Description: A comic catch from the studio that brought you Shrek, Shark Tale is a hilarious hit and "a wonderful under-the-sea adventure for movie lovers of all ages!" (Clay Smith, Access Hollywood)
Oscar (Will Smith), a lowly tongue-scrubber at the local Whale Wash, becomes an improbable hero when he tells a great white lie. To keep his secret, Oscar teams up with an outcast vegetarian shark, Lenny (Jack Black), and the two become the most unlikely of friends. When his lie begins to unravel, it’s up to Oscar’s loyal friend Angie (Renée Zellweger) and Lenny to help him stand up to the most feared shark in the water (Robert De Niro) and find his true place in the reef.
Amazon.com: When a shark accidentally clobbers himself, a small fish named Oscar (voiced by Will Smith, I, Robot) just happens to be around, prompting everyone to believe that he killed the shark himself. This lie soon makes Oscar a celebrity, worshipped by the general mass of fish, wooed by a glittering golddigger (Angelina Jolie, Girl, Interrupted), missed by his best friend (Renee Zellweger, Cold Mountain)--and hunted by the godfather of great whites (Robert De Niro, Goodfellas). Can a vegetarian shark named Lenny (Jack Black, School of Rock) get Oscar out of this mess? The formulaic story of Shark Tale never reaches the giddy heights of Pixar's output (Finding Nemo, Monsters Inc., Toy Story) or the freewheeling comedy of Shrek, but it's capably told and impeccably animated--the sheer technical skill is stunning. Kids won't get the mobster jokes or the other pop-culture references, but they'll enjoy it nonetheless. --Bret Fetzer
Everyone loves this DVD This is a family fun movie. Great quality and an adventure underwater, funny and thrilling animation.
Good movie 'Shark Tale' is a movie filled with movie and pop culture references. The movie has many colourful scenes and the plot, will not perfect, passes. Unfortunately I did not feel about the characters too much, with the odd exception. Maybe if it focused more on the storyline and characters and made this movie more heartwarming, this would be a better film. The fact that potty jokes and pop culture references outnumber heartwarming and memorable lines and scenes, this is a good movie, but not a great one. The music works with the movie and although the songs won't be to everyone's taste, the genre was definitely the right one.
What's the big deal with "adult" humor? A lot of kids' movies have an underlying adult theme. Big deal. We love this movie. In fact, my son has been watching it since he was 2 and has never been scared or confused by the adult themes in it. He also has never said the fish look creepy. In fact, everytime we go to the video store he wants to rent this movie and he'll watch it from beginning to end. He sees sharks and fish and a good story. That's it. I think it's absolutely appropriate for children. He "gets it" in his own 3 year old way. I'm actually on here today to buy the movie since we end up renting it so often.
Better than expected I found out my husband had purchased movie for my 3 y.o. son and I largely blew it off. Then my son kept requesting to watch it over and over again, and I realized it was pretty entertaining. (I've seen a lot of 'kids' movies since the birth of my son: from Shrek to Happy Feet, and this is equally entertaining w/o all the sexual undertones.)It has nothing to do with "Boyz N the Hood", way-off base, but does feature a fish who would probably be considered from the "hip-hop" generation crossing paths with the Mafia; an odd combination but works out well in this piece. I'm not sure why people are comparing this to Nemo, totally different theme, but since people are, I'll say my pitch: way better than Finding Nemo. Cute love story, nice lesson, good graphics, and funny. Plus I love Will Smith!
This terrific movie blows Finding Nemo out of the water!, I received my copy of Shark Tale for Christmas, last year, from one of my maternal aunts, and it became my most favorite computer-animated movie! I love this movie for lots of reasons: the all-star cast which includes Will Smith, Renee Zellweger, Martin Scorsese, Jack Black, Robert De Niro, etc., the way that the characters' faces look like the faces of the celebrities who supply the voices, as well as the plot, in which Oscar (Smith), who's a tongue scrubber at the local Whale Wash, tells a lie about killing a great white shark named Frankie, who's voiced by Michael Imperioli, of "The Sopranos", and the brother of Lenny (Black), and becomes the famous "Sharkslayer", and also that Lenny's a vegetarian, both of which make Lenny's "Godfather"-type father, Don Lino (De Niro) furious. I also enjoy the really funny parts, such as when Oscar's boss, Sykes (Scorsese) puffs up & his voice rises in pitch, as well as Oscar & Lenny's pretend-fight in which it seems like Oscar's killing Lenny, just as Don Lino's gang of sharks & Lino's "left-hand, right-hand" man, who's an octopus, named Luca, voiced by Vincent Pastore, of "The Sopranos", arrives. What I'm really impressed with is the way that the creators & animators "fishified" the looks of the two worlds, especially the world where Oscar, his friend, Angie (Zellweger) and Sykes reside with the "Swim, Don't Swim" traffic signs, the orca police cars, the sperm whale buses and the great product tie-ins, such as "Coral-Cola" & "Fish King". I also like the soundtrack, but what I really like is that it teaches 2 good lessons: 1. You don't need fame & money to be a somebody" and 2. You can love people just the way they are"! This is a marvelous movie and I recommend it to anyone that loves computer-animated movies or any kind of movie in general, because, believe me, this movie is fabulous!