Johnny Depp stars in 'Rango,' as a chameleon: movie review
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In the animated western 鈥Rango,鈥 Johnny Depp has one of his best roles as a chameleon cut loose in the Mojave Desert who turns into the gunslinging savior of a parched town. True, he鈥檚 only the voice of Rango, but this is Depp, after all, who can do more with his voice than most actors can do with their entire body.
The nonstop inventiveness of 鈥淩ango," the first animated feature directed by 鈥Pirates of the Caribbean鈥 maven Gore Verbinski, is almost never exhausting. That鈥檚 because it hews to a strong story line. By the way, why is it that animated features these days 鈥 think 鈥Toy Story 3鈥 et al. 鈥 are almost always better plotted than dramatic features? Is it because the arduousness of working in animation helps pare down excess?
But I digress. The best of 鈥淩ango鈥 is a lot like the best of the first 鈥淧irates鈥 movie 鈥 crazily funny and rambunctious. It draws on an entire library of westerns, most obviously 鈥淗igh Noon鈥 and the Clint Eastwood-Sergio Leone spaghetti epics, but it also draws on 鈥Chinatown鈥 and many other movies featuring reptilian bad guys. These borrowings are all done with high wit. (The screenwriter is John Logan.)
Depp鈥檚 is not the only standout voice work: Ned Beatty鈥檚 corrupt mayor, Bill Nighy鈥檚 Rattlesnake Jake, Timothy Olyphant鈥檚 Clint Eastwood parody, and Isla Fisher鈥檚 Beans, Rango鈥檚 lizardly love interest, are among the other standouts. The visual effects by Industrial Light and Magic, designed by Mark 鈥淐rash鈥 McCreery and his team, are state of the art, only occasionally veering into (literal) overkill.
The animation is probably too scarily intense for children younger than around 8 years old. I noticed that the 5-year-old seated in my row laughed out loud at most of 鈥淩ango鈥 but sunk into himself when the rattlesnake coiled into view. I was pretty scared, too. Grade: A- (Rated PG for rude humor, language, action, and smoking.)