Ice Age (2002 film)

Ice Age is a 2002 American computer-animated comedy film directed by Chris Wedge and co-directed by Carlos Saldanha from a story by Michael J. Wilson. Produced by Blue Sky Studios as its first feature film, it was released by 20th Century Fox on March 15, 2002. The film features the voices of Ray Romano, John Leguizamo, and Denis Leary. Set during the days of the ice age, the film centers around three main characters—Manny (Romano), a no-nonsense woolly mammoth; Sid (Leguizamo), a loudmouthed ground sloth; and Diego (Leary), a sardonic saber-tooth tiger—who come across a human baby and work together to return it to its tribe. Additionally, the film occasionally follows Scrat, a speechless "saber-toothed squirrel" voiced by Wedge who is perpetually searching for a place in the ground to bury his acorn.

Ice Age
Theatrical release poster
Directed byChris Wedge
Produced byLori Forte
Screenplay by
Story byMichael J. Wilson
Starring
Music byDavid Newman
Edited byJohn Carnochan
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • March 15, 2002 (2002-03-15)
Running time
81 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$59 million[1]
Box office$383.3 million

Ice Age was originally intended as a 2D animated film developed by Fox Animation Studios, but eventually became the first full-length animated film for the newly-reformed Blue Sky, which had been reshaped from a VFX house to a computer animation studio. Focus shifted from making an action-adventure drama film to a more comedy-oriented one, and several writers, such as Michael Berg and Peter Ackerman, were brought on to bring out a wittier tone.

Upon release, Ice Age received mostly positive reviews and was nominated at the 75th Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature, losing to Spirited Away. It was a box office success and grossed over $383 million, starting the Ice Age franchise, being followed by four sequels: Ice Age: The Meltdown in 2006, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs in 2009, Ice Age: Continental Drift in 2012, and Ice Age: Collision Course in 2016. Two holiday specials were also released: 2011's Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas (taking place between Dawn of the Dinosaurs and Continental Drift) and 2016's Ice Age: The Great Egg-Scapade (taking place between Continental Drift and Collision Course). Seven Ice Age short films were also released between 2002 and 2016.

Plot

Scrat, a saber-toothed squirrel, attempts to find a place to store his acorn for the winter. Eventually, as he tries to stomp it into the ground, he inadvertently causes a large crack to form in the ice that extends for miles before setting off a large avalanche which nearly crushes him. He barely escapes but finds himself getting stepped on by a herd of prehistoric animals migrating south in order to escape the forthcoming ice age. Sid, a clumsy ground sloth, is left behind by his family and decides to move on by himself, but is attacked by two Brontotheres after ruining their meal and making them angry. Sid is soon rescued by Manny, a cynical woolly mammoth heading north, who fights the rhinos off and continues on his path. Sid joins Manny, not wanting to be alone and unprotected. Manny is annoyed by Sid's outgoing demeanor and wishes to migrate on his own, but Sid nonetheless continues to follow Manny. Meanwhile, Soto, the leader of a Smilodon pack, wants revenge on a human tribe for killing half of his pack by eating the chief's infant son, Roshan,[2] alive. Soto leads a raid on the human camp, during which Roshan's mother flees with her son. Cornered by Soto’s lieutenant, Diego, she leaps down the waterfall with Roshan. As punishment for his failure to retrieve the boy, Diego is sent to find and retrieve him while the rest of the pack waits for him at a mountain known as Half-Peak. If he fails, he will be killed in Roshan’s place.

Later, Sid and Manny encounter the mother struggling out of the lake, dying from her plunge. The mother only has enough strength to entrust Roshan to Manny before she dies and disappears into the water. After much persuasion by Sid, they decide to return the baby, but when they reach the human settlement, they find it deserted. They meet up with Diego, who convinces the pair to let him help by tracking the humans. The four travel on, with Diego secretly leading them to Half-Peak where his pack is waiting to ambush them.

