Battle for Terra

Battle for Terra

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Aristomenis Tsirbas
Produced by Ryan Colucci
Keith Calder
Dane Allan Smith
Jessica Wu
Screenplay by Evan Spiliotopoulos
Story by Aristomenis Tsirbas
Starring Evan Rachel Wood
Brian Cox
James Garner
Chris Evans
Danny Glover
Amanda Peet
David Cross
Justin Long
with Dennis Quaid
and Luke Wilson
Music by Abel Korzeniowski
Cinematography Aristomenis Tsirbas
Edited by J. Kathleen Gibson
Production
company
SnootToons
MeniThings Productions
Distributed by Roadside Attractions (released through Lionsgate Films)
Release dates
  • August 8, 2007 (TIFF)
  • May 1, 2009 (United States)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $6,129,529[1]

Battle for Terra, originally screened as Terra, is a 2007 computer animated science fiction film, based on a short film of the same name about a peaceful alien planet which faces destruction from colonization by the displaced remainder of the human race. The film was directed by Aristomenis Tsirbas who conceived it as a hard-edged live action feature with photo-real Computer-Generated Imagery (CGI) environments. The close collaboration with producing partner and investor Snoot Entertainment redirected the project to become fully animated and appeal to younger audiences. The film features the voices of Evan Rachel Wood, Brian Cox, Luke Wilson, Amanda Peet, Dennis Quaid and Justin Long among others.

It premiered on September 8, 2007 at the Toronto International Film Festival. It was widely released in the United States on May 1, 2009.[2] The film was originally shot in 2D but was made in such a way that a second camera could be added to the film.[3] After the film was shown at festivals and distributors showed an interest in it a small team was hired to render the entire film again from the perspective of the second camera for a true 3D effect.[3]

It won the Grand Prize for Best Animated Feature at the 2008 Ottawa International Animation Festival.[4]

Plot

Mala (Evan Rachel Wood) and Senn (Justin Long) are young alien creatures who live on Terra, a planet from a star system in the Milky Way. Terra is a peaceful planet of small alien creatures who have a rich semi-advanced culture.

One day a large, mysterious object blocks the Terrian sun, piquing the Terrians' interest. However, since the Terrian culture bans the development of new technologies, such as telescopes, without the approval of the ruling council, none of the inhabitants are able to get a closer look at the huge object in their sky.

Mala, who is inventive and headstrong, goes against the rules of her community and creates a telescope, which she takes out into the dark empty area outside the Terrian city and uses to view the object and witnesses smaller objects coming from the large object that turn out to be incoming scout spaceships. She returns to the city to find that the scout spaceships have already started abducting Terrians (who willingly offer themselves to the "scout spaceships" mistaking them as their new "gods").

After Mala's own father, Roven (Dennis Quaid) is abducted she goads a ship into tailing her and lures it into a trap, which causes it to crash. Afterward, she saves the life of the pilot, revealed to be a human, an officer named Lieutenant Jim Stanton (Luke Wilson). After his personal robot assistant named Giddy (David Cross) warns Mala that Stanton will die without a supply of oxygen, (The Terran atmosphere contains none), she makes a deal with Giddy that she'd help him only if Giddy teaches Mala their language. So Giddy teaches her human's language. Then she creates an oxygen generator and fills a tent with air containing oxygen so that Jim can breathe. The Robot informs Mala that the mysterious object is a generation ship called The Ark, containing humans from Earth.

Centuries beforehand, both Mars and Venus were terraformed by humans and colonized. But 200 years later, the two planets demanded independence from Earth, which the Earth government refused to grant them due to the high demand of resources from the two colonies. The dispute between the three planets escalated into a violent interplanetary war that left all three planets uninhabitable. The Ark, containing the remnants of the human race, traveled for several generations looking for a new home. When Stanton awakes the robot informs Stanton and Mala that a crucial part of the ship was damaged in the crash, Mala offers to make a replacement part herself. When Stanton, Mala, and the robot return to the crash site, they discover that the ship has been moved.

The trio track the ship to a huge underground military facility which was built by a previous, warlike generation of the Terrians. The trio realizes that despite the current peaceful nature of the Terrian city, the elders have secretly retained the military technology from the dark days of war. After infiltrating the facility, fixing the ship and flying back to the Ark, Jim orders Mala to stay and goes to be debriefed.

