Amazon.ca    View CartWishlistYour AccountHelp
Welcome
Books
Music
DVD
Video
Software
Video Games
Gifts
Nos boutiques Francophones

Vous voulez voir cette page en français ? Cliquez ici.

3 used & new from CDN$ 50.65
See All Buying Options

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
Tell a Friend
Antz
 
 
Antz (1998)
Starring: Woody Allen, Dan Aykroyd Director: Eric Darnell MPAA Rating: PG
4.0 out of 5 stars  (145 customer reviews)

Availability: Available from these sellers.

3 used & new available from CDN$ 50.65

Customers Who Viewed This Item Also Viewed

A Bug's Life (Collector's Edition) (2-Disc Set)

A Bug's Life (Collector's Edition) (2-Disc Set) DVD ~ John Lasseter

4.3 out of 5 stars (96)  CDN$ 19.99
Beauty And The Beast: Enchanted Christmas

Beauty And The Beast: Enchanted Christmas

3.0 out of 5 stars (29) 
Belles Magical World

Belles Magical World

3.0 out of 5 stars (18)  CDN$ 28.99
Karate Kid

Karate Kid DVD ~ John G. Avildsen

4.4 out of 5 stars (91) 
Look Who's Talking (Widescreen/Full Screen)

Look Who's Talking (Widescreen/Full Screen) DVD ~ Amy Heckerling

4.1 out of 5 stars (25) 
Explore similar items : DVD (45)

Product Details


Product Description

From Amazon.com
Woody Allen as a worker ant with an inferiority complex? Sylvester Stallone as an affable soldier ant who discovers that digging tunnels is cool? The animation playground we all knew so well is turning into a theme park full of in-jokes for grownups. Antz explores age-old topics (one person--err, insect--can make a difference, individuality and social responsibility must exist side by side, war is hell) with comic asides and Woody Allen's funniest quips this side of PG (adults will chuckle at the socialist slogans bandied about as he campaigns for workers' rights). Sharon Stone voices the rebellious princess with a fun-loving streak that doesn't quite overcome her royal bearing and court training, but she can learn. Gene Hackman is all teeth (ants have teeth?) and menacing grins as the Army general plotting insect-icide. This bug's-eye view of life on Earth gives Allen's neurotic nonconformist an epic adventure of microscopic proportions: a devastating war with a termite colony, an odyssey to the fabled land of plenty (a picnic ground), and a race to save his fellow workers from certain death. Other voices include Anne Bancroft as the Queen, Christopher Walken, Jennifer Lopez, Danny Glover, Dan Aykroyd, Jane Curtin, and John Mahoney. The computer animation isn't exactly realistic but feels as solid and contoured as puppet animation with the smoothness and slickness of traditional cel cartoons, and the character designs and animation offer a marvelous range of expressions. The PG rating includes a gritty battle sequence that may frighten youngsters. --Sean Axmaker

Review
What a masterstroke to graft Woody Allen's neurotic schtick onto a creature with great allegorical cause for feeling insignificant: an ant born into a colony of millions, indistinguishable from his neighbors. The opening scene of Antz, in which Allen's Z reports his psychological malaise to a therapist, sets audiences up for the way the film will work on multiple levels. Only the second film to be entirely digital, after Toy Story (1995), the film is not content to be merely an odyssey of visual stimuli -- it also has the wry intelligence to exist as a loving lampoon of Allen's work. Allen is just one of many who do assured vocal work on the project, with Sylvester Stallone and Sharon Stone also offering mild riffs on their familiar personas. Inevitably compared and contrasted with its CGI insect competition, A Bug's Life, released by Disney and Pixar later that year, A Bug's Life may be the more cuddly and kid-friendly movie (the battle scene in Antz is not really appropriate for younger viewers), but Antz boasts a superior script. Plus, it earns points for the risky artistic decision to make the ants look realistic -- in other words, brown, rather than their plastic blue color in Pixar's film. Pacific Data Images knew it had a dynamic story and slick visuals, and it didn't need to enhance this essentially earth-toned world with pastels. Viewers aching for color will get a good enough dose when the ants go in search of Insectopia -- at which point it assumes thematic resonance, a symbol of the quest for a better world. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide

See all Product Description

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

A Bug's Life (Collector's Edition) (2-Disc Set)

A Bug's Life (Collector's Edition) (2-Disc Set) DVD ~ John Lasseter

4.3 out of 5 stars (96)  CDN$ 19.99
Monsters, Inc. (Widescreen) (2 Discs)