After encountering several misadventures on their way, the group reaches a cave with several cave paintings. There, Sid and Diego learn about Manny's past and his previous interactions with the human hunters, in which they slaughtered his family, consisting of his mate and child, leaving Manny a depressed loner. Later, the group almost reaches their destination, Half-Peak, only to encounter a forming river of lava. Manny and Sid, along with Roshan, make it across safely, but Diego ends up hanging on a cliff, about to fall into the lava. Manny saves him, narrowly missing certain death by falling into the lava himself. The herd takes a break for the night, and Roshan takes his first walking steps towards Diego, who starts to have a change of heart about his mission.

The next day, the herd approaches the ambush, causing Diego, now full of respect for Manny for saving his life, to change his mind and confess to Manny and Sid about the ambush. As the pair turn hostile towards him, Diego pleads for their trust and tries to foil the attack. The herd battles Soto's pack, but despite their efforts, Soto and his associates manage to corner Manny. As Soto closes in for the kill on Manny, Diego jumps in the way and is injured as a result. Manny then knocks a distracted Soto into a rock wall, causing several sharp icicles to fall onto Soto, impaling and instantly killing him. Horrified, the rest of the pack retreat. Manny and Sid mourn for Diego's injury, which they believe is fatal, and continue their journey without him. The two manage to successfully return Roshan to his tribe, and to their surprise, Diego manages to rejoin them in time to see Roshan leave. The group then begin to head off to warmer climates.

Twenty thousand years later, Scrat, frozen in a block of ice, ends up on the shores of a tropical island. As the ice slowly melts, an acorn that was also frozen in the same ice block is washed away. Scrat then finds a coconut and tries to stomp it into the ground, only to accidentally trigger a volcanic eruption.

Cast

The characters are all prehistoric animals. The animals can talk to and understand each other and are voiced by a variety of famous actors. Like many films of prehistoric life, the rules of time periods apply very loosely, as many of the species shown in the film never actually lived in the same time periods or the same geographic regions.

A person wearing a Sid costume

Production

Development

Ice Age was originally pitched to 20th Century Fox in 1997 by producer Lori Forte. The film, originally envisioned as a traditionally animated movie with an action-oriented comedy-drama tone, was intended to be developed by Don Bluth and Gary Goldman's Fox Animation Studios. Around the same time, Blue Sky Studios, a small visual effects studio in White Plains, New York, was bought out by Fox and reshaped into a full-fledged CG animation film studio. In light of this, Fox Animation head Chris Meledandri and executive producer Steve Bannerman approached Forte with the proposition of developing the film as a computer-animated movie, which Forte realized was "basically a no-brainer," according to her. Michael J. Wilson, who had written and developed the film's original story treatments in conjunction with Forte, wrote the first draft for the script, and Chris Wedge, a co-founder of Blue Sky, was brought on to the project as the director in late 1998. Fox also opted for the movie to take a more comedy-oriented direction (albeit while still maintaining some dramatic elements), and brought writer Michael Berg to help emphasize a funnier tone. After being hired, Berg reportedly told the studio that he couldn't write a kid's film, to which the studio responded, "Great! Just write a good story."[3]

Story development began in spring of 1999,[4] and official production on the film began in June 2000, one week after the closure of Fox Animation Studios.[5] 150 employees were hired to work on the film,[5][6] and a budget of $58 million was granted by Fox.[3] Peter Ackerman was hired as a third writer for the film, and collaborated extensively with Berg for three years before the two eventually moved on from the project. Jon Vitti and Mike Reiss, both former writers for The Simpsons, were added later on after Berg and Ackerman left to further polish the script.[3]

For research, the film's development team took several trips to the Museum of Natural History early on in production in order to make sure that the film authentically felt like the Ice Age.[7] Ultimately, the team translated the information that they had compiled in their research by stylizing it in order to fit with the film's story.[8] A team of 32 animators went out and did research to figure out the movements of different animals; for instance, for the movement of Scrat, animators visited a park and observed local squirrels, taking note of their "twitchy" way of moving.[4]

Writing and character development

Michael J. Wilson stated on his blog that his daughter Flora came up with the idea for an animal that was a mixture of both squirrel and rat, naming it Scrat, and that the animal was obsessed with pursuing his acorn.[9] The plan to have Scrat talk was quickly dropped, as he worked better as a silent character for comedic effect. The name 'Scrat' is a combination of the words 'squirrel' and 'rat', as Scrat has characteristics of both species; Wedge has also called him "saber-toothed squirrel." Scrat's opening adventure was inserted because, without it, the first real snow and ice sequence wouldn't take place until about 37 minutes into the film. This was the only role intended for Scrat, but he proved to be such a popular character with test audiences that he was given more scenes. The filmmakers made it so that many of the scenes with Scrat appear directly after dramatic moments in the film.

