‘Planet 51’ proves 
unable to support life

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It’s been a big year for animation, with a great variety of styles represented by “Up,” “Monsters vs. Aliens,” “Fantastic Mr. Fox” and the upcoming “The Princess and the Frog.”

The best you can say of the sci-fi comedy “Planet 51” is that like those others, it too is animated.

“Planet 51” is the first feature film from Ilion Animation Studios, established by the founders of video game outfit Pyro Studios. The Ilion crew has all the technical talent to craft decent computer imagery, though it looks commonplace next to the marvels “Up” creator Pixar Animation dreams up in film after film.

But “Planet 51” is an aborted liftoff when it comes to story, presenting a half- or quarter-baked premise of a human astronaut among little green aliens who, for some uninspired reason, are living the serene “Ozzie and Harriet” life of 1950s America.

Working from a screenplay by Joe Stillman (co-writer of “Shrek” and “Shrek 2”), director Jorge Blanco shifts from his Pyro video game career to the big screen with an adventure as bland as the sitcommy decade that fostered it.

Likewise, voice stars Dwayne Johnson, Jessica Biel, Justin Long and castmates seem to take their cue from the Ward Cleaver school of parental droning. Even vocal gymnast John Cleese sounds neutered as a partly mad alien scientist.

Lacking any real cleverness – why is it supposed to be funny that this planet’s skies rain rocks instead of water? – the movie piles on frantic slapstick and chases, which may go some distance in satisfying young children. Their parents may find “Planet 51” as boring as an interstellar voyage – a long way to go with not much to do.

“Planet 51” – you know, like Area 51, where the U.S. government keeps its own alien stuff – is a world petrified of outsiders, whose big entertainment is the latest B-movie about space invaders coming to take over.

Brainy teenager Lem (voiced by Long) is an unbeliever, an astronomy nut convinced the universe is only 500 miles wide and that his world is the big cheese, until he becomes reluctant protector of Chuck Baker (Johnson), a NASA astronaut who lands on Lem’s world.

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