Culture Shrek at 20: an unfunny and overrated low for blockbuster animation - The fairytale comedy was a hit with critics and audiences but its toilet humour, glibness and shoddy animation mark it out as a misfire

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Shrek has an outhouse with a working toilet.

It is not part of the film’s cynical brand of “irreverence” that an ogre’s latrine is supported by modern plumbing. And it’s certainly not consistent with the hygiene of a swamp-dwelling beast who bathes in mud, brushes his teeth in slime and boasts of a killer weed rat stew. But after our lime-green hero literally wipes his ass with a fairytale ending, it was apparently decided that the film needed that emphatic flushing sound before the Smash Mouth single All Star kicked in and the introductory montage could commence.

Twenty years later, that flushing sound seems to signify the moment when blockbuster animation circled the drain. Shrek is a terrible movie. It’s not funny. It looks awful. It would influence many unfunny, awful-looking computer-animated comedies that copied its formula of glib self-reference and sickly sweet sentimentality. Three of those terrible movies were sequels to Shrek and one was a spin-off with a sequel in the works. The curse has eased but not lifted.

And yet Shrek was a sensation with critics and audiences in 2001. After flailing in its early efforts to keep up with Disney – the animation house of which its co-founder, Jeffrey Katzenberg, was credited with reviving – DreamWorks had finally hit pay dirt, raising the possibility that it might become a viable challenger to established major studios. Even the stuffed shirts at the Cannes film festival, who usually separated Hollywood summer fare from its official selections, brought it into the competition slate, where it premiered alongside new work from world masters like David Lynch, Jean-Luc Godard, Hou Hsiao-hsien and Jacques Rivette. (Liv Ullmann’s jury left it empty-handed, alas.)

It’s hard to account for why Shrek hit the cultural moment as squarely as it did – other than, you know, people seemed to enjoy it – or why it will be celebrated in 20th anniversary pieces other than this one. But it’s worth pointing out how comprehensively bad its legacy remains, opening up the floodgates for other major studios to pile celebrities into recording booths, feed them committee-polished one-liners and put those lines in the mouths of sassy CGI animals or human-ish residents of the uncanny valley. Worse yet, it encouraged a destructive, know-it-all attitude toward the classics that made any earnest engagement with them seem like a waste of time. Those once-upon-a-times were now rendered stodgy and lame, literally toilet paper.


Their replacement? Chiefly a flatulent ogre voiced by Mike Myers, who deploys the same accent that carried him through the All Things Scottish sketches on Saturday Night Live. Myers was only just past peak of his popularity when he replaced fellow SNL alum Chris Farley as Shrek, still riding high off two hit Austin Powers movies and still powerful enough to get DreamWorks to shrug its shoulders over allowing him to redo the part in Scottish. For years, Shrek had seemed like a disaster in the making – writers assigned to polish up the script likened it to “the Gulag” – but the conceptual hook of its fairytale universe, combined with the buddy chemistry of Myers and Eddie Murphy as Donkey, and Cameron Diaz as Fiona, an up-for-anything damsel-in-distress, was stronger than they could have realized.

In fact, the roadmap for Shrek had already been drawn years earlier with The Princess Bride, a fractured fairytale that found the right balance between knowing, gently absurdist plays on storybook tradition and a sincere affirmation of their power. There is even a scene in Shrek that nods to the torture machine in the earlier film, with the evil Lord Farquaad (John Lithgow) working over the Gingerbread Man for information. But the balance in Shrek is off on both ends: there’s an excess of anachronisms and buddy-movie riffs from Myers and Murphy that have little relation to the backdrop and a woe-is-me soppiness to the love story between two lonely, misunderstood freaks. (Nothing screams “unearned gravitas” like slipping in a cover of Leonard Cohen’s Hallelujah.)

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The most curious element of Shrek is how uninterested it seems to be in the fairytale universe it creates. In recent years, as studios have merged and brands have been further reinforced, we’re seen plenty of eagerness for companies to trot out their IP – hello, Space Jam: A New Legacy – but there is much greater promise in a film that’s about fairytale favorites under threat, from nursery rhymes to the Brothers Grimm. Some of these creatures are assembled in mass detentions by Lord Farquaad, who exiles them to Shrek’s swamp, and Princess Fiona’s dilemma, imprisoned in a dragon-guarded castle tower, recalls Sleeping Beauty. But once Shrek and Donkey cross the kingdom on a quest to bring Fiona to Farquaad, the storybook references are all but abandoned. Even when Robin Hood and his Merry Men appear in the woods, the film blows past that boring old mythos in order to pay homage to The Matrix and Riverdance.

