It would be easy to reduce Small Soldiers to the story's lowest common denominators
and call it Toy Story meets Gremlins, but this is a Joe Dante film, and nothing's
ever that simple when it comes to Dante. One of the genre's leading fantasists, Dante's
warped sense of humor --gleaned, I think, working under the tutelage of Roger Corman
way back on Hollywood Boulevard and Piranha way back when --is coupled with his ongoing
fascination with the diminutive (see the aforementioned Piranha, Gremlins, or Innerspace)
and his genuinely unique sense of aesthetics. Unfortunately, Small Soldiers never
quite rises to the level of Dante's previous work and the result makes the film feel
like a transparent, though enthusiastically directed, marketing ploy: Coming soon
to a Toys 'R Us near you. Smith plays Alan Abernathy, a young teen with a troubled
past who one day signs for a shipment of military action figures --the Commando Elite
--while taking care of his father's toy store. Although liberal dad (Dunn) is averse
to G.I. Joes and the like, Alan feels he can sell the product while his father is
out of town and make some quick cash for the financially strapped toy outlet. What
he doesn't know is that the toys have been accidentally fitted-out with state-of-the-art
military computer chips that give them the ability to think and act for themselves.
Along with the Commando Elite arrive the hideous Gorgonites, a Todd McFarlane-esque
gaggle of plastic toy mutants who are the Commandos' sworn enemies. When the rival
toys begin fighting in earnest (actually the Gorgonites are programmed to "hide
and lose," so it's the Commandos who are doing most of the fighting), they wreck
the toy store, the neighborhood, and proceed from there. Meanwhile, Alan falls for
the lovely girl-next-door, Christy (Dunst), and has to work up the nerve to straighten
out not only his life but the future of the flesh-and-blood world as well. With Tommy
Lee Jones and Frank Langella providing the voices of the opposing toy leaders (Major
Chip Hazard and Archer, respectively) and the relatively stellar casting, you'd think
Small Soldiers would be a far more rollicking ride than it really is. Too much of
what goes on here seems rushed and poorly planned; the backstory involving the creation
of these out-of-control Lilliputians is glossed over in a matter of minutes and even
Alan's budding romance is in the end a simplistic script device. As in almost all
of Dante's films, regulars Miller and Jackie Joseph (Audrey in the original Little
Shop of Horrors) make appearances, but even that feels tacked on. And like Gremlins,
I think, the escalating levels of violence in Small Soldiers will distress some parents
who may be expecting Toy Story 2. Stan Winston's miniature and CGI effects are wonderful,
but they can't conceal an obviously weak script in what is unfortunately a footnote
to Dante's better work.
--Marc Savlov
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