In a 2012 interview with Jay Leno, Denis Leary revealed that his character, Diego the sabertooth, originally died near the end of the film. However, it was reported that kids in the test audience burst into tears when his death was shown. Leary himself warned the producers that something like this would happen. When it was proven true, the scene was re-written to ensure Diego survived.

Originally, Sid the Sloth was supposed to be a con-artist and a hustler, and there was even a finished scene of the character conning some aardvark kids. His character was later changed to a talkative-clumsy sloth because the team felt the audience would have hated him. There was also an alternate scene of Sid in the hottub with the ladies which shows him saying to them "Let's jump in the gene pool and see what happens." One of the female sloths then kicks him in the groin. This was cut because it was not suitable for children and may have gotten the film a PG-13 rating. Other innuendos with Sid were also cut from the film. Sid was also supposed to have a female sloth named Sylvia (voiced by Kristen Johnston) chasing after him, whom he despised and kept ditching. All the removed scenes can be seen on the DVD.

Animation

The characters and environments in Ice Age were modeled and animated using WaveFront's Maya animation software. Rendering was completed using CGI Studio, an in-house ray tracing program being developed since Blue Sky's formation in 1987 and previously used for Wedge's 1998 short film, Bunny. While Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, released three months before Ice Age, became the first computer-animated film to make use of ray tracing technology, Ice Age would have received the distinction had it been released at the time Blue Sky began work on the movie.[4]

In order to keep the film at a more exciting pace, the development team took certain liberties with Sid in terms of realism; although real-life ground sloths were slow-moving and rigid, Sid was given a fast movement speed in certain scenes, as well as a more flexible range of motions. Conversely, the character’s arm movements were more restricted in order to retain a sense of laziness true to the nature of sloths. Manny was a particularly difficult character to animate due to his unique attributes as a mammoth, such as his long fur and massive trunks that covered up his face. Dealing with a creature which had seldom appeared in animation at the time, the team needed to figure out how Manny would realistically move with character designer Pete DeSeve explaining that “a wooly mammoth isn’t simply an elephant with long fur”. According to co-director Carlos Saldanha, Diego was one of the most complexly animated characters in the movie, with some scenes showing off his high movement speed as a sabre-toothed tiger while others kept his movement more contained and focused on his facial expressions to carry the moment.[10]

Voice casting

The voice cast of Ice Age was encouraged to make up their own dialogue during recording. Several lines in the film were improvised by the actors.[11]

For Manny the Mammoth, the studio was initially looking at people with big voices.[12] James Earl Jones and Ving Rhames were considered, but they sounded too obvious and Wedge wanted more comedy.[13][14] Instead, the role was given to Ray Romano because they thought his voice sounded very elephant-like. Wedge described Romano's voice as deep and slow in delivery, but also with a "sarcastic wit behind it."[14]

John Leguizamo, who provided the voice for Sid the Sloth, experimented with over 40 voices for the character, including a slower-sounding voice to fit with the lazy nature of a giant sloth. Leguizamo came up with the final voice and trademark lateral lisp for the character after watching footage of sloths and learning that they store food in the pockets of their mouths which ferments over time.[15] Leguizamo remarked in an interview with BBC that he had wanted to contribute to an animated project for a while, claiming that cartoon voice actor Mel Blanc was "one of my comedy Gods" and a large source of inspiration for him as a child.[16]

Music

The official soundtrack to Ice Age was released on May 14, 2002 by Varèse Sarabande. The soundtrack consists of the original musical score composed for the film by David Newman and performed by the Hollywood Studio Symphony. The song "Send Me on My Way" by Rusted Root is also featured in the film but is absent from the album.[17]

