Shark Tale 2004
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Shark Tale 2004

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Shark Tale 2004 ◆ (Trusted)

The film's defining trait was its A-list voice cast , featuring Will Smith as Oscar, Robert De Niro as Don Lino, Renée Zellweger as Angie, Jack Black as Lenny, and Angelina Jolie as Lola. Unlike most animated films, the character designs were explicitly shaped around the actors’ physical traits , such as Oscar's Will Smith-inspired expressions and Lola’s Angelina Jolie-esque features . Themes of Identity and Truth

Plans for a sequel were ultimately cancelled by Jeffrey Katzenberg after the original failed to meet financial expectations outside of North America.

: The film was criticized for Italian-American stereotyping via its mobster-themed shark antagonists. Shark Tale 2004

Shark Tale (2004) remains one of the most polarizing entries in DreamWorks' history, often remembered more for its celebrity-modeled character designs and pop-culture saturation than its actual narrative. While it managed an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature, it is frequently criticized by reviewers from sites like Alternate Ending for lacking the heart of its contemporary, Finding Nemo . A Star-Studded, "Humanized" Ocean

Beneath the hip-hop soundtrack and urban setting, the movie explores Oscar's struggle with self-worth . The film's defining trait was its A-list voice

: Lenny, a shark who is secretly a vegetarian , parallels Oscar’s lie; both characters must eventually choose to be themselves rather than live up to society’s (or their family’s) expectations. Criticisms and Legacy The film has faced significant retrospective critique:

: Despite the heavy criticism, it has found a second life in online memes and nostalgia posts , with fans frequently referencing iconic scenes like the Whale Wash or the "What What" exchange. : The film was criticized for Italian-American stereotyping

: Critics often describe the animation as "exceptionally ugly" compared to Shrek 2 , with characters looking like "plastic dolls" with photoshopped human faces.

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