Madagascar, a Journey Diary (2010) Poster

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8/10
Beautiful, fascinating short not to all tastes
llltdesq22 April 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This short was nominated for the Academy Award for Animated Short, losing to The Lost Thing. There will be spoilers ahead:

This short is pretty much what its title says it is-it's a diary of a journey by a tourist in Madagascar. It's a mix of pages from a journal/scrapbook, brief action shots of people, animals, scenes and events and music. There's not very much of a plot, just one small portion having to do with the tourist meeting a man who tells him about a festival and inviting him to attend.

There's a bus trip taken by the tourist to go to the village to attend the festival and some material on the festival, but this is more a travelogue than a story. If one knows something about Madagascar, that would likely make things a bit more enjoyable. I'm sure I missed things I didn't understand because I lacked background knowledge.

But the animation and art is nice, the music is nice and it's visually appealing. I liked it, but preferred The Lost Thing personally.

This short is available on DVD and is well worth watching.
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7/10
Madagascar, a Journey Diary
CinemaSerf7 April 2024
This uses a variety of animation styles to take us on a whistle-stop tour of Madagascar. Taking a quick coffee, we are invited to a "famadihana" - a sort of funeral ritual deep within the island. Using a lively original soundtrack, we are then whisked off in a coach taking in the towns and the sights around this huge island before being deposited amidst some farmland where a hillclimb takes us to a small village full of thatched-roof houses and friendly, smiling, people. We are here for this ceremony to commemorate a recently deceased lady. Rice and pork on the menu then a procession to her tomb where the emphasis is very much on joy tempered with respect. Meantime, some racoons are playfully enjoying the scene and the community continues it's daily routine as we proceed to explore the rest of this island, largely untouched for centuries. It has a little of the tourist video to it, this, but in an interesting and engaging fashion. The scenarios are sometimes animated, at other times static as if we were sending a postcard. The character detail can be specific or broad brush and that mixture of styles helps keep this vividly coloured feature interesting to watch for ten minutes.
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10/10
This movie has a rating of 6.9?!?! That's crazy.
planktonrules19 February 2011
The movie is a journal of a man's visit to the island. Using a series of varying art styles (some of which appear to be a journal page coming to life), you see highlights of this trip.

I was shocked when I went onto IMDb to post this review. After all, after seeing a special screening of all the Academy Award-nominated animated shorts I thought it was a best in the very strong field of five. Yes, inexplicably its score is currently only 6.9--a score that would indicate that it's only an average film (yes, 6.9 is about average on IMDb--not 5.0). I don't get it--perhaps the non-traditional story or unusual animation put off some--I thought it was brilliant and if I were awarding the Oscar I'd give it to "Madagascar".

Why did I like it so? Well, the way the film so rapidly changed from one art style to another to yet another to yet another was a wonderful way for the artists to show off their skills. I didn't mind this bouncy style at all--but, interestingly, when I called my daughter to discuss the films (she is halfway across the country but we always go to these and then talk about them on the phone), she absolutely hated it. Her impression was that the film bounced so much that it made her eyes and brain hurt and she didn't like the story. Hyperactive me, I didn't mind any of this at all and liked that the story was not at all traditional and played more like a diary coming to life.

Hmmmm....so obviously my review didn't clear this up at all for you! If you don't mind a lot of bright images and a non-traditional story, then this is for you. If you occasionally get sensory overload and demand a clear story with a start and a finish, then you might be a bit disappointed. All I know is I loved it and was very, very impressed with the artistry. A moving film and my vote for best animated short.

UPDATE: I was surprised, but just moments ago I saw that "The Lost Thing" won the Oscar for Best Animated Short. To me, this was a surprise! I guess this helps illustrate that if I like a film, it's doomed!!
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exploring
RResende6 July 2010
What an interesting experience. I'm still dealing with this little film, days after i saw it. There is a non complexed attitude towards the chosen medium, the animation techniques, and the very look that is intended for the film, all of which captivates me seriously. And, like in the films i most admire, and which i consider deserve being watched repeatedly, there is a coherence between structure, form, and content, which is quite rare and always to be praised. At the same time, in this film like in many other short animations, the creative roots of the involved minds are in areas other than cinema which, in this case, is a good thing. That is because, behind films like this, we don't find any formal compromise, nor formatted heritages caused by over exposition to other works. In this case, the formal "vices" are fully related with the drawings. Those drawings are the reason for this film to exist. They are the work of a talented artist, in front of the blank sheet, someone who knows how to work contour and water paint, and who could successfully transport the spirit of both kinds of drawings to the animated film.