What’s left is an all-ages film that’s somehow more crude and juvenile in its appeals to adults than children. The grownups in the room can snicker knowingly at Farquaad’s name and the repeated references to his penis size while the kids are left with fart jokes and the wanton diminishment of timeless characters and stories. Last year, the National Film Registry added Shrek to the Library of Congress, which seals its canonization, but it’s remarkable how much of an early aughts relic it’s become, an amber-preserved monument to phenomena (Mike Myers, Smash Mouth, Michael Flatley) that hasn’t stood the test of time. Even the film’s referential style looks resolutely slow and unhip next to the whirring pop Cuisinarts of Lord and Miller productions like The Lego Movie and Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse or even IP-heavy Disney fare like Wreck-it Ralph and its sequel.

In the end, Shrek didn’t save DreamWorks from selling itself off a few years later. It didn’t extend Myers’s career past a hard expiration date. And Katzenberg went on to found Quibi. The entire enterprise is better left in the past.

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TL;DR Britbong mad that Shrek isn't a Disney film, probably

(Gonna also use this thread to shill my Multimedia thread)
 
I’m still a bit heartbroken over what it would have been like if Chris Farley had lived. What bits of his lines have been made public, really are touching. Chris really channeled his deeper needs (falling in love, having a true home) instead of just being Farting Fat Funny Guy, not that the latter can’t be appreciated, in its proper context. But Shrek would’ve been a completely different animal. That’s why Monsters Inc. will always win out ten out of ten times for me, as far as emotions go; Farley had way more finesse and depth than Myers could hope to produce.

That said, fuck that guy.
 
I grew up with the sequel so I believe it to be the better movie, but you have to be an old joyless cunt to not like Shrek. It's not even that raunchy of a movie once you get past the opening scene. It did comedy for both children and adults alike perfectly and in a way that a fist-full of movies since have been able to replicate. Hell, it still holds up to this day. One of the only things that I can fault it for is helping to kill off traditionally drawn animated movies and even then it's not really the movie's fault for that.

I also like Shrek 4. Come at me.
Ok fag, I will. :jaceknife:
 
It’s a cute movie, but...isn’t the reason it’s stuck around the idea? It was a nice idea that an ugly fat ogre would discover the beautiful woman he thought was out of his reach is actually also an ugly fat ogre, and much more to his taste physically anyway. It’s a nice message, that fat ugly people belong together, and also that manlets get the rope. Wholesome.
 
It’s a cute movie, but...isn’t the reason it’s stuck around the idea? It was a nice idea that an ugly fat ogre would discover the beautiful woman he thought was out of his reach is actually also an ugly fat ogre, and much more to his taste physically anyway. It’s a nice message, that fat ugly people belong together, and also that manlets get the rope. Wholesome.
She was pretty fucking attractive for a fucking half-ogre you gotta admit.
 
This is probably a grift to get more clicks, since that's all journos ever do and a lot of people love Shrek. But tbh I kinda agree that it has aged poorly and is nothing special.

Maybe it's just because it pales in comparison to the second movie, though. That one's genuinely great.
 
This is probably a grift to get more clicks, since that's all journos ever do and a lot of people love Shrek. But tbh I kinda agree that it has aged poorly and is nothing special.
It has to be low effort lazy blogger type clickbait since unless I've completely missed it over the past twenty years, there are no Shrek 'fans/supremacists/whatever' that need to be put in their place or finally dunked on by this sad but brave little clown at the Guardian.

I should finally watch the second one.
 
"What’s left is an all-ages film that’s somehow more crude and juvenile in its appeals to adults than children."

Gonna have to agree with this part, this is bad, not just shrek but other movies too. Forced and "subtle" sex/naughty word/dudeweed/old pop culture etc references are only funny to lowest common denominator retard adults and they're just stupid to kids who would probably appreciate that time being filled with kids stuff.

Also Eddie Murphy (or other past good comics) went family safe imo tainting him and anything he touches. If coming to america was the safest thing he'd ever done I'd have a lot more respect. Get some generic studio voice for characters in a kids movie, the kids don't care.
Disney's Renaissance has a lot of that catering to adults crap as well, and did the same turning Eddie Murphy into a family friendly version if himself. Mulan came out in 1998 after all
 
I've been saying this since it came out, why anyone ever liked this movie is beyond me, Smash Mouth is literally the only good thing about it.
 
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The author is a pansy, but he's also right. Shrek started the celebrity VA in crappy self-referential movies trend. Maybe there's no direct line between it and every big movie being a quippathon but what made it stand out then is also what's made it age badly.
And the original Star Wars started the trend of the big blockbuster action movies beating out well written New Hollywood films at the box office. Doesn't make Star Wars any less of a good movie.
 
Why does it matter? An old computer generation animation will look a bit poor 20 years later.
 
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