Vegetables offer message good for all ages
Published 9:22 am Saturday, January 12, 2008
- "THE PIRATES Who Don't Do Anything," a VeggieTales movie, opened in limited release Friday in theaters across the country. East Oregonians will have to drive to Hermiston, Boise or Tri-Cities to see it or wait for the DVD release. For more information, visit www.veggiepirates.com . - Photo courtesy Big Idea Productions, Inc.
Our daughter Mollie, now 19, introduced us
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to VeggieTales back in the mid-1990s when she was in grade school.
Somebody at church or school introduced her, and she was hooked. She
wanted a video of her own.
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I don’t remember the year, I don’t remember whether it was
Christmas or her birthday and I don’t remember which VeggieTale it was.
But as I sat and watched it with her, I remember thinking, “Wow! This
is different – this is really cool.” And I’ve been hooked ever since.
VeggieTales appeal to all ages – they’re basic
enough for little kids and clever enough for big ones. The humor is
clean and witty. The tunes are catchy with silly lyrics and the
colorful characters are unforgettable.
VeggieTales are the creation of computer animator Phil Vischer
and writer/director Mike Nawrocki. They started Big Idea Productions in
Phil’s spare bedroom in 1993, when computer generated animation was
still vastly unheard of.
Pixar’s now famous Toy Story – which largely gets the credit for all the CG breakthrough – was not even on the horizon.
And in 1993, when Bible stories were barely past the felt-board
stage, Vischer created a cast of animated vegetables led by a silly
cucumber and his straight-man tomato friend loosely played off the
Abbott and Costello comedy team.
VeggieTales are goofy, fun and never get old. Silly Songs, a
VeggieTale standard, get stuck in your head and become part of your
family’s identity. These vegetables are definitly good for you.
Big Idea Productions’ new feature move – “The Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything” – opened in theaters across the country Friday.
Maddie, 14, and her friends already have the movie’s rousing theme song memorized.
We love VeggieTales at our house and look forward to this latest effort from the talented folks at Big Idea.
The following synopsis appears in the movie website’s press room:
This new adventure stars Larry the Cucumber, Mr. Lunt (an onion)
and Pa Grape as three moping misfits trying to prove to the world who
they really are. They want to be heroes – how hard could it be?
Working at The Pieces of Ate Dinner Theater, busboys Elliot,
Sedgewick and George – Larry, Mr. Lunt and Pa Grape – dream of the day
when they can ditch their dishrags and star in the big pirate show. But
with Elliot’s timidity, Sedgewick’s laziness and George’s lack of
self-confidence, it seems as if the day to prove who they really are
will never come.
Pirates is an allegory, an illustration, a parable, Vischer
says. Each character illustrates a fatal flaw: Larry fears everything.
Lunt lacks self-motivation. And Pa Grape has no backbone to move on a
good idea.
That all changes when a series of events drags them back to the
17th century – and into the belly of certain danger. Now, The Pirates
Who Don’t Do Anything must each face their fears – becoming unlikely
heroes in a battle to rescue a royal family from an evil tyrant, and
themselves from living the life of common couch potatoes.
Clearly it’s not a Bible story, but it is an allegory on
heroism, human desire and God’s call. Three despondent wannabes learn
to believe in themselves by believing in someone beyond themselves.
The movie defines a hero as someone who does what’s right “even when it’s really, really hard.”
More important, it says that God calls us to great adventure. And if we respond, He’ll equip us for every task.