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https://scmp.com/culture/film-tv/article/2005522/film-review-robinson-crusoe-daniel-defoes-novel-talking-animal
Culture/ Film & TV

Film review: Robinson Crusoe – Daniel Defoe’s novel as a talking-animal cartoon

The original story is stripped of pirates, cannibals and all sense of danger, to become a sweet-natured comedy in which the castaway gets to live in a big tree house with his animal friends

Robinson Crusoe (category I, English and Cantonese versions) is directed by Vincent Kesteloot and Ben Stassen.

2.5 stars

Less a harrowing survival tale than a sweet-natured talking-animal cartoon for young children, this 3D animation – co-directed by Belgium studio nWave Pictures’ Ben Stassen and Vincent Kesteloot – is a most gentle take on Daniel Defoe’s 1719 historical fiction that has somehow managed to leave all the cannibals and mutineers out of the picture.

While it’s a nice idea to observe the castaway hero from the perspective of the tropical island’s inexplicably small animal population – led by an inquisitive macaw that longs to learn about the world beyond the sea – Robinson Crusoe (also titled The Wild Life in some territories) does nothing to develop the interspecies encounters into anything inspiring.

Crusoe and friends.
Crusoe and friends.

The audience is instead treated to a bumbling comedy in which the shipwrecked human and the animal ensemble become friends and end up living in a big tree house. Indeed, the stakes are so low that the filmmakers have to resort to a pair of unaccountably vengeful wildcats to introduce a hint of narrative tension. This is pleasant but entirely frivolous fare.

Robinson Crusoe opens on August 18

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