Pride

2004
Pride
6.2| 1h50m| en| More Info
Released: 21 June 2004 Released
Producted By: BBC
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The story of Suki, a lioness cub, who rebels against her mother and her Pride to mate with an unsuitable lion from the other side of the river.

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Director

Producted By

BBC

Trailers & Images

Reviews

TheCajunPhoenix I think 'Pride' should be part of everyone' DVD collections because the interaction between the cocky Suki (Kate Winslet), her less adventurous brother Linus (Rupert Graves), and the orphaned Fleck (Martin Freeman) when they fight over who gets nursed by Macheeba (Helen Mirren) first is hilarious. Not so hilarious is the disapproval over Suki's infatuation with Dark (Sean Bean), the patriarch of the scrublands pride, as Dark and Harry (John Hurt) think they can take what James (Robbie Coltrane) and Eddie (Jim Broadbent) want to keep. I like that Dark is not completely cold-hearted, as he admits that Harry is a hell of a hunting partner. The deal is, Dark ends up with all the scrublands lionesses, not Harry, and he also literally makes every scene he's in his own. Suki's tantrum before she elopes with Dark minor spoiler) underscores that she has to experience life on her own to fully appreciate her family. Fleck came across as a big sissy, though, which makes Linus look more macho. Lush (Kwame Kwei-Armah) didn't really seem to fit in so easily, and Kwei-Armah's voice delivery sounded last-minute as well. Big one-ups to the older actors for some amazing screen chemistry.
Sherazade But what was with the lazy visual effects? It was so sad to see in this day and age, the people in charge of CGI and visuals or whatever use such painful cut and paste methods that would have even been shameful to see in a film from 50 years ago! Nevertheless the all star cast including; Kate Winslet, Sean Bean, Jim Broadbent, Rupert Graves and Helen Mirren lend their talents in voice-work to this wonderful storytelling of the lives of lions and the animals they hunt/and are hunted by in the animal kingdom. Suki (Winslet) and Linus (Graves) are both sibling cubs living in the Pride under the careful watch of their mother Macheba (Mirren), one day while playing, the cubs decide to venture out to a part of the Pride that is forbidden and there Suki spots a wild lion called Dark (Bean), whom she instantly falls in love with. The trouble is, he's not a part of their Pride nor does anybody know anything about these wild pack of lions other than the fact that they are dangerous and to be avoided. This does nothing to deter Suki though and her love turns her into a full fledged rebellious vegetarian (yes, you heard right "VEGETARIAN") lioness. Years pass by and she grows into a beautiful teen lioness, she rejects all her potential suitors and ventures out of the Pride one her own after a fight with her mother. While in the wild, she crosses paths with the now much older but still suave Dark once more, still in love with him, they mate and she bears his cubs only to find out, that Dark is just like the animal version of the typical human male. LOL! He deserts her and she is left to care for her cubs alone. You can only imagine what happens to her and her cubs in the wild. Use your imagination. That said, there are a lot of sub-plots and plot twists which makes for a quite interesting animated film. It was a two-part mini series when I saw it on telly and I have since bought the DVD. It's worth a watch! Kate Winslet continues to dazzle us with her rare vocal talents! She breaks your heart, even in animation.
neo256 Well I can't deny I like the big cats. That's one of the things that attracted me in this movie. The talking animals aren't annoying in the way of "Damn that is so fake". It looks somewhat natural in someway, it is very well computer edited. Still there are some flaws in the way they move and some scenes that did look pretty fake. Still it isn't annoying. It's a pretty good story and it's pretty realistic in the way how lions live in the real world. The biggest ledge for most people will be the talking lions part. If you accept that and accept the minor flaws: you will probably like this story.It's family compatible so round up your kids and have good time.
TxMike 'Pride' is a small, innocuous movie that tells a story much like animated 'The Lion King', but using real lions and computer animation of animal faces to make it appear that they really are talking. We see lots of shots of lion cubs romping and running through the grass, and exquisite close-ups of mature lions eating or reposing, and many times staring just a few inches away from the lens of the camera. How did they do this? The DVD extras tell a very interesting story, a story I found more interesting than the one told in the movie. However, I suspect that most children will really enjoy a movie where the animals appear to be really speaking.STOP reading if you want to discover it fresh for yourself, but the following comments only address how the movie was filmed, NOT the actual story. Lions from two sources were used. First, tame lions in a preserve were filmed for many stock shots of running, jumping, crossing water on a fallen tree, things like that. Enticed with large pieces of meat at the end of a pole, the lions were very cooperative.More inventive was the use of a 'boulder cam', a radio-controlled camera inside an enclosure shaped like a boulder, but on wheels. Controlled from a nearby truck, it could, and did, follow the lions into hunting and feeding sessions, into the midst of their den, even climbing large rock formations, for a total of 300 days. After initial curiosity, the lions accepted this 'boulder on wheels' as a part of their environment.The extras also showed how computer techniques were used to make the lions change expressions and appear to speak.