After adventures in the wilds of Madagascar and Africa, this third installment of the animated series begins where the second one ended: with the animals in northern Africa and newly overtaken by the dubious desire to return to their home at the Central Park Zoo in New York. Since the penguins and monkeys have hijacked their plane and pointed it toward further exploits in the Monte Carlo casinos, the foursome lion Alex (Stiller), zebra Marty (Rock), giraffe Melman (Schwimmer), and hippo Gloria (Pinkett Smith) snorkel their way across the Mediterranean in pursuit. The havoc created in the casino by the animals causes the principalitys authorities to call out their top bloodhound the wide-hipped, pointy-breasted, relentless Captain Chantel DuBois (McDormand) to catch the miscreants. Forced to flee, the animals find cover in the midst of a traveling circus, though it takes some convincing of its Russian tiger boss Vitaly (Cranston) to let them join up. The circus is heading toward Rome and London, where it has the chance to win a contract for an American tour.
Although Madagascar 3 is low on originality (despite having The Squid and the Whales Noah Baumbach on board as a co-screenwriter, as he was on the animated Fantastic Mr. Fox) and high on volume, it manages to remain amusing due to its talented voice cast and brief running time. The new characters who, in addition to DuBois and Vitaly include the circus seal Stefano (Short) and the slinky jaguar Gia (Chastain) are also good, as is Baron Cohen, returning as the lemur King Julien XIII and lending some pathos to the comedy through his infatuation with the bicycle-riding bear in a tutu. The circus acts and the rehearsals, which are set to Katy Perrys Fireworks, make the greatest use of the movies 3-D capacities. Madagascar 3 may not rival the greatest show on earth but its good enough to pack em in anyway.
This article appears in June 8 • 2012.
