This week’s episode of our podcast WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is up! Hear WAMG’s Cate Marquis, Jim Batts and Tom Stockman talk movies. We’ll discuss the weekend box office and review THE BIRTH OF A NATION, DENIAL, DEEPWATER HORIZON, MISS PEREGRINES SCHOOL FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN, STORKS, MASTERMINDS, COME WHAT MAY and OPERATION AVALANCHE. We’ll talk about all the movie-related events going on in St. Louis and we’ll pay tribute to the late directors Curtis Hanson and Herschell Gordon Lewis.
STORKS takes the old myth of storks delivering babies as a starting point for an animated action/adventure comedy, where the storks have gone corporate and gotten out of the baby delivery business. Now, storks deliver merchandise for Cornerstore.com, a giant Amazon-like internet retailer, because now there are so many options if you want a baby. Or at least they thought they were out of the baby business, until a little boy uses an old form to place an order for a baby brother- an order that would never have been filled except for a glitch in the system that activates the long-shuttered Baby Factory.
A baby is in no way part of the company’s new business model, so an ambitious, efficient stork named Junior (Andy Samberg), who is in line to become the next CEO, has to deal with the problem – and quickly, before his boss Hunter (Kelsey Grammer) finds out about it and puts an end to Junior’s career. Part of the “glitch” is the storks’ sole human employee, Tulip (Katie Crown). Cheerful but klutzy 18-year-old Tulip grew up in the factory after her stork botched the delivery, but she has a knack for botching things up, particularly with her numerous untried inventions. Hunter had asked Junior to lay her off but ambitious Junior is also basically a nice guy, and it is while he is gingerly trying to handle that situation that the baby glitch happens.
The easiest way to solve the problem is to delivery the baby, but with an injured wing, Junior is forced to accept Tulip’s help to do that. Sure, they are on an island called Stork Mountain in the middle of the ocean, but what (else) could go wrong?
Fast and clever, STORKS will have the whole family laughing but anyone expecting realism from a movie about birds who used to deliver babies needs to chuck that thought. This funny action/adventure tale (*ahem*) delivers the fun, and at a non-stop action pace. Although it has its warm moments, the focus is really on the comedy, and with less than an hour and a half running time (100 minutes with the pre-feature LEGO short), there is little chance of little ones getting bored.
One cannot resist a little punning about this movie. And the film itself misses no chance for comedy, either high or low, while maintaining a good heart and appropriate tastefulness for a family film. Co-director/writer Nicholas Stoller already has some experience making the grown-ups laugh, with his previous films NEIGHBORS and FORGETTING SARAH MARSHALL, and co-director Doug Sweetland has the animation handled, with his experience on TOY STORY, FINDING NEMO and CARS. The creative team also includes a few from the LEGO MOVIE, and the feature film even has a Lego short shown before it. STORKS is not only funny and breathlessly entertaining but looks good too.
Like many kids’ films, this is basically a buddy movie, with mismatched companions on a quest. In this case, the companions are the efficient executive Junior and the slightly klutzy wannabe inventor girl Tulip. Making things tougher for them are a stool-pigeon employee named Pigeon Toady (Stephen Kramer Glickman), his steely-eyed boss Hunter, a bunch of evil penguin thugs, and a super-skilled wolf pack led by Alpha Wolf (Keegan-Michael Key) and Beta Wolf (Jordan Peele). Besides, the buddy theme, the story has another thread – a boy named Nate Gardner (Anton Starkman) who wants a brother to keep him company because his parents (Jennifer Aniston and Ty Burrell) are too wrapped up in their real estate business to pay any attention to him. And of course, part of the glitch with this unauthorized baby is that she is not the requested boy but a girl – a baby girl so adorable she conquers all who look at her, melting them into endless “aawws.”
The film is packed with jokes, both kid-friendly slapstick and visual comedy, and slyly clever wordplay and in-jokes for parents. The script is one of the movie’s strength, from a writer coming from a live-action comedy background, but the animation is terrific too, with some great action sequences and jaw-dropping perspectives. The characters are likable but also more believable than you expect, and the strong female character is a plus. Tulip is as chipper as can be but she’s also resourceful, inventive and relentless, often buoying the spirits of efficient business-oriented Junior, who thought he was the tops in getting things done.
This comedy story uses every tool – the adorable little baby girl exerts her power, whether reducing adults to baby-talking fools or running them ragged trying to get her to sleep. There is a very clever scene, a running theme really, built around the troubles birds have with glass windows.
All the cast are good, but Key and Peele are particularly hilarious as wolves who fall under the baby’s spell, and lose all perspective on what they are doing. Using humor, the film taps into truths about parenting, bonding, balancing career and family, and even about modern commerce – all without losing a single laugh. Grammer is excellent as CEO Hunter but the standout is Glickman as the socially-awkward Pigeon Toady, both toadying to the boss and at the same time, trying to win the acceptance of his co-workers. Samberg and Crown make a winning pair as Junior and Tulip, as do Aniston and Burrell as the parents who finally figure it out.
STORKS is pure fun, a delight start to finish. It might not be original enough to be an Oscar contender but STORKS surely is one funny family film, one with a lighter touch but still hitting home with some warm truths about both family and friendship.
Get ready to bring the whole flock to the advance screening of STORKS!
Storks deliver babies…or at least they used to. Now they deliver packages for global internet giant Cornerstore. Starring Andy Samberg, Jennifer Aniston, Kelsey Grammar, Ty Burrell, Keegan-Michael Key, Jordan Peele, Danny Trejo, Stephen Kramer Glickman and Katie Crown, and from the studio that delivered THE LEGO MOVIE, see STORKS in theaters September 23!
WAMG invites you to enter for the chance to win FOUR (4) seats to the advance screening of STORKS on September 17 at 10AM in the St. Louis area.
TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.
OFFICIAL RULES:
1. YOU MUST BE IN THE ST. LOUIS AREA THE DAY OF THE SCREENING.
2. No purchase necessary. A pass does not guarantee a seat at a screening. Seating is on a first-come, first served basis. The theater is overbooked to assure a full house. The theater is not responsible for overbooking.
Rated PG or mild action and some thematic elements.
A new STORKS trailer has been delivered. Catch it below now.
The upcoming movie is from the directors of THE LEGO MOVIE, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller.
Storks deliver babies…or at least they used to. Now they deliver packages for a global internet retail giant. Junior, the company’s top delivery stork, is about to be promoted when he accidentally activates the Baby Making Machine, producing an adorable and wholly unauthorized baby girl. Desperate to deliver this bundle of trouble before the boss gets wise, Junior and his friend Tulip, the only human on Stork Mountain, race to make their first-ever baby drop – in a wild and revealing journey that could make more than one family whole and restore the storks’ true mission in the world.
The voice cast includes Andy Samberg, Kelsey Grammer, Katie Crown, Keegan-Michael Key,
Jordan Peele and Danny Trejo.
Directed by Nicholas Stoller and Doug Sweetland, STORKS opens in 3D and 2D in select theaters on September 23.