Le Petit Dinosaure: La Pluie d'étoiles glacées
Titre original : The Land Before Time VIII: The Big Freeze
NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
2,9 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSnow falls in the Great Valley for the first time, puzzling and enchanting everyone. The friends search for Spike after he leaves to search for his family.Snow falls in the Great Valley for the first time, puzzling and enchanting everyone. The friends search for Spike after he leaves to search for his family.Snow falls in the Great Valley for the first time, puzzling and enchanting everyone. The friends search for Spike after he leaves to search for his family.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total
John Ingle
- Narrator
- (voix)
- …
Aria Noelle Curzon
- Ducky
- (voix)
- …
Rob Paulsen
- Spike
- (voix)
- …
Thomas Dekker
- Littlefoot
- (voix)
Anndi McAfee
- Cera
- (voix)
Jeff Bennett
- Petrie
- (voix)
- …
Tress MacNeille
- Ducky's Mom
- (voix)
- …
Susan Krebs
- Tippy's Mom
- (voix)
- …
Jeremy Suarez
- Tippy
- (voix)
Kenneth Mars
- Grandpa Longneck
- (voix)
- …
Miriam Flynn
- Grandma
- (voix)
Avis à la une
Unfortunately, this LBT has a spoilt, usually positive Ducky who is now grumpy and a storyline that is good for teaching but not very good for a LBT film.
Luckily, the plot is all right and the songs are good, especially "Family" and the learning songs. The animation is quite good as well, sort of in between LBT 7's animation and LBT 9's animation.
The new characters are entertaining. Mr. Thicknose is a wise threehorn (they are all dinosaurs) who likes to teach Littlefoot and his friends. While he talks to them again, Ducky is angry at Spike and Littlefoot is worried that he is seeming to upset Mr. Thicknose. The film continues on as a pretty good learning adventure and an adventure good for an animated film.
The best character in this who is one of the main five is Petrie.
Ah well. Enjoy "Land Before Time VIII: The Big Freeze".
Luckily, the plot is all right and the songs are good, especially "Family" and the learning songs. The animation is quite good as well, sort of in between LBT 7's animation and LBT 9's animation.
The new characters are entertaining. Mr. Thicknose is a wise threehorn (they are all dinosaurs) who likes to teach Littlefoot and his friends. While he talks to them again, Ducky is angry at Spike and Littlefoot is worried that he is seeming to upset Mr. Thicknose. The film continues on as a pretty good learning adventure and an adventure good for an animated film.
The best character in this who is one of the main five is Petrie.
Ah well. Enjoy "Land Before Time VIII: The Big Freeze".
While a long way from being the worst, this sequel isn't the best either. It does benefit from some nice colourful animation, a sweet story and a sterling vocal turn from Robert Guillaume(who also voiced Rafiki in "The Lion King"). Actually in general the whole voice cast was very well done. However, while sweet the songs aren't exactly memorable, some of the dialogue is a little on the corny side and the film is too short. I may be alone as well in thinking the singing was a tad weak, Guillaume has done much better singing before.
Overall, I do recommend it for kids, they will definitely love it. However depending on whether you loved the first film, I did, or how old you are, others may find it disappointing. It does do the right thing though, provides decent entertainment for its target audience. 5.5/10 Bethany Cox
Overall, I do recommend it for kids, they will definitely love it. However depending on whether you loved the first film, I did, or how old you are, others may find it disappointing. It does do the right thing though, provides decent entertainment for its target audience. 5.5/10 Bethany Cox
The 'Land before time' series has its high points. Of course the 1988 progenitor is the best, with its earnestness and substance, but 1995's 'The time of Great Giving' again reached for meaningful themes and ideas, and 1998's 'The secret of Saurus Rock,' going the other way and leaning into its silliness, was genuinely clever and fun. Otherwise - well, it's not that the other direct-to-video sequels are bad, because they're not. They are consistent, however, and they are consistently somewhat so-so: enjoyable, but modestly so, with shortcomings as evident as their strengths, and writing and execution that are rather simplified and unsophisticated. These issues have been routinely reflected in the dialogue, characterizations, scene writing, plot, voice acting, songs, and to some degree even in the animation. Sitting for the eighth entry in the franchise, there was no reason to think that 'The Big Freeze' would be any different. Indeed, for better and for worse, this is part and parcel with its brethren, and its lasting value is a little soft.
The saga of Littlefoot and his friends continues, with mild humor adjoining mild adventure and mild drama, and life lessons will be imparted along the way. I think the animators refined their digital methods a bit following 'The stone of cold fire' as it shifted away from traditional hand-drawn art, and there's perhaps some more nuance in the visuals - including, unfailingly, beautiful, detailed backgrounds, and character designs and other active elements that more than not are pretty swell. Reliable as the voice cast has been in and of themselves, their performances are maybe more grounded, and not quite as wholly juvenile as those heard in prior sequels. Even as they're regularly ham-handed the songs are variable in their quality, with some a touch sharper than others. There's not much to say about John Loy's screenplay that hasn't been said previously, but suffice to say that the picture more closely recalls a Saturday morning cartoon, or at most a cartoon that might air in the afternoon as elementary schools let out, more than a full-length theatrical presentation.
