Huh, I'm talking to myself an awful lot here... that aside, it's time to tackle what might just be the biggest and most ambitious of all of the sequels:
The Land Before Time X: The Great Longneck Migration.
Before I get started, I'll mention here that Littlefoot's mother is addressed by the non-canon name "Louise" in a couple of the notes.
So it comes to this. Ten movies. Nine sequels. 15 years. Is
The Great Longneck Migration any good? We-he-hell, let's see...
I will commend X for its ambition; the movie feels much bigger than the other sequels, with its longer running time, its journey across sweeping landscapes, the story of (apparently) saving the world from a cataclysm and Littlefoot having an encounter with someone that changes his life. Unfortunately, I think that little of it works - the journey to the crater isn't all that exciting but at least has pretty backgrounds and music; the save-the-world plotline, though mercifully only conveyed through the sauropods witnessing an unusually hectic eclipse with their eyes closed and assuming that they pushed the sun back into the sky, is still a bit of a stretch for the series; and, unfortunately, things really fall apart once Littlefoot meets the big new character of the day, Bron, which I will elaborate upon when I get around to discussing him - all I will say here is that I absolutely do
not buy the stakes of Littlefoot wanting to be with him and that his backstory, well, wait for the next paragraph. Suffice to say that little else improves the story: the comedy is very rarely effective, only one emotional moment (the final song) leaves any impact and the action scenes - well, to be frank, calling any of the ones past the second crocodile encounter "action scenes" is an insult to action scenes everywhere.
As the big tenth movie, and with it making an effort to reference the first movie more than ever - it comes off to me like they made the movie just for fans of the original, it doesn't feel like any of the other sequels really matter even with a handful of visual cues nodding to a handful of them - one would hope that the movie takes some care to treat its source material with some level of respect. Well, you'd be a damned fool to think that way, this is a Grosvenor-era TLBT sequel. Probably the best way to illustrate the matter is with the portrayal of the world outside of the Great Valley: even though I've tried to pass off the increasingly verdant
Mysterious Great Beyond (alright, that's a welcome change from the other sequels, I'll admit) as the world improving since the first movie, this one makes it abundantly clear that the apoclayptic conditions from that movie - the very catalyst for the series happening in the first place, the sole reason the characters sought out the Great Valley - has been completely retconned out of existence. Until the Great Earthshake comes along and burns everything (???), the valley that everyone lived in in the first place (
???) was verdant and completely fine, and the nest that Littlefoot lived in since he hatched was secure (
!?!?!?!?!?). Bron's reasoning for wanting to find the Great Valley all but confirms the retcon; instead of wanting to find the valley for food, he explains that he and his mate wanted to find the Great Valley to make sure his family was safe... even though valley in the first movie was simply a massive food store in the first movie and the lack of sharpteeth was an invention of the sequels. With the other Grosvenor-directed
Land Before Time sequels in mind, it begs the question; between the lack of understanding of the themes and the basic world that it set up, did the creative team behind the sequels after Roy Allen Smith left even watch the first movie, or did they just have a list of things that happened in it on hand and try to build off of that without actually knowing what in the name of Bluth they were doing?
On a lighter note, the songs boomerang; the first song, 'Adventuring', is passable. The second song, 'Me and my Dad', is irritating for a tsunami of reasons. The final song. The last song, 'Bestest Friends', is surprisingly great, even if I don't buy the setup for the song (its credits reprise is strong as well).
Once again, I feel little need to go deep into most of the main characters because they are once again one-note and forgettable shells of their former selves, but I do have things to say about Cera and Littlefoot. First of all, I think Cera is a little more noble than she was in the previous sequels, namely with her choosing to stay by an injured character at one point, but at the same time, she is otherwise no more or less complex than she was in
VIII or
IX. Littlefoot, the star of the movie, is slightly more-two dimensional than usual (in comparison to his usual one-dimensional self), even if he is still a nicey-boy: he acts a lot more like an actual kid than usual, with him getting himself into danger because he wants to play and him initially being somewhat hurt when he is told by his grandfather that Bron is his father (though that melts and gives away to him playing with him after... rgghhh). Grandma and Grandpa get to shine a little more than usual and are likeable enough, and Topps is mercifully completely absent outside of two quick gags that have nothing to do with his bland, typical self.
Three of the new characters are not particularly remarkable. Sue is just kind of
there, Pat is a cool-ish old guy and Shorty is a more-well-executed-but-still-not-good version of Hyp. Bron, however, is a very different beast. On one hand, he is nice and he has a good introduction, and he is portrayed very well by Keifer Sutherland. On the other hand, his backstory utterly poisons him: as he tells it, he abandons his mate and unborn child to find the Great Valley (which has some pretty clear directions to follow, by the by), fails to find it over the course of over five years (this is an estimate going off of production art for the first movie, but still, he had all of the time between leaving his family and the Great Earthshake...), comes back to find his home literally up in smoke, looks for his mate and kid for a few days before Rooter says his wife is dead and he decides to stop trying to find his son after he (begrudgingly) adopts some randos. Because of all of this, he reads as an inept deadbeat; none of his nice conversations with Littlefoot or play sessions mask the fact that he up and gave up on looking for his son when, as far as he knew, he was out there alone in the Great Beyond. None of the mentions of him being wise mask his inability to walk west in a straight line for a couple hundred miles.
