Like Gus Van Sant's recent remake of Psycho, this Disney retread of the classic 1949
fantasy film raises the question: Why? Obviously, recent advances in the field of
special effects make for a more realistic depiction of the titular giant ape, but
the film loses something in the updating. Willis O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen's lovingly
rendered stop-motion Joe Young has been replaced by Rick Baker's too-realistic animatronics
and the computer wizardry of Industrial Light & Magic, leaving the original's
sense of wonder in the dirt. It looks like a million bucks, sure, but this Joe Young,
expressive though he may be, is a far cry from the original's campy fun. Paxton plays
Gregg O'Hara, a California zoologist scouring darkest Africa hoping to cash in on
reports of a mythical giant ape. What he finds is Theron's Jill Young, a vivacious,
fiercely protective naturalist who's busy fighting off the poachers who'd rather
have Mighty Joe Young sold off in pieces to the highest bidder. Fifteen-feet-tall
and possessed of childlike facial expressions (everyone in the film seems to rely
on an ongoing childlike naïveté from time to time), giant Joe Young is
a genetic anomaly, a silverback gorilla with above-average intelligence. Both Joe
and Jill are orphans - their mother was killed by the unctuous Strasser 12 years
earlier. When Strasser returns to capture the now-fully-grown Joe, Gregg convinces
Jill that the only safe haven for her oversized friend is back in California in a
wildlife preserve especially manufactured to contain the hulking ape. Once there,
both Joe and Jill begin to brood amidst the stifling constraints of the modern world.
It's not long before Joe Young earns the Mighty in his name and breaks free, running
amok in downtown San Diego and causing all manner of havoc while Gregg, Jill, and
Strasser race against the clock. Director Underwood has a sure hand with the action
sequences here, but not much else. Shots of a CGI Joe loping through the veldt are
breathtaking, but they still look computer-generated. Academy Award winner Rick Baker's
animatronics are another matter. The cable-controlled Joe is as expressive as a real
gorilla, but all the special effects in the world can't save Mighty Joe Young from
screenwriter Ruth Rose's leaden dialogue and an ending so hamhanded that it appears
to have been lifted part and parcel from It's a Wonderful Life. Paxton, as always,
is thoroughly engaging, and Theron is coming into her own as an actress, but the
bottom line here is that the film lacks the original's goofy good humor. Less effects
and more humanity are in order before this remake can even get within spitting distance
of the original.
--Marc Savlov
Capsule Reviews
Mighty Joe Young 
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