film from my youth I had forgotten about for several years until the Nostalgia Critic reminded me of it by placing it at no. 6 in his 'Top 11 Underrated Classics,' which also included the likes of 'The Prince of Egypt' and 'Babe: Pig in the City' that I had also seen during my pre-teen years.
So back to 'The Iron Giant.' The animation was mostly smooth but jarring in places and there seemed to be a continuity error with regard to Hogarth's eyes - in some shots they had pupils in others they didn't. Other than the jarring movements and alleged continuities, the Iron Giant blended with the 2D animation perfectly since he didn't look anything like a CGI character and I liked the black and white animated segments that were used for the televisions and the bombing protection public information film shown at Hogarth's school. The film, although animated, had some realistic elements such as the Iron Giant eating metal that stayed true to the Iron Man eating metal in the Ted Hughes book and reminded me of a task I did at primary school where we were put into pairs and had to create a menu for the Iron Man that included ingredients such as chicken wire and oil. There were also some realistic and effective uses of colour and lighting such as the camera pan from a sunset sky to an autumnal landscape and the pale blue lighting as Hogarth followed the Iron Giant to an electric substation. The incidental music was initially forgettable but I found it fitting to the story when I re-visited the film this evening. As for the story itself, I found it a creative spin on the Hughes book that had a mixture of funny, somewhat crude and touching moments; the funny ones including the squirrel running rampage around the diner; the crude ones including Hogarth pretending to suffer from constipation as he tries to push the Iron Giant's hand out of the bathroom window and later sprinkling 'Coco-Lax' onto Kent's drink; and the touching ones including Hogarth's ever- increasing friendship with the Iron Giant and teaching him about death being a part of life upon witnessing a deer having been shot (it's Bambi all over again albeit less powerful. The story also has some educational value, especially Hogarth teaching the Iron Giant about the human world around him and that killing people or animals is a bad thing. Moving on to the voice acting, Jennifer Aniston as Hogarth's mother Annie and Vin Diesel, who pulled off the Iron Giant's voice as well as Robby Benson did with the Beast's voice in 'Beauty and the Beast,' were the standouts but Harry Connick Jr. as Dean and Eli Marienthal as Hogarth also did a great job with their roles. The ending of the missile destroying the Iron Giant, a statue of him being unveiled in the park and his separate parts moving in Iceland is unforgettable and moving without being too sentimental. I can even remember calling the film's setting Roswell instead of Rockwell as corrected by my then-babysitter and it was thoughtful of the film makers to dedicate this film to the memory of Ted Hughes during the closing credits.
To conclude, I originally gave this an 8/10 due to finding some scenes more memorable than others but I upgraded it to a 9 because I enjoyed watching this even more than I did when I was a pre-teen/teenager.
A terrific feature-length cartoon.
Yes, in a deleted story board scene hints that the Iron Giant isn't the only one of its kind. When the Giant starts to sleep, his "dream" is transmitted to Dean's TV which shows brief footage of other Iron Giants.
However in the "Signature Edition" released in 2015, it is implied that the Iron Giant is the last of his kind, his planet having been destroyed by the war for which he was presumably created. a5c7b9f00b
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