Alright, onto the sharpteeth, because they are...
interesting. I'll get the crocodile out of the way first, it's fine; it's nothing great or good but it's not a terrible threat. In fact, because of how irritating the kids are in some of its scenes, it's easy to root for. Unfortunately, it is one of four sharpteeth in the movie, and the other three - some technicolor
Tyrannosaurus - stand out as the most worthless sharpteeth up to this point. They come off as some of the weakest and least functional creatures in the franchise; they barely seem to know how to do much more than stand around and roar, they don't seem to have senses of smell, the very few blows they inflict on the characters leave no effects on them (seriously: Bron gets
bitten in the leg by one of them and all it garners is a pained grunt) and they are startlingly fragile: the red and gray ones in particular are felled by tiny pebbles and a strange effort by Cera and Shorty respectively.
The animation is about on par with last time, with two differences I can point out: the backgrounds look a lot better to my eye and horrible CGI has taken over the world and ultimately drags down the animation quality as a whole.
The more I wrote here, the colder my view on this movie became. I was initially not sure what to give it; I was split somewhere between a 4/10 and a 3.5/10; but, the more and more I think about it, the more I realize that a good song and a few strong elements are not nearly enough to save this from a
2.5/10.
I went adventuring, but at what cost?
Before the notes, I'd like to point out that I only barely settled with a 2.5/10 after the rewatch; in fact, my initial score for the movie by the time I had written all but the final paragraph was a flat 2/10, and I only bumped it up because I conceded that it was probably a little harsh (Nate agreed with this notion).
- Littlefoot here sounds older than any of the other Littlefoot voice actors.
- The kids bait one of their best friends into hurting herself on a rock, pleasant.
- You five regularly go on harrowing adventures and only now do you sing about the prospect of going on one???
- The crocodile has problems with subtlety - Ducky, your kind are built for swamps in this universe, you should love this place.
- Apparently sharptooth skin has a similar enough texture to rock for the kids to mistake Smasher (read: the awful gray sharptooth) for one; he looks absolutely MASSIVE when they're close up on him.
- One of the themes from II is given a bit of a reprise at a point - how big was the asteroid that left the crater?
- "This is your father. He was dead in context of the first movie, but he's back."
I think one of the anonymous longnecks yells "oh, my God!" when Littlefoot is running away. - Alright, so picture this: in a decidedly green valley filled with various kinds of sauropod, Bron decides to abandon his mate, Blue Louise, to look for the Great Valley, which is semi-easily reached by going west for long enough. He comes back to find the green valley up in smoke, burned to a crisp by tectonic activity and his nest swallowed up by the Big Underground that his mate and parents-in-law didn't move from in the five years since he ditched them. He navigated a canyon, some rain, a luscious, verdant plain (??!?!?!?!?!?!??) and some rocks over the course of several days before Rooter told him that Sharptooth killed Louise but he didn't know what happened to Littlefoot. One day, in a wonderful green woodland, he saw a young brachiosaur shielding some Camarasaurus and Diplodocus calves. Noticing that Littlefoot wasn't among them, he abandoned the babies and only begrudgingly let them follow him. He got used to them and let some other sauropods gang up with him.
The only detail Littlefoot gleams from Bron's story of failing to be a good father and abandoning his family is that he is the leader of a whole herd and that his mother would have been proud of him. - oh, and he sings about how cool this deadbeat pile of stem-bird red meat is
- apparently Littlefoot didn't pick up on the detail of Shorty being one of the young'ns Bron found; one of the babies that was alongside him clearly hasn't grown since Bron found him a few days after Louise died, I bet it's only been a few months since the first movie ended in this universe.
- one day, the moon pushed the sun out of the sky because it was jealous and a bunch of sauropods threw it back into orbit (yes, the orbit around the Earth, dinosaurs have figured out how evolution works but they're still flat-earthers)
- Bron's view on sharpteeth is that they're all cowards, too chicken to hunt a large herd; they are habitual pack-hunters, they hunt in pairs and trios.
Friendly reminder that his mate was killed by a completely fearless Tyrannosaurus that hunted by itself. - I got distracted, pressed a button and made the movie Spanish; Littlefoot's Spanish name is El Pequinio (????).
- Crusher (the red sharptooth) is more concerned with looking cool and roaring than with actually attacking Pat, and he is felled by a handful of tiny pebbles.
- Why are all of the rexes more concerned with screaming and looking cool than with actually killing the sauropods they're hunting?
- Thrasher's (the green rex... yes, all of my X rex pet names end with 'sher) defeat is understandable given that his two attackers are two giant (elderly) Apatosaurus.
- I won't fault (the sharpteeth) for being afraid of the event; if anything, all of the characters should be panicking like that in the face of an eclipse, a tornado, and a thunderstorm all in one.
- They're all still looking at the eclipse (particularly the sharpteeth, they're just roaring and glaring at it dumbfoundedly); they're all going to go blind.
- Littlefoot opens his eyes prematurely, he's going to die; the sun being right behind the moon is the only point in which it's safe to look at an eclipse, if it's not completely obscured you're destroying your eyes
- They make a point of having Pat live in the Great Valley with the kids, but he never shows up ever again.
- Threehorns feel pain when they ram into things, they just grin and bear it.
- Bron assumed his son was alive until now but just chose not to look for him... "dad" and "deadbeat" start with the same letter.
- I'm not happy that Littlefoot is staying with his friends and grandparents, I'm happy that he's not staying with that loser.
- The narrator point-blank says that Littlefoot and his father will have more adventures together; was that one TV series episode already planned at this point?
Instead of stoking false hopes that I'll be nice to the next movie, I'll say that, if you like
XII, maybe you'll agree with at least some of what I have to say in the review
after the next.
Until then, take care
