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I
recommend Disney's Tarzan for a number of reasons.
First, my family liked it a lot. My wife and kids and I
all sat fascinated by the animation. The computer-assists
grow sharper by the movie: here we have a startlingly
three-dimensional jungle, limbs and vines passing the
camera with fresh realism. Many of the characters - Wayne
Knight's Tantor, for instance - are drawn as charming
throwbacks to traditional animation; the elephants are
reminiscent of the military marchers in The Jungle Book.
What's most exciting is the way the camera follows
Tarzan's agile ranging among the trees. He zips and
zooms, cuts and caroms, surfs and slides. American
amusement parks are always trying to build a better
roller coaster, and Disney has built the ultimate (as of
the last year of the century) ape man. Tarzan is always
likable and, even though his hi-jinks defy physics, he
always keeps the eye occupied.
Edgar Rice Burroughs' story moves smoothly at the start.
We watch a husband, wife and baby abandoning a burning
ship. They land on some part of the African coast, where
they build an extensive tree dwelling and, presumably,
the parents die by the claws and teeth of a large cat.
Discovered by a compassionate and large-eyed gorilla
(Kala, voiced by Glenn Close), the English baby becomes
part of the extended clan. Although the silver-backed
leader Kerchak (Lance Henrickson) is against keeping the
child, as he is not of their kind, the boy grows and
becomes friends with most of the surrounding animals,
especially his two pals, this film's versions of
sidekicks. They are Tantor, done with a slightly silly,
adenoidal voice by Wayne Knight, and Terk, a young female
gorilla with a Don King 'do and a Brooklyn attitude
(supplied ably by Rosie O'Donnell). Both of these voices
are delightfully distinguishable, by the way, as is the
threatening rasp of Henrickson as Kerchak.
Something else we loved was the human side to Tarzan. We
are attracted to his character mostly, I think, because
he is an outcast, fully accepted neither in the world of
the jungle, nor in the less civilized society of
humankind. Tarzan frequently feels excluded from his
clan, and is thrilled to find Jane (Minnie Driver), the
English woman who has accompanied her father, Professor
Porter (Nigel Hawthorne), and the hunter Clayton (Brian
Blessed). Of course the main conflict is supplied by the
white man's encroachment upon the natural habitat of the
apes. What's rather predictable here is that Professor
Porter himself has come merely to observe gorillas,
whereas Clayton - and his boatload of mercenary thugs -
are armed with rifles and the cages that will transport
as many apes as possible back to the zoos and
laboratories of Western civilization.
Small moments make most of the difference. Directors
Chris Buck and Kevin Lima cause Tarzan's basic conflicts
to evoke our sympathy again and again. There's one scene
in which the jungle hero has heard the reports of rifles
and gone to investigate. We watch as he picks up a shell
casing, sniffs and then tastes it. It's foreign and
unsavory, of course, and a fine example of the main fight
going on in the narrative. Another moving scene occurs
when Tarzan places his palm against Jane's - and sees
that hers is a comparably-sized, human hand. These brief
moments sketch character without using speech, a feat
difficult to do even when using live actors.
As the voice of Tarzan, Tony Goldwyn performs well. He's
heroic without showing off - his job the equivalent of a
good writer telling a story with a transparent prose
style. Minnie Driver is very expressive, especially in
the frantically-paced scenes in which Tarzan rescues her
from vicious baboons. Finally, the voice of Phil Collins
is quite pleasing in the background. It's a pleasure that
none of the animals themselves breaks into song: the
story relies on the musicianship of a proven soft-rock
star. Another aspect of language handled cleverly is the
English spoken by Tarzan while he is with the gorillas,
versus the English he learns from Jane and her father.
It's more believeable than the scenes in which Pocahantas
suddenly speaks fluent English to John Smith; it also
makes good use of linguistic jokes, as when Tarzan
connects the name "Clayton" with the gunshots
intruding upon the quiet jungle.
Only The Lion King used a story original to Disney
writers. I find it ironic, therefore, that their
Renaissance continues with reliable stories like Tarzan.
I hope they keep doing it, though, because there are not
enough good G-rated movies around, and because it makes
good sense, after all, to go with a good thing.

Related
'Tarzan' Links:

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 An
immortal legend. As you've only imagined.

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