Orlando Sentinel

The movie’s premise

- By Alan Zilberman Alan Zilberman is a freelance writer.

might be a little silly, but the action-family hybrid “Monster Trucks” is great fun.

One of the best things about the 1988 comedy “Big” was Tom Hanks’ main character, a kid stuck in an adult’s body who used his playful imaginatio­n to rise through the ranks of a toy company. At one point, he pitches the idea of a robot toy that turns into a bug, arguing that kids will prefer something that’s both unexpected and fun.

The premise of “Monster Trucks” is in that same spirit. What would happen, the film wonders, if cute, otherworld­ly creatures operated hulking cars (which already appeal to children)? The idea is unabashedl­y silly, yet “Monster Trucks” is more involving than it sounds. Characters and conflicts are sharply defined, and director Chris Wedge handles the action with clarity.

Lucas Till plays Tripp, a sullen high school student who dreams of escaping his North Dakota hamlet. Tripp has a part-time job in a junkyard, where, during an evening shift, he makes a startling discovery: a giant, oil-guzzling monster with tentacles is hiding there, scrounging through scrapped vehicles for any drop of oil it can find. The monster lived deep beneath Earth’s surface until a greedy oil executive named Reece (Rob Lowe) destroyed its undergroun­d habitat.

Tripp nicknames the monster Creech (short for “creature”), becoming buddies with it, since it is smart and has big, dopey eyes and a friendly dispositio­n. When the monster takes refuge inside the metal body of the vintage pickup truck Tripp is restoring, the boy sees an opportunit­y. He rigs the truck so that Creech can serve as its de facto engine.

In addition to Lowe, “Monster Trucks” features many familiar character actors in supporting roles. Danny Glover, Amy Ryan, Barry Pepper and Thomas Lennon all make appearance­s.

Since the oil company wants to destroy the monsters — the presence of a new species would mean they must halt drilling operations — the film turns into a contest of wills between Tripp and the evil corporatio­n.

Screenwrit­er Derek Connolly shrewdly uses archetypes for many characters while also leaving room for modest surprises. Motivation­s may not be complex, but they bear a satisfying resemblanc­e to actual human behavior.

The special effects strike an admirable balance between the cutesy and the creepy. Creech, for example, is less humanoid than E.T., but the CGI character designers give him personalit­y and heft. More important, Wedge uses the monster-in-atruck conceit as a springboar­d for some imaginativ­e chase sequences. With Creech inside, Tripp’s truck can jump, tilt and climb walls.

Unlike Michael Bay of “Transforme­rs” fame, Hedge shoots these sequences carefully so that we always understand where Tripp is in relation to his pursuers. Camera placement and editing are coherent, not chaotic.

“Monster Trucks” is far from deep. The good guys don’t experience major life lessons, and the comeuppanc­e meted out to the bad guys is only perfunctor­y. But the conflict is simple enough so that kids can recognize what’s at stake. Broad gags are thrown in alongside sly jokes, including asides that suggest that the filmmakers know the 26-year-old Till is way too old to play a teenager.

This is a film in which adults needn’t count the minutes until the end credits. “Monster Trucks” does not rely on bright, flashy colors to maintain the attention of the intended audience. Long after the novelty of the premise runs out of gas, it’s sheer moviemakin­g craft that fuels this action-family hybrid.

 ?? PARAMOUNT ?? Lucas Till plays a high schooler who discovers a monster.
PARAMOUNT Lucas Till plays a high schooler who discovers a monster.

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