Slant Magazine by Jaime N. Christley
There's something about these films, something about the working-over these songs suffer--a wrongness that's intangible but inescapable, like the unseen menace of a bad dream.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Australia · 2011
Rated PG · 1h 40m
Director George Miller
Starring Elijah Wood, Robin Williams, Pink, Elizabeth Daily
Genre Animation, Comedy, Family
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Mumble the penguin has a problem: his son Erik, who is reluctant to dance, encounters The Mighty Sven, a penguin who can fly! Things get worse for Mumble when the world is shaken by powerful threats, forcing him to bring together the penguin nations and their allies to set things right.
Slant Magazine by Jaime N. Christley
There's something about these films, something about the working-over these songs suffer--a wrongness that's intangible but inescapable, like the unseen menace of a bad dream.
Though it retains the buoyant musical stylings and splendid visuals that made its predecessor so distinctive, this chatterbox of a sequel loses its way with a raft of annoying side characters for which the slender narrative framework provides far too indulgent a showcase.
The trek to get there is sluggish at best, torturous at worst. March away, penguins. Far away.
Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum
Earnest messages about bad climate change and good parenting skills have been replaced by a we-all-share-a-planet sense of fun that's more "Finding Nemo" than National Geographic.
Village Voice by Nick Pinkerton
Really, the movie has absolutely everything except the light touch required for unaffected charm - the mugging is savage - a single piece of memorable original music, or a production number that's celebratory rather than trampling.
Boxoffice Magazine by Pete Hammond
This new round of toe-tapping musical numbers from the penguin population is shot in eye-poppingly gorgeous 3D.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
For me, Happy Feet Two is pretty thin soup. The animation is bright and attractive, the music gives the characters something to do, but the movie has too much dialogue in the areas of philosophy and analysis.
Orlando Sentinel by Roger Moore
A clever and adorable original film remade with most of the charm wrung out of it.
The A.V. Club by Tasha Robinson
In some ways, it's a more grown-up story than Happy Feet, with more complicated messages delivered in subtler ways.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
Even with the addition of new characters, such as the ones voiced by Brad Pitt and Matt Damon, George Miller's animated sequel just isn't very funny.
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