Tracks
  • Opening Travel Music (1:17)
  • Angered Rhinos (2:14)
  • Humans/Diego (1:43)
  • Tigers Going for Baby (3:12)
  • Dodos (0:42)
  • Fighting Over the Melons (2:01)
  • Walking Through (1:25)
  • Baby's Wild Ride (1:56)
  • Checking Out the Cave (3:43)
  • Running from the Lava (2:27)
  • Baby Walks (1:34)
  • Tigers Try to Get the Baby (5:41)
  • Giving Back the Baby (6:26)

Release

Box office

Ice Age was released on March 15, 2002, and had a $46.3 million opening weekend, a large number not usually seen until the summer season, and way ahead of Fox's most optimistic projection of about $30 million. Ice Age broke the record for a March opening (later surpassed in 2006 by its sequel, Ice Age: The Meltdown) and at the time was the third-best opening ever for an animated feature—after Monsters, Inc. ($62.6 million) and Toy Story 2 ($57.4 million).[18] Ice Age finished its domestic box office run with $176,387,405 and grossed $383,257,136 worldwide, being the 9th highest gross of 2002 in North America and the 8th best worldwide at the time.[1]

Critical reception

Ice Age holds a 77% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 167 reviews, with an average rating of 6.84/10. The site's consensus reads: "Even though Ice Age is treading over the same grounds as Monsters, Inc. and Shrek, it has enough wit and laughs to stand on its own."[19] Similar site Metacritic had a score of 60% out of 31 reviews, meaning "mixed or average reviews".[20] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 stars out of 4 and wrote "I came to scoff and stayed to smile". Elvis Mitchell of the New York Times called the film a "blandly likeable computer-animation extravaganza", comparing the film's plot to the Western film 3 Godfathers.[21]

CinemaScore polls conducted during the opening weekend, cinema audiences gave Ice Age an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.[22]

Accolades

Ice Age was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2003, losing to Spirited Away.[23]

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Home media

The initial home video release for Ice Age was accompanied by an $85 million marketing campaign involving promotional partnerships with 14 different companies,[25] including Microsoft, Pizza Hut, Carl's Jr., Dole, Langer's, Valpak, Cold Stone Creamery, and the National Hockey League.[26] The movie was released on 2-disc DVD, VHS and D-Theater[27] on November 26, 2002. All three releases included Gone Nutty, a short film starring Scrat and detailing his further antics as he tries to bury his acorn.[28] Another single disc release was released February 5, 2005,[29] and the next year a new two-disc release with extra features on March 14, 2006.[30] The film was released on Blu-ray on March 4, 2008, and beside Gone Nutty, it included 9 minutes of deleted scenes.[31]

Ice Age was included on The Walt Disney Company's streaming service Disney+ on March 1, 2020.[32]

Video game

A tie-in video game was developed by Artificial Mind and Movement and published by Ubisoft for the Game Boy Advance. A platform game, it has the player controlling Sid and Manny through 10 levels as they carry Roshan. The game holds an aggregate ranking of 46.00% on GameRankings[33] and 47/100 on Metacritic.[34]

Sequels

Since the release of Ice Age, several sequels have followed. Ice Age: The Meltdown, the first sequel, was released on March 31, 2006, following the main characters trying to escape a massive flooding due to global warming, as well as Manny's concern over whether or not his species is going extinct. A third installment, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, was released in 2009, followed by a fourth film, Ice Age: Continental Drift, in 2012. The fifth and latest installment, Ice Age: Collision Course, was released on July 22, 2016.[35] With the release of Collision Course, the Ice Age series became the first animated movie franchise to house five theatrical installments.[36] The sequels experienced steadily declining critical reception but were box office successes nonetheless.[37]

