As befits the director of Mad Max and The Road Warrior, this sequel to the Academy
Award-nominated Babe is a far more boisterous affair than its predecessor. Whereas
audiences' initial introduction to the helium-voiced sheep-pig centered around the
benign characters of Hoggett's farm, Miller broadens the scope considerably by transplanting
the action to the metaphorical City (with its skyline sporting not only the Statue
of Liberty, but also the Eiffel Tower, the Hollywood sign, and the Sidney Opera House),
making for an altogether more rollicking affair. You know this isn't the same old
Babe when the film's first reel has plump Mrs. Hoggett being strip-searched by the
Drug Enforcement Agency. If the first film was a gentle parable for children and
adults alike, then Babe: Pig in the City is its brash city cousin, a surrealistic,
occasionally grim tale of valor in the face of terrifically bad odds. With occasional
flashes of Orwell's Animal Farm and some set design that looks strangely cribbed
from The City of Lost Children, it is easy to see why the filmmakers had difficulty
securing that all-important G rating. Miller opens his film moments after the close
of the first, with the sheep-pig Babe (E.G. Daily) basking in his newfound glory,
with farmer Hoggett (Cromwell) at his side. The adulation and notoriety soon take
second place to more pressing concerns when the farmer is accidentally injured, leaving
his wife Esme (Szubanski) to manage the farm. After that, it's not long before a
pair of cadaverous bank men come calling to inform the Hoggetts they are about to
lose their land. In a desperate effort to secure some cash flow, Mrs. Hoggett and
Babe set out to make a guest appearance at a faraway fairgrounds, though a series
of missed connections leave them stranded in The City. There they check into an animal-friendly
hotel and, while Mrs. Hoggett is thrown in jail (after skirmishing with security
guards who appear to be extras from Mad Max), Babe allies himself with a group of
city-bred animals including a Fagin-esque orangutan and his hipster chimpanzee cronies
(headed by a cool Steven Wright). Much chaos ensues -- far too much to go into here
-- but suffice to say that yes, it all works out in the end. No surprise that; the
real question is whether kids are going to like this loud, tumultuous menagerie of
a film. Despite the odd scene of injured animals and breakneck suspense, this is
still a children's film, though it's much more Willy Wonka than Mickey Mouse. Miller's
non-stop pacing and sense of the absurd is operating on all cylinders, and though
younger kids might shy away from some of the adult gags (of which there are many),
that hard-won G rating is in place, barely. You couldn't have gotten a more pleasantly
bizarre film if Salvador Dali himself had directed, which says a lot for Miller's
rabid talents. Fans of the original (myself included) may be temporarily put off
by this sequel's kinetic clutter, but at its heart it's still the same pinkly porcine
tale of pig power and PETA-friendly anima.
--Marc Savlov
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