- “Still together, Still lost!”
- ―Tagline
Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa (also known as Madagascar 2: Escape to Africa or Madagascar 2) is a 2008 American computer-animated adventure comedy film, and the sequel to Madagascar.
The film received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics, with many calling it an improvement over it's predecessor, and was a box office success, grossing $603 million worldwide against a $150 million budget. It is the one-hundred-first movie to be created by DreamWorks overall.
Plot[]
As a cub, Alex the lion was called Alakay and was the son of Zuba, the alpha lion. Though Zuba tries to teach Alakay to be a hunter, the cub is more interested in dancing. When another lion named Makunga challenges Zuba to a fight for the position of alpha lion, Alakay is captured by poachers. Though Zuba tries to rescue his son, Alakay is forced into a crate. The poachers shoot Zuba in the ear, but Zuba does not die. The crate falls into the ocean where it drifts to New York. There, Alakay is having a new name, Alex and sent to the Central Park Zoo where he grew up, meeting Gloria, Marty, and Melman.
In the present time, Alex, Gloria, Melman, Marty, King Julien, Maurice, and Skipper and his fellow penguins board a repaired airplane in the hopes of using it to fly back to New York. Though the plane does fly, it ends up crash-landing in Africa because of lack of fuel. In Africa, the animals are amazed to find more of their kind. Alex is re united with Zuba and his mother. Marty quickly fits into a herd of zebra who all look, sound, and talk exactly like him. Melman takes on the position of witch doctor amongst the animals. Gloria, interested in finding a mate, attracts the attention of a smooth-talking but shallow hippo named Moto Moto.
Meanwhile, the penguins set about repairing the plane. They carjack several jeeps from New Yorkers on vacation, leaving the tourists stranded and lost in the jungle. A tough old woman called "Nana" takes charge, reminding them that they are New Yorkers and always survive.
The next morning Mort washes up on the shore of Africa and sets off to find King Julien, only to be chased by a shark.
Unfortunately, life in Africa is not as wonderful as it first seems. Makunga still determined to take the position of alpha lion, reminds Zuba that Alex must complete a traditional lion coming-of-age challenge. Alex, thinking that the challenge is a dance contest (it is actually a fight), competes against the strongest lion (who was recommended by Makunga) and loses quickly. To avoid being forced to banish Alex for failing, Zuba abdicates, and Makunga immediately takes the position and banishes Alex and his family. Marty, meanwhile, begins to feel upset that all of the zebras are exactly the same as him, leaving him with nothing unique. Melman is happy as a witch doctor until he learns that he has the same spot that had apparently caused the previous witch doctor to die. Melman is also upset about Gloria dating Moto Moto, as Melman has secretly loved her for a long time. Gloria goes on a date with Moto Moto and quickly realizes that he only loves her for her body.
The next day, the animals panic when they discover that the watering hole has dried up. Determined to make up for his earlier failure, Alex and Marty decides to risk being shot by hunters and leave the reserve to discover what happened. The pair discover that the stranded New Yorkers, under the instruction of Nana, have dammed the river and built a primitive civilization. Unfortunately, Alex is captured, and Marty runs for help. Meanwhile, Zuba hears what Alex did and goes to rescue him.
King Julien suggests that the animals sacrifice one of themselves into the volcano to appease the water gods and regain their water supply. Believing that he will die soon, Melman volunteers to be sacrificed. Gloria stops him just in time and Marty arrives to tell them of Alex's fate. The trio, the penguins, and several chimpanzees use the newly fixed plane to come to the rescue. Alex meanwhile manages to rescue both himself and his father by dancing for the New Yorkers, who quickly recognize him from the zoo. The other animals rescue the lions with the plane and destroy the dam, freeing the water. Alex manages to remove Makunga from power by tricking Nana into attacking him, she kicks him in the tummy, she steps on his toes, she hits his palm with a ruler, she sucks on her finger and puts it in his ear, she rubs his forearm hard, and slaps his right butt cheek, and she drags him by his ear back to the other marooned tourists. Skipper marries a bobble-head hula doll from the plane and leaves on a honeymoon, leaving the other animals to remain in Africa. Taking stage for Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted.