Mala ventures off and finds Roven, but before she can rescue him, the human guards are alerted to her presence. While trying to save Mala, Roven kills himself and two men after breaching the hull, and she is captured, but Stanton helps her to escape back to Terra. The commander of the military wing of the Ark, General Hemmer (Brian Cox), takes power over the civilian leaders in a coup, and declares war on Terra, citing the deteriorating condition of the Ark. His goal is to annihilate the Terrians so that the humans can turn Terra into the new Earth. He plans to drop a huge machine onto the planet's surface—called the Terraformer—which will create an Earthlike atmosphere. Stanton is sent to be in the first group of space-fighters designated to defend the Terraformer, while General Hemmer will go down to the planet's surface in the Terraformer to personally supervise the terraforming process.

After the humans drop the Terraformer machine onto the surface, it begins to replace the native gases with oxygen and nitrogen, which will asphyxiate the aliens. The terrian elders bring out all of the secretly-hidden military technologies from their secret base, and huge waves of terrian glider-fighters attack the Terraformer machine. The human spacefighter ships begin a huge and bloody battle against the high-tech alien glider-fighters, and the sky is filled with laser cannon fire and explosions.

Finally, as the Terraformer is close to the completion of its goal of turning the Terrian atmosphere into an Earth like atmosphere, Lieutenant Stanton realizes that annihilating all of the inhabitants is morally wrong. He turns his ship towards the Terraformer machine, and, with his laser cannons blazing, attacks it. As his ship is raked with anti-aircraft defensive fire, Stanton fires his air-to-air missiles at the Terraformer's command module, destroying it, General Hemmer and Stanton in a ball of flame.

An epilogue shows what happens in Terra some time later. The Terrians and the humans have decided to live in peace. With the Terraformer machine destroyed, the Terrian atmosphere becomes safe once again for the aliens. The Terrians create a sanctuary for the human colonists to live in, with an Earth-like atmosphere. In the human sanctuary, a large statue of Lieutenant Stanton is erected, in honor of his memory and sacrifice.

Cast

Release

Roadside Attractions handled theatrical marketing in North America and used its business relationship with Lionsgate to open the film wide in the United States. Battle for Terra received uncharacteristically little marketing for a wide release film. The television campaign consisted of a small number of television spots on Cartoon Network and a handful of network television ads in select markets. Awareness for the film on its opening weekend was subsequently little to non-existent. This strategy of having a disproportionately small advertising campaign for a wide release was employed only one other time a year earlier with the film Delgo. The results for that film were disastrous as the $40 million Delgo grossed a mere $694,782 on 2,160 screens. The lower costing Battle for Terra fared considerably better by taking in more than twice as much revenue ($1,647,083) on roughly half as many screens (1,159) and continued on to gross $6 million internationally. Battle For Terra opened May 1 in the United States against 2 other wide releases: X-Men Origins: Wolverine (4,099 screens) and Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (3,175).

Reception

Critical reaction

The film has received average reviews from critics. Based on 94 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an average rating of 5.5/10, and a score of 48% from critics.[5] Another review aggretator, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream critics, the film has received an average score of 54%, based on 19 reviews.[6]

Box office

The film opened at #12 in the United States grossing $1,082,064 in 1,159 theaters with an average of $934 per theater. The film's international box office began May 14, 2009 in Russia with a 5th place opening of $332,634 at 83 screens. "Battle for Terra's" current worldwide total is $6,101,046.

Home media release

Battle for Terra was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc September 22, 2009 by Lionsgate Home Entertainment.[7]

Battle for Terra was released in France in French and English version by Rézo Films on DVD and Blu-ray Disc October 20, 2010 and include a 3D version of the movie with 4 3D glasses.[8] It uses the TriOviz Inficolor 3D technology, a patent pending stereoscopic system, first demonstrated at the International Broadcasting Convention in 2007 and deployed in 2010. It works with traditional 2D flat screens and HDTV sets and uses glasses with complex color filters and dedicated image processing that allow natural color perception with a pleasant 3D experience. When observed without glasses, some slight doubling can be noticed in the background of the action which allows watching the movie in 2D without the glasses. This is not possible with traditional brute force anaglyphic systems.[9]

A Region B Blu-ray 3D was released in Germany.[10]

References

  1. "Battle for Terra". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  2. Welcome to MeniThings.com
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Battle for Terra: About the film: Production notes". Archived from the original on 20 April 2009. Retrieved 2009-04-22.
  4. Ottawa 08 International Animation Festival - History
  5. "Battle for Terra Movie Reviews, Pictures". IGN Entertainment. Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on 4 May 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  6. "Battle for Terra (2009): Reviews". Metacritic. Archived from the original on 1 May 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  7. "Lionsgate Announces 'Battle for Terra' Blu-ray". High-Def Digest. Retrieved 2009-07-08.
  8. "Battle for Terra 3D (Blu-ray): The test (Google Translation: French to English)". Unification France. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  9. www.digitalcinemareport.com: The Games We Play, by Michael Karagosian
  10. Terra Blu-ray

External links