Times Colonist

Museum creatures come alive at IMAX

- MICHAEL D. REID

What: Museum Alive Where: Imax Victoria When: Daily, 11 a.m., 1, 3 and 5 p.m. Tickets, info: imaxvictor­ia.com 250-953-4629 Rating: Four stars (out of five)

Before the first of many extinct creatures whose skeletons populate London’s Natural History Museum springs to life, it’s hard not to think of Night at the Museum.

Sir David Attenborou­gh is no Ben Stiller, who played the night watchman in the Night at the Museum comedies, of course. This is not just a good thing, but one of the chief charms of Museum Alive, a wildlife documentar­y that just opened at Imax Victoria.

The rumpled, avuncular adventurer takes us on a nocturnal journey through the famous neoGothic London museum, as perfect a fit as narrator as the film’s massive creatures are for the IMAX screen that accommodat­es them.

The 40-minute nature documentar­y is book-ended by the departure of the museum’s security guard after the last visitor of the day has left, and his return the following morning.

In the intervenin­g hours, Attenborou­gh becomes an overnight tour guide, talking about and interactin­g with fossils from its exhibits animated through the wonders of photoreali­stic CGI.

As our host roams the museum’s hallowed halls, giant skeletons are suddenly enveloped by flesh and fur, with all manner of species lurching and leaping to virtual life before our eyes.

Museum Alive, from the makers of Penguins 3D and Galapagos 3D, is a prime example of 3D effects being used to great effect.

(For those who prefer a traditiona­l non-3D presentati­on, there’s a single screening daily in this format.)

Highlights of the film include encounters with a huge, fearsome bird of prey, the Haast eagle; the Moa, a giant, flightless bird from New Zealand that makes a spectacula­r entrance after pecking her way out of her glass cage; a giant ground sloth; a huge prehistori­c snake aptly dubbed a Gigantophi­s; a giant ape; a Dodo bird; a prowling sabre-toothed cat called a Smilodon; and “Dippy,” a ravenous replica of a 26-metre-long dinosaur that Attenborou­gh playfully “feeds” from a balcony.

It helps immensely that Attenborou­gh, wandering around in a wrinkled, short-sleeved shirt and khakis, provides insight and knowledge with such infectious, almost child-like enthusiasm.

It also seems appropriat­e that Museum Alive is being shown in a cinema that is an integral component of Victoria’s own treasured museum, and likely to encourage more visits to an institutio­n many take for granted.

Just don’t expect the Royal B.C. Museum’s resident woolly mammoth to spring to life in the Natural History Gallery and wreak havoc.

That kind of action only happens in the movies, and thank heavens for that.

 ??  ?? Narrator Sir David Attenborou­gh leads a tour of the creatures at London’s Natural History Museum.
Narrator Sir David Attenborou­gh leads a tour of the creatures at London’s Natural History Museum.

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