Animonday: Titan A.E.
This week’s animated feature comes from the US rather than Japan but it certainly owes a debt to anime films with its epic SF ideas. In the first ten minutes we’ve witnessed the destruction of the earth by an alien race bent on the annihilation of the human race, with the remnants of mankind scattered throughout the galaxy.
If the ideas are anime inspired the characters are straight out of Star Wars, Matt Damon’s Cale and Bill Pullman’s Korso are Luke and Han from Lucas’s space opera, with the only real difference being that Korso is the optimist and Cale the realist. We also get a spunky female character in the shape of Akima, voiced by Drew Barrymore.
The plot is simple, a search for the lost ship Titan that holds the future of mankind within its metal hull, but it does take an unexpected (and very un-Star Wars) turn midway through the film that you don’t expect in an American animated film.
It’s the visuals that really make the film stand-out, with its blend of both old style and computer animation. The chase through the hydrogen trees and the cat and mouse game in the ice crystals are the highlights. In fact the latter has a touch of Star Trek: The Wrath of Kahn about it and that film is also plundered for Titan A.E.’s ending with the Titan very reminiscent of Project Genesis.
But while it may ape a lot of other films it’s still an enjoyable experience with some top notch voice acting and mind blowing visuals being the films biggest assets.
And if you’ve ever wondered what Matt Damon would have been like as Luke (or Bill Pullman as Han for that matter) then this is the film for you.



Bill Pullman as Han Solo?
For Bill Pullman as Luke Skywalker, there’s always Spaceballs…
Comment by Just Passing Through | September 18, 2007
Nice review Ian. An under-rated movie IMO, great fun for us fans of comic-book science fiction. Some pretty spectacular visuals on display.
Comment by primus | September 18, 2007
[...] And I also heard that the Sci-Fi Channel’s AniMonday block will now be showing Titan A.E., that 2000 attempt by Fox to make an anime-style flick (I have no idea if it’s any good; haven’t seen it). [...]
Comment by a geek by any other name » Blog Archive » Blogiverse Check: East vs West | September 18, 2007
Although I don’t agree with you about the visual effects (the 2D and 3D don’t always fit together as they should), I can agree with your choice of stand-out moments. And I guess I can see why people find it to be a nice piece of sci-fi adventure - it just didn’t do it for me.
Comment by gproject | September 18, 2007