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The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie

The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie

For
the last 15 years, Mike Nawrocki and Phil Vischer have been churning out
"VeggieTales" cartoons, in which singing, bouncing CGI vegetables teach moral
lessons through Biblical stories retold in goofy, extra-kid-friendly ways. They
made the jump to the big screen with 2002's Jonah: A VeggieTales Movie, a softened-up version of the
Bible's Jonah story. Now they're back again with The Pirates Who Don't Do
Anything
, a
harmless nothing of a film that drops the Biblical metaphors almost entirely,
but doesn't find much to replace them. It's the equivalent of a sack of Duplo
blocks: brightly colored, simple, clunky, and no fun for anyone but the very
young.

The
usual VeggieTales
cast of characters, mostly voiced by Nawrocki and Vischer, crop up here as
usual, with new names and occupations. Three veggies serve as "cabin boys" at a
pirate-themed dinner theater, where they long to move from table service to the
stage show, but their incompetence, laziness, and cowardice get in the way. But
when a princess drags them into the 17th century to rescue her brother, who's
been kidnapped by a nefarious pirate with designs on her kingdom, they have to
overcome their issues and become heroes.

The
saving grace of the VeggieTales series has always been its silly songs and surreal humor,
but little of either are on display here, apart from the sequence where one of
the heroes shucks off his quest and settles into a lazy, gluttonous life in a
cavern full of cheese curls, which inexplicably turn out to be shrieking,
toothy little monsters, highly reminiscent of the screaming slugs from Flushed
Away
. There's
nothing particularly offensive about Pirates, though Christian parents will be
disappointed to learn that it isn't Biblically based (perhaps because this is
the series' first major-studio release) and doesn't have much sense of purpose,
moral or otherwise. It's also visually simple enough that there's no
good reason to see it in a theater; it feels like an average straight-to-DVD
kids' feature inexplicably slapped onto the big screen. Mostly, it's full of
mild goofiness and equally mild messages about believing in yourself. It's all
good-natured enough. It just isn't actually good.

 
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