This may be misconstrued as a comment best belonging to the Department of Damning
With Faint Praise, but it must be said nevertheless: Quest for Camelot is so much
better than its trailers make it appear. That is to say, Quest for Camelot is not
awful -- not by a long shot. Come expecting the lackluster animation and wimpy storyline
that are trumpeted by the trailers and you will leave most pleasantly surprised.
You will hardly be bowled over, mind you, but parents who've been dreading tagging
along with their youngsters to see this new animated feature need not fear the experience.
The new Warner Bros. animation unit touts Quest for Camelot as its first fully animated
feature, following up 1996's half-jock/half-cartoon smash Space Jam. Wisely, Warner's
has released Quest a full month before the highly anticipated debut of Disney's new
animated feature Mulan. And for its part, Disney has decided to do the decent thing
and not bogart the market like it did last Thanksgiving when it re-released The Little
Mermaid in time to directly compete with the debut of Anastasia, the first animated
feature from the new Fox unit. Like Anastasia, The Little Mermaid, and Pocahontas,
Quest for Camelot seems designed to reel in the distaff market with its central female
protagonist and contemporary feminist overtones. Of course, it's only the contemporary
layering of a feminist perspective that will permit the storyline of a medieval girl
who dreams of joining King Arthur's Round Table and becoming a knight who recovers
Excalibur, the King's stolen sword, and thereby restoring peace to the land. On top
of that, this ahistorical girl who actualizes her dreams of derring-do is assisted
by a blind boy who has also hoped to become a knight until injury quashed his grand
dreams. Although the film starts off a bit slowly, things pick up as the two heroes
venture into the mysterious forest in search of Excalibur. There the images start
twisting themselves into wacky animated fun. But still, events are interrupted by
way too much singing, a prospect not helped much by the caliber of the instantly
forgettable tunes composed by David Foster and Carole Bayer Sager. The vocal characterizations
are all top-notch however, and the comical two-headed dragon voiced by Eric Idle
and Don Rickles seems to be the character destined for breakout success. The film
is also packed with the kind of knowing cultural references that only adults will
understand (i.e., signature lines from such films as Taxi Driver, Dirty Harry, and
Apollo 13), but they seem oddly out of place in this medieval setting. Nevertheless,
there's something for everyone in this new Arthurian legend.
--Marjorie Baumgarten
Capsule Reviews
Quest for Camelot 
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