What I will say is that 'The Big Freeze' boasts more admirable sincerity than most of its predecessors with the thoughts that it broaches, hitting upon some important notions for the intended audience of a tender age (and, let's face it, for too many so-called adults, too). Then, too, some of the humor is a tad more amusing than elsewhere. I honestly do like this, and it's fairly well-rounded. I think the key trouble this flick faces is that from top to bottom it lands all too gently, lacking the vitality to make a mark even at its best, or at the most tense moments. Through moods both happy, sad, and ostensibly urgent it's too even-keeled, and while as a result it's not as gauche as other examples, its strengths are also made to feel more shallow in the process. In the way that is true of other fare that is so light and passively appreciable, the sum total is still worth watching in one measure or another. Even among other 'Land before time' films, however, this is kind of middling, so unless you have a special impetus to watch, this is something to check out only on a passing whim.
There was a lot of potential and real care poured into the writing, but in this case Charles Grosvenor's direction molds the movie into a form that's sadly unexciting and dull. It's still decent enough to merit a view if you happen to come across it, but definitely don't go out of your way for 'The Big Freeze,' and temper your expectations.
The saga of Littlefoot and his friends continues, with mild humor adjoining mild adventure and mild drama, and life lessons will be imparted along the way. I think the animators refined their digital methods a bit following 'The stone of cold fire' as it shifted away from traditional hand-drawn art, and there's perhaps some more nuance in the visuals - including, unfailingly, beautiful, detailed backgrounds, and character designs and other active elements that more than not are pretty swell. Reliable as the voice cast has been in and of themselves, their performances are maybe more grounded, and not quite as wholly juvenile as those heard in prior sequels. Even as they're regularly ham-handed the songs are variable in their quality, with some a touch sharper than others. There's not much to say about John Loy's screenplay that hasn't been said previously, but suffice to say that the picture more closely recalls a Saturday morning cartoon, or at most a cartoon that might air in the afternoon as elementary schools let out, more than a full-length theatrical presentation.
What I will say is that 'The Big Freeze' boasts more admirable sincerity than most of its predecessors with the thoughts that it broaches, hitting upon some important notions for the intended audience of a tender age (and, let's face it, for too many so-called adults, too). Then, too, some of the humor is a tad more amusing than elsewhere. I honestly do like this, and it's fairly well-rounded. I think the key trouble this flick faces is that from top to bottom it lands all too gently, lacking the vitality to make a mark even at its best, or at the most tense moments. Through moods both happy, sad, and ostensibly urgent it's too even-keeled, and while as a result it's not as gauche as other examples, its strengths are also made to feel more shallow in the process. In the way that is true of other fare that is so light and passively appreciable, the sum total is still worth watching in one measure or another. Even among other 'Land before time' films, however, this is kind of middling, so unless you have a special impetus to watch, this is something to check out only on a passing whim.
There was a lot of potential and real care poured into the writing, but in this case Charles Grosvenor's direction molds the movie into a form that's sadly unexciting and dull. It's still decent enough to merit a view if you happen to come across it, but definitely don't go out of your way for 'The Big Freeze,' and temper your expectations.
Boy that Universal really knows how to milk (or should I say "Mine") a franchise to death, these sequels seem to get cheaper & cheaper every time, it's really sickning that one of Don Bluth's classic mytho's is getting buchered more & more with near low quality sequels like this, I wonder how Don feels about this?
I'm sure glad MGM didn't take The Secret Of Nimh to the same direction as Land Before Time (hey, one dog ugly sequel was bad enough), if there's ever a Land Before Time 9, I think they should try "Land Before Time IX, The Mushroom Cloud".
I'm sure glad MGM didn't take The Secret Of Nimh to the same direction as Land Before Time (hey, one dog ugly sequel was bad enough), if there's ever a Land Before Time 9, I think they should try "Land Before Time IX, The Mushroom Cloud".
I loved the Land Before Time (first one). I love Don Bluth movies in general. I would like to point out The first LBT was the ONLY one that Don had a hand in. You will notice that it is a new director every 3 or so movies after that. It is so sad that it has become the norm now to take something that was wonderful and heartfelt and turn it into a marketing scheme =(. I have only seen this sequel, and I don't plan on seeing any of the others, I prefer to leave my childhood memories of Littefoot, Petrie, Cera and the others intact. I miss animated movies that had imagination and an obvious amount of thought and effort put into them, most movies now a days are cranked out for the soul purpose of making money. So sad.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe second movie where Spike talks. First time was in Le Petit Dinosaure: Voyage au pays des brumes (1996).
- GaffesDucky and Spike's mother tells Tippy's mother that there were no other spiketails in the Great Valley when she took Spike in as her own, but other stegosaurs have been seen in the Great Valley in the past sequels; some even having a few minor speaking roles. She might have meant, however, that there were none at the time, but some arrived later on.
- Citations
Mr. Thicknose: [Mr. Thicknose is struggling to keep up with Littlefoot, Cera and Petrie] Children... wait up, please. I'm not as young as I used to be.
Cera: He's not as young as anybody used to be.
- ConnexionsEdited from Le petit dinosaure et la vallée des merveilles (1988)
- Bandes originalesThe Mad Song
(2001)
Written by Michele Brourman and Amanda McBroom
Performed by Anndi McAfee and Aria Noelle Curzon
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Land Before Time: The Big Freeze
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 15min(75 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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