It’s a Zoo movie with Matt Damon. Unless the animals are attacking in awesome accents and he’s taking them out methodically one by one in that Bourne like way I’m used to, this movie was going to fail. Going in it had all the makings of Dr. Dolittle meets Evan Almighty so I was ready to throw lighter fluid on it and torch it. Walking in anyway, I was poised and ready for a nap. Walking out I was an emotional mess. This is a family/drama in every sense. In fact its a drama about a family, not a family (la de da, farting monkeys) movie. Literally, it’s a perfect example of how raw a family can be when faced with a situation that nobody is prepared for; then throw animals in the mix and a hot zoo keeper (Scarlett Johansson-no that’s not what made me emotional) and evidently you have something!
Quick premise....the mother dies 6 months previous to the beginning, the father Benjamin (Matt Damon - Sorry, no Bournesque action in this one guys) is trying to hold his son Dylan (Colin Ford) and daughter Rosie (Maggie Elizabeth Jones - probably the cutest damn thing on the planet) together as best he can. Long story short, they have to make a change and move, so they decide to give this a shot. Remarkably, the rest is very predictable, but Cameron Crowe, storyteller extraordinare, takes what could have been an eye gougingly nice and boring story and starts throwing emotional anchors in the water with the chains shackled to your ankles. Just when you think this is a pleasant story about re-building a zoo, Crowe goes all ‘anchors away‘ and you're suddenly hurling to the bottom of the emotion ocean and you connect with the characters. Even when you see it coming, it's tough to prepare for. Not sure how he does it to someone like me, the Tin Man, who has no heart unless Rudy is running down the sideline or Rocky beats the pity out of Clubber Lang (best fighter name ever by the way) , but this one got me misty. Or maybe it was just a bad allergy attack and my eyes were all watery, I’ll never say. You win this time Mr. Crowe, but I won’t be fooled again.
Class this as an 'Emotionally Intense at Times Family Movie'
PG - Language and some intense kid to parent confrontations