Monsters, Inc. (Widescreen) (2 Discs) DVD ~ Peter Docter

4.6 out of 5 stars (537)  CDN$ 19.99
Toy Story: 10th Anniversary Edition

Toy Story: 10th Anniversary Edition DVD ~ John Lasseter

4.9 out of 5 stars (63)  CDN$ 19.99
Finding Nemo

Finding Nemo DVD ~ Andrew Stanton

4.4 out of 5 stars (668)  CDN$ 19.99
Shark Tale (Full Screen)

Shark Tale (Full Screen) DVD ~ Bibo Bergeron

CDN$ 12.79
Explore similar items : DVD (15)

 

Customer Reviews

145 Reviews
5 star: 51%  (74)
4 star: 19%  (28)
3 star: 11%  (17)
2 star: 9%  (14)
1 star: 8%  (12)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Create your own review
Most helpful customer reviews

 
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An inoculation against irrational Disney animation, Oct 21 2003
By Francois Tremblay (Montreal, QC Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Antz (Widescreen) (DVD)
Antz looks like standard animation fare. I didn't expect a great movie, or even a good movie. Boy was I wrong. Antz is to standard animation as 1984 is to political novels. What's more, it out-1984s 1984, and is in the league of, but not as political as, Rand's "Anthem".

Antz is the story of a neurotic worker ant named Z-4195, masterly scripted and voiced by Woody Allen, as a depressed individualist in a microcosm where complete conformity, obedience and class-based social structure is the rule. The only thing that keeps him from becoming a total outcast is his friend Weaver, a soldier ant voiced by Sylvester Stallone.

Attracted to the princess of the colony, "Z" switches places with Weaver in a ploy to see her again, but is caught in a full-scale battle with a termite colony where he is the only survivor. While his individualism becomes contagious and creates turmoil amongst the other ants, he and the princess set in a journey to try to find the fabled Insectopia.

Other voice actors are Sharon Stone, Gene Hackman, Anne Bancroft, Christopher Walken, Jennifer Lopez, Danny Glover, and Dan Aykroyd. As goofy as the voice casting choices may sound, they really work. The humour will probably appeal more to adults than children (as for example Woody Allen pointing out that "when you're the middle child in a family of five million, you don't get any attention."). The views of the colony are impressive, even for an animation. A sense of scale and wonder is maintained throughout, under as well as over ground. The Insectopia, for example, turns out to be a picnic which, thanks to plastic bags and a looking glass, is more work than expected.

As a nice touch, there are socialist slogans everywhere, like "FREE TIME IS FOR TRAINING" (an actual real-life PDI slogan), and even an Atlas ant, in Atlas Shrugged pose, with the words "CONQUER IDLENESS". The evils of statism are not presented as stereotypical evil, but rather as an honestly-held belief, just as they are in real life. Even the backstabbing General Mandible is motivated by an ideology which, to simple minds, would make sense. While the worker ants rise up against their oppressors, they still hold their false premises, and chant socialist slogans : and as well they are quickly turned back into obedience by promises of more material gain by General Mandible.

While Disney continues to churn out mediocre animation which preaches the evils of collectivism, obedience and altruism (including the competitor to Antz, "A Bug's Life"), Antz is an incredible case in point of rationality, coupled with good humour, a sense of wonder, and modern technology, triumphing in modern movies. If you like animation, I cannot recommend "Antz" enough.

Weaver: What are you bitching about? In case you haven't noticed, we ants are running the show ! We're the Lords of the Earth !

Was this review helpful to you? YesNo (Report this)



 
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very Funny, April 16 2004
By Mad Beaver (SanFrancisco CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Antz (Widescreen) (DVD)
I couldnt deside between 4 or 5 stars... Anyway this movie illustrates the best ant enviornment and makes bugs life look like crap... Wait it is crap! From the crazy general and the colony, to the termite battle, to woody alan and danny glover, to the picknick scene, to insecttopia, and to the halarious lines by Woody Alan. Its just fun!
Was this review helpful to you? YesNo (Report this)



 
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars NOT FOR KIDS, Jul 17 2004
This review is from: Antz (Widescreen) (DVD)
I bought this for my kids and I was NOT happy when I heard cuss words and watched this video. Adults may like this video but I WOULD NOT ever reccomend it for kids.
Was this review helpful to you?