See also

References

  1. "Ice Age (2002)". Box Office Mojo. Box Office Mojo, LLC. Retrieved July 23, 2009.
  2. Tara Strong. "Tara Strong official website". Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  3. "Working With Sloths Can Be Time-Consuming". March 15, 2002 via LA Times.
  4. http://www.cgw.com/Publications/CGW/2002/Volume-25-Issue-4-April-2002-/Ice-Pack.aspx
  5. "Fox Shuts Down Animation HQ". E! Online. June 27, 2000.
  6. https://www.ign.com/articles/2000/06/27/fox-animation-studios-closes-its-doors
  7. The Making of Ice Age: (Video) |format= requires |url= (help) (DVD). 20th Century Fox. November 26, 2002. Event occurs at 0:35. At the very beginning, I wanted for at least the look of the film to be as authentic as it could, so we did a lot of research early on and we took trips to the Museum of Natural History. |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  8. The Making of Ice Age: (Video) |format= requires |url= (help) (DVD). 20th Century Fox. November 26, 2002. Event occurs at 1:00. What we ended up doing was stylizing quite a bit- we took what we had learned in our research, and we just kinda styled it up to suit our story. |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  9. Ice Age: The Story Behind the Story (from the writer Michael J. Wilson), News from the Soo Theatre, Inc. Retrieved April 2nd, 2017.
  10. http://cinema.com/articles/813/ice-age-production-notes.phtml
  11. The Making of Ice Age: Acting in Animation (Video) |format= requires |url= (help) (DVD). 20th Century Fox. November 26, 2002. Event occurs at 6:03. Our actors were encouraged to do as much writing as they wanted to- a lot of that stuff is in the movie. |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  12. Fine, Marshall (March 20, 2002). "Animation star of 'Ice Age,' Romano says". Gannett News Service. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  13. Longsdorf, Amy (March 9, 2002). "'Ice Age" natural". The Morning Call. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
  14. Ausiello, Michael (May 15, 2002). "Ice Age's Ray of Light". TV Guide. Retrieved June 6, 2014.
  15. "John Leguizamo Talks Ice Age: The Meltdown". MovieWeb. March 29, 2006.
  16. "BBC - Films - interview - John Leguizamo". www.bbc.co.uk.
  17. "Ice Age [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack] - David Newman - Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic.
  18. "Ice Age enjoys mammoth opening weekend". Entertainment Weekly. March 18, 2002.
  19. "Ice Age (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  20. "Ice Age". Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved July 23, 2009.
  21. Mitchell, Elvis (March 15, 2002). "Movie Review; Woolly Mammoths and Tigers and Sloths, Oh My!". New York Times. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  22. "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
  23. "The 75th Academy Awards (2003) Nominees and Winners". The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences. March 23, 2003. Retrieved March 8, 2013.
  24. "AFI's 10 Top 10 Nominees" (PDF). Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved August 19, 2016.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  25. Cella, Catherine (August 24, 2002). "Kid Vid (& DVD): Santa Wraps Dolls And Monsters, Dogs And Rugrats And Beastly Gifts". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved January 6, 2018.
  26. Villa, Joan (October 10, 2002). "Ice Age Chisels Mammoth Campaign in Q4". Home Media Magazine. Archived from the original on January 8, 2018. Retrieved January 8, 2018.
  27. Netherby, Jennifer (November 3, 2002). "High def, Spanish vids set to heat up 'Ice Age'". Variety. Archived from the original on January 14, 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
  28. Fretts, Bruce (November 29, 2002). "Ice Age Review". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
  29. Saldanha, Carlos; Wedge, Chris (February 8, 2005), Ice Age, 20th Century Fox, retrieved December 7, 2017
  30. Saldanha, Carlos; Wedge, Chris (March 14, 2006), Ice Age - Super Cool Edition, 20th Century Fox, retrieved December 7, 2017
  31. "Ice Age (Blu-ray)". High-Def Digest. March 14, 2008. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
  32. February 2020, Samuel Roberts 20. "Disney Plus in March 2020: new movies and shows, including Black Panther (updated)". TechRadar. Retrieved March 6, 2020.
  33. "Ice Age for Game Boy Advance". GameRankings. Retrieved July 23, 2009.
  34. "Ice Age (gba) reviews". Metacritic. CNET Networks, Inc. Retrieved July 23, 2009.
  35. "Ice Age 5 Set for July 15, 2016, Anubis Moves to 2018". ComingSoon.net. December 20, 2013. Archived from the original on December 21, 2013. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  36. "Pinoy/Cebu-born Galen Tan Chu co-directs Ice Age: Collision Course". InqPOP!. July 5, 2016.
  37. "Ice Age Franchise Box Office History - the Numbers".
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