But what interested me more here was the attitude assumed probably during the voyage that originated this film, and which was transported to the drawings made about it (and to the photos!) and finally got stick to the film i'm commenting. All the film has a provisional character, has if it was being improvised, work in progress, opened still. Every sequence, as well as the connexions between them, seem to be informal, almost casual. Now, it is possible that a carnet de voyage, the real one, in paper, has genuinely those informal characteristics, because the carnet happens with the voyage, with the unpredictabilities of a trip. The voyage happens, simply, and drawings get built, "naturally". But transporting that inquisitive spirit of a traveler, and the resulting spontaneity to a film, which obviously carries months or even years of preparation and execution, is something very tricky, which i enjoyed here.

The trick here is, i think, is the additional plasticity that the director can add to the drawings. Those subtleties that allow us to get in the contours, and see animated characters in the water paints. And a very interesting aspect, as well, is the facto that several times the film accuses the fact that we are actually not watching a film, instead we're visiting a personal journey. That fact is many times assumed, when we see the side metal that holds the sheets, or the cover of the notebook, or pages turning. I'll want to re watch this film.

My opinion: 4/5 http://www.7eyes.wordpress.com
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9/10
Travel journal of love
Felonious-Punk26 January 2011
The idea for this movie is simple but the result is profound. A French video game programmer took a trip to Madagascar and then decided to share his trip with the world through an animated short. The sounds of Madagascar and its music are beautifully selected, and the visuals are breath-taking as well, but what pushes this movie into the realm of greatness is the fact that every scene is presented as if we're flipping through a scrap-book. The narrator/filmmaker wisely leaves out a lot of dialogue and narration and instead opts for showing us his drawings of what he found inspiring during his trip. The perspectives of each shot are always unexpected and are quick to shift, so that we are never for a second bored. As far as content goes, the filmmaker focuses on subjects that are full of heart, vibrant. We see vendors selling their wares, children playing, house- wives on their errands, dogs picking through trash, windsurfers and much more, all shown to the rhythm of a brisk stroll. And as if all of these treats weren't enough, our narrator/protagonist goes through an eerie but enlightening transformation. It's certainly a satisfying trip!
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5/10
An odd little movie I didn't enjoy but I'm sure will find happiness with some.
Hellmant23 February 2011
'MADAGASCAR, A JOURNEY DIARY': Two and a Half Stars (Out of Five)

The weakest of the 2010 Oscar animated short films this one tells the story of a young man's visit to Madagascar in animated diary formant. It was written, directed and edited by Bastien Dubois. The film jumps around from one image to another with no real story. It really is like a scapbook put to animation but the animation is rather weak and unimpressive. The lack of story or any sort of direction whatsoever makes the movie kind of dull, in my opinion, and drawn-out (even at just 11 minutes). It does deserve some points for creativity and uniqueness and also for breaking all storytelling and film rules. An odd little movie I didn't enjoy but I'm sure will find happiness with some.

Watch our review show 'MOVIE TALK' at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CBqNUf10kuk
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4/10
An animated travel documentary
Horst_In_Translation27 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Bastien Dubois' 10-minute short film from 5 years ago is probably the most unusual from the Animated Short Film Academy Award nominees that year. There was a fake documentary among the nominees, but this one is actually a real documentary. The language is mostly French, but there is not that much talk, so you do not really need subtitles. The topic and animation is certainly not too common, so it will definitely not appeal to everybody and that includes myself. The music was fine, but other than that I had no real interest in the cuisine, people and landscapes of Madagascar before watching this and I still do not have it now. I am not really sad that it did not get the Oscar and that director Dubois did not manage to build a prolific career on the success of this film. Really only recommended to people who have an affinity for Madagascar and who maybe spent their holidays there in the past already.
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The French school of animation
ersbel12 November 2016
The French school of animation is all about making money. Multiple state agencies have poured help into this piece of junk. And also typical of the French school of animation, there is no story, only a reinforcement of the old colonial thinking: the curious white man, the happy savages with their strange, yet so very humane reactions, all saying 'see? they're also human!' What is the point of this? The trip? But we are thrown into action from the first minute. Walking the dead ritual? But there is more. So much more for a short feature. The animation is an aberrant mix of animation techniques. Can they do all those? Wonderful. That should be their portfolio to get a job. It can be colorful or monochrome, but in a random way. Yet, the locals are speaking stereotype bad French.

Contact me with Questions, Comments or Suggestions ryitfork @ bitmail.ch
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