Cast[]
- Ben Stiller as Alex the Lion
- Chris Rock as Marty the Zebra, Other Zebras
- David Schwimmer as Melman the Giraffe
- Jada Pinkett Smith as Gloria the Hippopotamus
- Sacha Baron Cohen as King Julian the Lemur
- Cedric the Entertainer as Maurice the Aye-Aye
- Andy Richter as Mort the Lemur
- Bernie Mac as Zuba the Lion
- Sherri Shepherd as Florrie the Lioness (credited as "Mom")
- Alec Baldwin as Makunga the Lion
- Elisa Gabrielli as Nana
- Will.i.am as Moto Moto the Hippopotamus
- Tom McGrath as Skipper the Penguin
- Chris Miller as Kowalski the Penguin
- Christopher Knights as Private the Penguin
- John DiMaggio as Rico the Penguin
- Conrad Vernon as Mason (Phil is unvoiced)
- Fred Tatasciore as Teetsi, Elephant, Poacher #1
- Eric Darnell as Joe the Witch Doctor, Poacher #2
- Al Roker as Newscaster
- Stephen Kearin as Stephen the Giraffe, Rhinoceros, Tourist with video camera
- Danny Jacobs as Tourist with New York T-shirt
- Dan O'Connor as Cape Buffalo, Tourist with University Shirt
- Stacy Ferguson as Female Hippopotamus
- Harland Williams as Additional Giraffe
- Bridget Hoffman as Female Tourist
- Quinn Dempsey Stiller (Ben Stiller's real-life son) as Baby Alex
- Thomas Stanley as Baby Marty
- Zachary Gordon as Baby Melman
- Willow Smith as Baby Gloria
- David P. Smith as Bobby the Dik-Dik
- Connor Rayburn as Little Giraffe
- John Eric Bentley (additional voices)
- Terrence Hardy as Lion Cub
Reception[]
The film generally received positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gave a 65% critic score, based on 137 reviews, with the consensus view that the film was "an improvement on the original, with more fleshed-out characters, crisper animation, and more consistent humor." Another review aggregator, Metacritic, classified the film into the "generally favorable reviews" category with 61/100 approval rating based on 24 reviews, also a bit higher a score than the original.
Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune stated in his review that the film "goes easy on the pop culture jokes, I should clarify: one of the smarter things in the script is how Alex, who digs his Bob Fosse and Jerome Robbins dance moves, becomes the film's primary pop-cult gag." Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 stars and wrote, "This is a brighter, more engaging film than the original Madagascar. Steven D. Greydanus complained the film's plot was similar to The Lion King, Joe Vs. The Volcano, and Happy Feet. Carrie Rickey of the Philadelphia Inquirer gave the film 2 stars and wrote, "Take the flat tire that was Madagascar. Retread it with The Lion King storyline. Pump it up with air. Now you have Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa." John Anderson gave the film a 3½ approval rating and stated, "Madagascar 2: Escape to Africa, the sequel to the enormously successful DreamWorks adventure and a film that hews close to the whole Lion King/species-as-destiny/self-fulfillment paradigm."
On its opening day, the film grossed $17,555,027 from 4,056 theaters with a $4,328 average. After that, it went to be at #1 at the box office with $63,106,589 with a $15,559 average per theater. As of March 19, 2009, it achieved a gross of $180,010,950 in the United States and Canada along with a gross of $422,297,228 in other regions adding to a worldwide gross total of $602,308,178.
Gallery[]
Appearances[]
Characters[]
- Alex
- Bobby the Dik-dik (First appearance)
- Florrie (First appearance)
- Gloria
- Joe the Witch Doctor (First appearance)
- Kowalski
- Lemurs
- Lola (First appearance)
- Makunga (First appearance)
- Marty
- Mason
- Melman
- Melman's mother (First mentioned)
- Moto Moto (First appearance)
- Nana
- Phil
- Private
- Rico
- The Shark (First appearance)
- Skipper
- Stephen the Giraffe (First appearance)
- Teetsi (First appearance)
- Unidentified elephant (First appearance)
- Unidentified Lion Cub (First appearance)
- Zuba (First appearance)
Locations[]
- Earth
- Africa
- Kenya (First appearance)
- Kilimanjaro (First appearance)
- Madagascar
- Kingdom of Madagascar
- Kenya (First appearance)
- North America
- New York City
- Central Park
- Central Park Zoo
- New York City
- Africa
Organizations[]
- New Yorkers
Trivia[]
- This was DreamWorks' first non-Shrek sequel, followed by Kung Fu Panda 2.
- This is the first DreamWorks Animation film not to use the credits of "DreamWorks Animation Presents" and "A PDI/DreamWorks Production", Along with How to Train Your Dragon.
- Madagascar is DreamWorks' third film to become a franchise, after The Prince of Egypt and Shrek.
- The last DreamWorks Animation film to have separate widescreen and pan-and-scan DVD releases; the next films starting with Monsters vs. Aliens would only be presented in widescreen on DVD releases.
- This is the sixth DreamWorks Animation film to be Co-Produced with Pacific Data Images (aka PDI/DreamWorks), the first five being Antz, Shrek, Shrek 2, Madagascar, and Shrek the Third.
- The last DreamWorks Animation film to be featured in a 1:85:1 aspect ratio until Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted.
- This is the first Madagascar film to be distributed by Paramount Pictures.
- Paramount Pictures was not involved with the first Madagascar film.
External Links[]
- Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa at Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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