Vincent Berry, Jason James Richter, Patrick Kilpatrick,
August Schellenberg. (PG, 86 min.)
Among the fictional cetacean set, Moby Dick still commands all the highbrow respect,
but with two megahit movies to his credit, curly-finned screen idol Willy is definitely
the whale who's gettin' paid these days. This third installment in the saga of the
amiable, perpetually endangered giant orca figures to keep the lucrative franchise
chugging along with more of the wholesome and edifying family drama that gave its
predecessors their cineplex-packing power. This time around, Willy's human antagonists
are the crew of an illegal whaling ship that services Asian black markets in defiance
of international treaties. The captain (Kilpatrick) is really not a bad sort, but
he's one of those guys - like tobacco farmers and elephant poachers - who sees his
traditional livelihood as a birthright to be defended against all costs against meddling,
sentimental enviro-wimps. But his efforts to pass the family harpoon along to 11-year-old
son Max (Berry) meet resistance when the boy falls under the awesome mammals' mystical
spell. Max soon begins colluding with a group of scientists, including Jesse (Richter,
Willy's pal from FW I and II), who want to expose the clandestine whaling activities.
As with most kid/animal movies, the whales' inherent appeal is exaggerated by anthropomorphizing
them to an unrealistic degree, showing them frolicking like two-ton toddlers, munching
oranges and breaching exuberantly in postcard-esque backlit scenes. (Scenes of Willy
biting heads off seals might add balance and authenticity, but at the expense of
box office appeal.) Still, the filmmakers do pass up some easy opportunities to stack
the moral deck in favor of the whale-savers. In particular, they make an honest effort
to at least understand why some humans can't or won't respect the whales' right to
lead unmolested lives befitting creatures with no irreplaceable commodity value in
our post-whale oil age. The human characters on both sides are believable, relatively
well fleshed out, and interesting enough to sustain viewer attention in a story the
outcome of which is 100 percent suspense-free. By the end of this exemplary family
movie, Free Willy 3's two main objectives have been fully met: All the narrative
elements are in place for a sequel, and enough goodwill has been sustained that we
will welcome its inevitable arrival.
3.0 stars
--Russell Smith
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