Tarzan review

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You know the drill - - or at least you think you do. Another year, another bout of Disney, with its high production values, mildly grating songs and colourful, cutesy characters. There's the hero, the love interest, the clown-about good guys and the baddie with his bumbling sidekicks. Chuck in set pieces, musical numbers and one or two adult jokes, and you've got the perfect entertainment package "for all the family".

Of course, over the past few years, the House Of Mouse have played with the formula to good effect: Mulan was a war movie, The Hunchback Of Notre Dame was disturbingly dark and Hercules was based on designs by satirical sketcher Gerald Scarfe. But with Tarzan, Disney has finally learned from both the success of its Pixar-produced offshoots (Toy Story, A Bug's Life) and the mistakes of Dream-Works' Prince Of Egypt: ditch most of the intrusive tunes, forget anyone bursting into song, and concentrate on the script.

Enjoy the Mouse House's very own special brand of animation without having to cringe every time the characters launch into a song. Okay, Mr Collins isn't everyone's fave crooner, but ignore his tunes and lose yourself in this energetic jungle adventure.

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