Agrega una trama en tu idiomaBalto and his daughter Aleu embark on a journey of adventure and self discovery.Balto and his daughter Aleu embark on a journey of adventure and self discovery.Balto and his daughter Aleu embark on a journey of adventure and self discovery.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 1 nominación en total
- Jenna
- (voz)
- Nava
- (voz)
- Aleu
- (voz)
- Niju
- (voz)
- Muru
- (voz)
- Terrier
- (voz)
- …
- Saba
- (voz)
- Muc
- (voz)
- …
- Hunter
- (voz)
- …
- Aniu
- (voz)
- (as Mone Walton)
- Fox
- (voz)
- …
- Yak
- (voz)
- (as Jeff Glen Bennet)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This film is *gasp* actually pretty good, and is easily better than the first!
The story, in a nutshell, is that our hero, Balto, had babies. While most of the pups look like their mother, one of them looks more like a wolf than a dog. She grows up and is unable to accept the fact she is more wolf-like than dog-like, then runs away. (She doesn't like being dominated by her father.) Meanwhile, both of them have the same dream filled with ice, a raven, caribou, and wolves. Well, both of them embark on a journey that manages to include all elements of the two dreams, then runs into a pack of wolves who must either leave the land they lived on for years or starve to death. Balto's daughter realizes her destiny is to leave her family and lead the wolves. Balto understands and lets her leave.
Yeah, I make it sound generic, but believe me, IT IS NOT! This film may be one of many that feature the "journey to find oneself" theme, but it succeeds extremely well! The message is deep, and the presentation is haunting with a little bit of comedy mixed in (the comedy is quite ordinary, so that may explain why the commercial makes the movie look so generic.) Add a great voice acting with talents such as Mark Hamill, Rob Paulsen, Jodi Benson etc., and you've got what may be the best direct-to-video animated motion picture ever made.
The animation was more CGI than ever, meaning that it sucked, not that it had cool special effects. So when there are no graphics and no story what is there to see? Of course, Disney like songs, with an Aztec twists. The major quality of the original Balto was that it was pure story and no darn singing in it. They completely destroyed this in Balto II. They are singing and singing and my fast forward isn't fast enough.
The ending is like the end of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. Everybody's happy, but you have absolutely no clue why. Horrible sequel.
First, I really wish we could have had Kevin Bacon and Bridget Fonda back from the original. While the voices were good, it left me feeling a bit lost as to the relation to the first. Mark Hamill's voice was also completely inappropriate for Niju - at least as he was drawn, it should have been much deeper. Second, the animation - compared to the first - is atrocious. The computer-generated parts are easily identifiable and the scenes just don't seem to mesh as well as the original Balto. The combat scenes don't seem to flow very well. And one of the things that sticks out the most in my mind from the first is gone: the complex facial expressions of the characters. Third, the plot (while good) has some holes that you could fly a 747 through. The two evil wolves (and indeed the clan) were introduced so suddenly it sent me reeling, and how did the wolf pack suddenly know Balto's name? Fourth, it tried too hard to be Lion King - and it was so visible. With Aleu hanging off that cliff, I kept seeing Simba. With Niju standing up on the rock, I kept seeing Scar preaching to the lions. Why does every movie now feel they must pay homage to the Lion King in some fashion?
Still, the movie does have many redeeming qualities. It stays interesting for most of the film and deals with some issues that can be looked at by both children and adults from both sides - when to let go. Besides the holes - and no film is perfect - the plot was good, and I truly enjoyed the Inuit references in the film - one of the truly forgotten cultures of America.
Overall, it was a good film and worth the DVD, but it could have been so much more.
So I have to say I still like the original a bit more, but this film was by no means a failure.
Visually, the film is actually quite pleasing to the eye with dramatic angles and quickly moving in Balto's really cool dream sequence and with vibrant colours in his daughter's self-discovery.
And the not that good stuff.
Balto: Wolf Quest is not grounded in reality like its predecessor and didn't have much originality to the story, but it had its moments of decent voice acting from new characters like the soft and firm Nava and the menacing Niju. Aside from that we have to deal with new voices for the recurring characters, and it shows.
Boris is the most noticeable, and even if Charles Fleischer did a decent job, I found him too loud and not funny. I wasn't that keen of Muk and Luk in the original, but they seemed pointless here. Jodi Benson did the best performance as Jenna, I'll give her credit for that.
The story, while not original, had a spiritual theme to it and I would have liked that to be explored more, because it was shown so many times right from the start and especially in this beautiful scene when Balto's daughter is in a cave. It could have been so interesting.
I'm sure Balto: Wolf Quest will entertain on its own, and I was entertained, too. I feel it could have been better, but Even though it is a far cry from its predecessor, it is still among the better sequels out there.
¿Sabías que…?
- Trivia(at around 11 mins) The box that the pups are in while being adopted is the same medicine box Balto delivered in the first film.
- ErroresThroughout most of the beginning of the movie, the raven's beak does not move whenever it caws. When Balto is by the river talking to the raven, the raven caws several times but it's beak doesn't move, yet in a later scene, when it caws, its beak moves.
- Citas
Aleu: I knew there was something wrong with me.
Balto: There is nothing wrong with you. You have a proud heritage.
Aleu: Oh, sure.
Balto: Your mother is a pure-bred husky.
Aleu: Then what are you?
Balto: I-I'm the one who's part wolf.
Aleu: How could this happen?
Balto: Look. Aleu. My dad was a husky who... had pups with a wolf.
Aleu: Great. My grandmother was a wild animal? Did the wolf teach you how to know when a human wants to kill you?
Balto: I was accidentally separated from her when I was young, so I never spent much time with... the wolf. I remember that she was as white as snow, and she had this warm voice that made me feel safe. Well, then Boris took me in, and, after being raised by a goose it's a wonder I don't honk instead of bark.
Aleu: Why didn't you tell me this before?
Balto: Because I wanted to protect you.
Aleu: Protect me? From what? From the fact that no human will ever want me because I'm part wild animal?
Balto: Aleu.
Aleu: And what about my brothers and sisters? They've got wolf in them, too. Why did humans want them?
Balto: Because they don't look it,
[sighs]
Balto: and you do.
Aleu: It's not fair. I hate you!
[jumps off the boat crying]
Balto: Aleu? Aleu, come back!
Aleu: Leave me alone!
[runs away crying]
- Versiones alternativasAround the early 2010's, Universal released the movie on digital platforms. Rather than using the 2002 master for VHS, DVD, and TV broadcasts, it was re-rendered from the original files. The soundtrack remained unchanged, however the images differed drastically from the original release. Some of the sequences included different takes, such as one in which Aleu frowned instead of smiling as in the original master. A portion of the scenes are also modified for continuity reasons, and even scenes that are beyond than 24fps have had their frame rate changed. The current master was also utilized in DVD compilations featuring this film since 2015, while others used the standalone 2002 DVD.
- ConexionesEdited into The Paul Behragam Talk Show: "Balto 3" R&T Part 1 (2015)
- Bandas sonorasTaking You Home
Written by Michele Brourman and Amanda McBroom
Performed by Kimaya Seward
Produced by Michele Brourman
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Balto: Wolf Quest
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 16 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1