IMDb RATING
6.2/10
592
YOUR RATING
11-year-old Alfonso, heir of Don Quixote, and his 3 imaginary and musical rabbits join Pancho and Victoria, to save their beloved town of La Mancha from a huge storm.11-year-old Alfonso, heir of Don Quixote, and his 3 imaginary and musical rabbits join Pancho and Victoria, to save their beloved town of La Mancha from a huge storm.11-year-old Alfonso, heir of Don Quixote, and his 3 imaginary and musical rabbits join Pancho and Victoria, to save their beloved town of La Mancha from a huge storm.
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It's hard to find a movie that touches your heart lately, and that's the case with Giants, or "The Explorers" in our country.
It's a movie with soul, and you can tell it was made with heart. Its protagonists are unusual characters, and far from being the typical heroes of animated films, they are erratic beings, but with conviction. This tells us that many times the will and desire are the greatest tools to achieve our dreams, no matter how impossible they may seem.
Visually, the art is extremely original, with a Stop Motion style at times reminiscent of the beautiful Laika films.
The animation is very good and the humor that is constant throughout the adventure stands out.
An important detail, for some reason in our country they removed the references to Don Quixote, which in my opinion makes it even more interesting, since it closes the whole concept of the movie.
If you want to have a good time with your family, and especially transmit messages and values to your children, go see this movie, then talk to them... And you will be surprised at the number of messages the movie contains.
We need more movies like this.
It's a movie with soul, and you can tell it was made with heart. Its protagonists are unusual characters, and far from being the typical heroes of animated films, they are erratic beings, but with conviction. This tells us that many times the will and desire are the greatest tools to achieve our dreams, no matter how impossible they may seem.
Visually, the art is extremely original, with a Stop Motion style at times reminiscent of the beautiful Laika films.
The animation is very good and the humor that is constant throughout the adventure stands out.
An important detail, for some reason in our country they removed the references to Don Quixote, which in my opinion makes it even more interesting, since it closes the whole concept of the movie.
If you want to have a good time with your family, and especially transmit messages and values to your children, go see this movie, then talk to them... And you will be surprised at the number of messages the movie contains.
We need more movies like this.
Just watched this at the cinema. Wow, is it bad. There's a fart gag, or similar every few minutes. For some reason, in the last few scenes there's a mime for no other reason than cheap laughs. Nobody laughed. Seriously, maybe one in eight gags got a reaction from the audience despite being mostly children.
Animation was average at best. In particular the lead character, Alfonso, looked cheap as if they had purchased the model from some animation stock library.
The script and story lacked any sensibility. Some scenes just didn't make any sense at all. The imaginary characters could have played a major part in the movie, but were just some weird subplot. There are so many better kids movies out there.
Animation was average at best. In particular the lead character, Alfonso, looked cheap as if they had purchased the model from some animation stock library.
The script and story lacked any sensibility. Some scenes just didn't make any sense at all. The imaginary characters could have played a major part in the movie, but were just some weird subplot. There are so many better kids movies out there.
"Alfonso" is a distant relative of the legendary windmill-tilting "Don Quixote" and is an accident-prone young lad who doesn't always know how to differentiate between the real and imaginary! One thing they all agree on, though, is that the weather is turning increasingly violent and the storms - coupled with some offers for their property from the local nasty "Carrasco", are driving people out of their La Mancha village. Luckily, he and his three rabbits make friends with "Pancho" and "Victoria" and quickly they determine to find out just what's the connection between the property developer and these new sudden downpours. No, there's not much jeopardy here nor is it all very original, but it's still quite a good fun adventure film with plenty going on, some gadgets and loads of imagination for those of us who have/had friends that only we are clever enough to see. It probably doesn't need a cinema viewing, but there were young kids in the cinema when I saw it who laughed out loud and that's got to be a good thing as it focuses more on the characteristics of loyalty and friendship and less on endless whizzy CGI.
If I had a nickel for everytime a movie based on Don Quixote was released in the 2020's... I'd have two nickels. Which isn't a lot, but it'd be weird that it happened twice.
Overall, this movie is not pleasing to the eyes, having a CGI style with unflattering character designs; the fact that the 2D concept art in the credits is so lively only makes this a bigger sin. If it has one redeeming quality, it's the depiction of Spain's mountains, which look gorgeous.
Some odd creative decisions include having the Panzas be scientists, one of the henchmen having a weirdly swolen neck, three imaginary rabbits that have no impact in the plot and a jittery rate frame that makes movements look bizarre and unnatural.
The villain is a generic cliché and the story doesn't seem consistent with how ruthless he is given a scene I won't spoil. This movie has an environmentalist message, though it's also anti-gentrification so kudos I guess.
Overall a disjointed mess.
Overall, this movie is not pleasing to the eyes, having a CGI style with unflattering character designs; the fact that the 2D concept art in the credits is so lively only makes this a bigger sin. If it has one redeeming quality, it's the depiction of Spain's mountains, which look gorgeous.
Some odd creative decisions include having the Panzas be scientists, one of the henchmen having a weirdly swolen neck, three imaginary rabbits that have no impact in the plot and a jittery rate frame that makes movements look bizarre and unnatural.
The villain is a generic cliché and the story doesn't seem consistent with how ruthless he is given a scene I won't spoil. This movie has an environmentalist message, though it's also anti-gentrification so kudos I guess.
Overall a disjointed mess.
Alfonso is Don Quixote's heir. He too has a wild imagination. He is excited to see that the coming storm is not a storm, but a monster. A storm can't be tamed but a monster can be defeated. He has his two friends, Pancho and Victoria, and various imaginary friends. They intend to stop the villagers from leaving the rain-soaked town and defeat the monster in turn. Carrasco is trying to sell homes to the villagers in his Carrascoland.
I like this for this European animation film. I like the Don Quixote connection and the animation style. I'm not sure if we should see the imaginary world right away. Alfonso should talk to no one and about nothing. Maybe the imaginary world would come alive with the climatic battle. This is interesting but not the best.
I like this for this European animation film. I like the Don Quixote connection and the animation style. I'm not sure if we should see the imaginary world right away. Alfonso should talk to no one and about nothing. Maybe the imaginary world would come alive with the climatic battle. This is interesting but not the best.
Did you know
- ConnectionsReferences E.T., l'extra-terrestre (1982)
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $2,670,028
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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