Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie

Home

Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie United States

Blu-ray + DVD + UV Digital Copy
DreamWorks | 2014 | 92 min | Rated PG | Mar 17, 2015

Penguins of Madagascar (Blu-ray Movie)

Price

List price: $8.74
Third party: $3.38 (Save 61%)
Listed on Amazon marketplace
Buy Penguins of Madagascar on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

6.7
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.3 of 54.3
Reviewer3.5 of 53.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Overview

Penguins of Madagascar (2014)

Skipper, Kowalski, Rico and Private join forces with undercover organization The North Wind to prevent the villainous Dr. Octavius Brine from destroying the world as we know it.

Starring: Tom McGrath, Chris Miller (V), Christopher Knights, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ken Jeong
Director: Simon J. Smith, Eric Darnell

Family100%
Animation91%
Adventure80%
Comedy68%

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 1.85:1, 2.34:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
    French (Canada): Dolby Digital 5.1
    French: DTS 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    Spanish: DTS 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    Catalan: DTS 5.1
    Dutch: DTS 5.1
    German: DTS 5.1
    Italian: DTS 5.1
    Portuguese: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
    Flemish: DTS 5.1
    Chinese: Dolby Digital 5.1

  • Subtitles

    English SDH, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, Hindi, Mandarin (Traditional)

  • Discs

    50GB Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
    UV digital copy
    DVD copy

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region A, B (C untested)

Review

Rating summary

Movie3.0 of 53.0
Video5.0 of 55.0
Audio4.5 of 54.5
Extras2.0 of 52.0
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie Review

Not the Penguins of Pittsburgh.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman March 19, 2015

DreamWorks' Madagascar franchise has officially become the X-Men wing of the digital animated genre, spitting out sequel after sequel and, now, spin-off after spin-off featuring favorite characters in starring roles. King Julien has his own Netflix Series. The Penguins have their own Nickelodeon program, and they now also have an animated feature-length film all to themselves. Directed by Eric Darnell and Simon J. Smith, Penguins of Madagascar is, at its best, a serviceable entertainer that's aimed squarely at the kids. While some of the in-jokes are aimed at parents -- references to other movies, actors, and mildly crude little bits -- it's largely just a 90-minute digital energy drink that's colorfully frenetic, cuddly cute, and packed to the flippers with action, wit, and a flurry of jokes, all of which all but devour the plot and bank on side-splitting laughter and dazzling, picture-perfect animation to satisfy rather than tell a story of any real importance.

What's inside?


The Penguins -- Skipper (voiced by Tom McGrath), Kowalski (voiced by Chris Miller), Private (voiced by Christopher Knights), and Rico (voiced by Conrad Vernon) -- are on a secret mission to infiltrate Fort Knox, home to...a vending machine that stocks nothing but delicious and oh-so-bad-for-you Cheezy Dibbles. When they become trapped inside the machine -- those things never seem to work right, and the prices are outrageous! -- it sprouts octopus legs and winds up in Venice where the Penguins find themselves captives of Dave (voiced by John Malkovich), a disgruntled ex zoo attraction whose glory was overshadowed by penguins. Now, he's out for revenge. The Penguins are out to save the day, and they're aided by a secret organization known as "North Wind," a covert inter-species task force comprised of "Classified" (voiced by Benedict Cumberbatch), Short Fuse (voiced by Ken Jeong), Corporal (voiced by Peter Stormare), and Eva (voiced by Annet Mahendru).

As noted above, story takes a backseat to the endless barrage of physical and verbal antics, and rightfully so, at least in a movie of this style. In many animated films, the end destination is less important than what happens along the way, which is usually only a series of antics and mayhem and a race to see how much action, humor, and winks and nods can be crammed into a 90-minute festival of sound, color, and motion. Penguins of Madagascar takes this idea and runs with it. The core story is built on a simple premise that allows the storytellers to do a great many things, including travel the world, involve more penguins than even the core foursome, tie it into their past, and splash the screen with even more oddities and colors in the final act. Yet Penguins arguably takes it a little too far. It never forgets its story, and most of the humor flows from it -- even if the filmmakers sometimes push it -- and it's clear the story wasn't written just to make a place for the jokes to live. The film ultimately comes a little unraveled when it it falls out of balance, when it pushes so hard to get the last laugh that it sometimes excuses all but the most core dramatic content in favor of getting one more verbal or physical gag up on the screen and dancing out of the speakers. The youngest viewers won't care, but adults and more mature children in the audience may tire of the endless onslaught that gives the movie almost no breathing room off to the sides or underneath.

The movie does get its object right. The film is frequently side-splitting funny. There's never a dull moment, several less than uproarious to be sure but Penguins finds a good, general balance in its humorous delivery, blending verbal and visual mayhem to positive result. The film is as colorfully precise as anything else out there in this class, a true state-of-the-art masterpiece in terms of its raw technical quality and build. The movie showcases a fully realized world, finely tuned character details, and plenty of fun little bits that play with things like perspective and scale and creature physiology and out-there science with razor-sharp digital perfection. The film is also smartly and effortlessly voiced by a team of top-end talent that breathes a healthy vigor into the main performers. While there's nothing so wonderfully tuned and perfectly matched as, say, Will Ferrell and Megamind or Jack Black and Po, the voice cast, whether the collected penguins, John Malkovich as the villainous Dave, or Benedict Cumberbatch as Classified, is uniformly good, enthusiastic, and capable of finding just the right verbal note to drive home a joke or better build a scene.


Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  5.0 of 5

Penguins of Madagascar's 1080p presentation, framed at a 1.85:1 aspect ratio, with select scenes chiming in at ~2.39:1, is a sight to behold. It's a breathtaking digital production with an incredibly diverse color palette and consistently healthy and razor-sharp details. The picture presents viewers with tremendous attention to fine detail that's reproduced with an exacting flair and flavor. Furry animal hides, rusted and worn surfaces on an abandoned ship, lightly frayed rope texture, slick and clean instruments in North Wind's jet, rigid and smooth surfaces, and practically any object in any given frame is a testament to both how far digital animation has come at creating a fully alive, tangibly believable world and how precisely Blu-ray is capable of reproducing it for home viewing. Likewise, colors are dazzling, presented with a natural consistency that's both showy when necessary and grounded when called far. Orange penguin beaks, deep blue water, rich purples, exciting reds, cheddar oranges, oozy greens, and all variety of healthy, living shades are to be enjoyed in nearly very scene. Blacks are attractively deep and rich. The image suffers from extremely minute levels of banding but it's not quite enough to warrant a one-half point drop in an otherwise remarkable image from DreamWorks.


Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.5 of 5

Penguins of Madagascar features a DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 lossless soundtrack. While the presentation occasionally feels mildly unenthusiastic in terms of raw volume and delivery potency at reference levels, it still dazzles with a detailed and precise sonic outburst. Music is crisp, well defined, voluminous in stage presence, and pours from every speaker for a completely immersive experience. Sound effects likewise enjoy pinpoint details, effortless movement, precise imagining, and a healthy low end support, whether describing the most chaotic bits of action or the most subtle background details. Minor ambience supports various scenes with, again, a healthy front and back channel collaboration. Even in the track's most fully chaotic moments, the marriage of music and mayhem enjoys precise reproduction, faultless balance, and wide immersion. Dialogue is exactingly delivered from the center with, again, perfect balance against supporting music and effects.


Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  2.0 of 5

Penguins of Madagascar contains a bunch of fluffy, kid-oriented extras. Inside the Blu-ray case, buyers will find a DVD copy of the film as well as a voucher for a UV/iTunes digital copy.

  • Top Secret Guide to Becoming an Elite Agent (1080p, 3:39): A comical look at the importance of a keen eye, false identities, the ability to make split-second decisions, lock picking, parkour, martial arts, mastery of language, a keen sense of deduction, intelligence, moxie, steel trap memory...and an appreciation for Bavarian Folk Music. In other words, everything the Penguins don't have.
  • Music Video (1080p, 3:18): "He is Dave."
  • Flipper Slap Shake Waddle and Roll (1080p, 2:06): The Penguins perform a flippin' good song and dance routine.
  • Music Video (1080p, 3:18): "Celebrate" by Pitbull.
  • Do the Penguin Shake with tWitch (1080p, 2:26): tWitch shows off a dance routine he made for the movie.
  • Deleted Scene (1080p): Orangefinger (1:20) with Intro (Audio Only), a fun little Penguin comment that plays over the menu before starting the scene.
  • Madagascar Mash Up (1080p, 3:12): Highlights of the Penguins' adventures.
  • Global Flight Plan (1080p, 1:29): A look at how the Penguins became secret agents and their history of top-secret spy work.
  • Cheezy Dibbles Ad (1080p, 0:32): A fun Penguins-themed commercial for the snack food featured in the film.
  • Gallery (1080p, 2:18): A series of stills from the film.
  • Penguins of Madagascar Theatrical Trailer (1080p, 2:25).
  • Sneak Peek (1080p): Home, Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb, DreamWorks Animation 20th Anniversary, King Julien, and Turbo F.A.S.T.
  • The World of DreamWorks Animation (1080p): Music videos, trailers, and more, for Shrek, Madagascar, How to Train Your Dragon, Kung Fu Panda, The Croods, Turbo, and Mr. Peabody & Sherman.


Penguins of Madagascar Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  3.5 of 5

Color, color color, movement, movement, movement, humor, humor, humor. Penguins of Madagascar doesn't amount to much more than that, and it satisfies requirements as, essentially, a digital baby-sitter that frequently pushes story details aside for, well, more color, more movement, and more humor. It's effective for what it needs to be, and truth be told much of it truly is legitimately funny. Ultimately, though, it's about perspective. While the movie doesn't bring anything new to the animated table, it does offer a steady diet of mostly hit humor wrapped up in a simple story of comical revenge. A few good core life lessons are tossed in, but this one's primarily for kids only, unlike the best of the digital animated world that strikes the perfect balance between kid-friendly and adult-approved. DreamWorks' Blu-ray release of Penguins of Madagascar features stellar video, excellent audio, and a good number of kid-friendly extras. Recommended for young fans.