Home
Part of the This Is Wiltshire Network
What's On
Music
Events
Theatre & Arts
Submit Your Event
Eating Out
Film Trailers
Competitions
Horoscopes
South West Trains 241
Reader Travel
Film Reviews
Site Map
Search Advanced Search
Film Reviews
Go, Speed Racer!
Christina Ricci as Trixie
Christina Ricci as Trixie

"Go, Speed Racer, Go!"

Based on the Japanese animated series, Speed Racer signals the return of Andy and Larry Wachowski, the publicity-shy brothers who pioneered 'bullet time' in The Matrix trilogy.

There are souped-up thrills here too, set in a retro-futuristic world of high-speed motor sport on outrageous racetracks littered with gravity-defying banks and stomach churning turns.

The Wachowskis put the pedal to the metal from the opening frame, conjuring a comic book universe of retina-searing colour and neon that seamlessly melds live action with digital environs.

Production designer Owen Paterson saturates the screen with every conceivable combination of rich, primary hues.

The Racer family home is a triumph of orange, turquoise and fuchsia, contrasting brilliantly with the hero's white leather jumpsuit.

On large format IMAX screens especially, this is a non-stop assault on the senses. Older viewers may want to take their sunglasses.

In a cute nod to the film's anime origins, the Wachowskis imagine fight sequences as frames of hand-drawn cartoons.

Technically at least, Speed Racer is a triumph, although frenetic editing reduces segments of some set pieces to a blur.

However, under the bonnet, the screenplay needs some fine-tuning to allow performances to stand out against all that spectacular, twinkling background detail.

Speed Racer (Hirsch) is a demon behind the wheel of his Mach 5, designed by his father Pops (Goodman); so good that Royalton Industries, run by the Machiavellian E.P. Arnold Royalton (Allam), offers Speed a lucrative sponsorship deal.

SPEED RACER (PG, 135 mins)
Released: May 9

The young driver declines on behalf of his father and mother (Sarandon), determined to remain an independent and honour the memory of older brother Rex (Porter), who crashed and burned during the notorious Crucible rally.

Royalton doesn't take rejection kindly.

"Racing has nothing to do with drivers, it's all about power and the unassailable might of money!" he rages, revealing that the Grand Prix, the holy grail of the World Racing League, has been fixed for years.

Determined to restore the tarnished reputation of the sport, Speed declares war on Royalton, aided by his girlfriend Trixie (Ricci), the mysterious Racer X (Fox) and rival driver Taejo Togokhan (Rain).

Speed Racer is a high-octane, turbo-charged blast for kids, with enough breathtaking action sequences to satisfy even the most demanding adrenaline junkie.

Unfortunately for experienced drivers, the Wachowskis forget to put sufficient genuine emotion in the tank and their film is several laps too long at 135 minutes.

Hirsch, Sarandon and co play their roles with absolute seriousness while Allam's pantomime villain is almost as much fun as Speed's trouble-seeking little brother Spritle (Litt) and his animal sidekick Chim-Chim.

This is very much a spectacle for the entire family.

An encounter with a ninja death squad is played for laughs and when Speed and Trixie pucker up, Spritle warns fellow youngsters that "the following image may be unsuitable for the inoculated or cootie-sensitive viewers".

3:09pm Wednesday 7th May 2008

Print   Email this
Archive
Search
Thousands of Jobs, Homes & Cars from the This is Wiltshire
Powered by Powered by Fish4
Get yourself headhunted
Upload your cv for free with us
Need a holiday?
Click here for a great selection with local pick ups
Got an item for sale?
place an advert in your local newspaper
Looking for old news?
Click here to search our archive
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy © Copyright 2001-2008
Newsquest Media Group
A Gannett Company
This site is part of Newsquest's audited local newspaper network