The Croods 2013 [portable] -
The movie has also inspired various merchandise, including toys, clothing, and video games. The film's memorable characters and quotes have become a part of pop culture, with the Croods family becoming a beloved and recognizable franchise.
An evolved human who uses "ideas" (like fire and shoes) to survive. Ugga (Catherine Keener): The supportive mother and glue of the family. Belt (Chris Sanders): the croods 2013
Directed by Kirk DeMicco and Chris Sanders (the mastermind behind Lilo & Stitch ), The Croods 2013 introduces us to the Crood family: Grug (Nicolas Cage), the overprotective patriarch; Ugga (Catherine Keener), the empathetic mother; Gran (Cloris Leachman), the sarcastic, nearly-fossilized grandmother; Thunk (Clark Duke), the goofy son; Sandy (Randy Thom), a feral baby with multiple rows of teeth; and Eep (Emma Stone), the restless teenage daughter who dreams of sunlight. The movie has also inspired various merchandise, including
"The Croods" (2013) is a timeless animated classic that has captured the hearts of audiences worldwide. The film's stunning visuals, engaging storyline, and lovable characters make it a must-watch for families and animation enthusiasts. The movie's themes of family, love, and acceptance continue to resonate with audiences, making it a film that will be enjoyed for generations to come. Ugga (Catherine Keener): The supportive mother and glue
Enter Guy (Ryan Reynolds), a lanky, inventive nomad who has fire (“the sun that lives in a rock”), shoes, and a sloth named Belt. Guy represents everything Grug fears: intelligence, adaptation, and the future. The film becomes a road-trip comedy where the stubborn, muscle-bound Grug must learn to embrace Guy’s “ideas” (like brains over brawn) to save his family.
Guy (Ryan Reynolds at his snarkiest but most sincere) offers the counterpoint: “Don’t hide from the sun. Reach for it.” While Guy initially seems like a cocky outsider, he is also scared. He lost his family and invented “thinking” as a way to control an uncontrollable world. The synthesis of these two worldviews is the film’s thesis: You need Grug’s strength to survive the present, but Guy’s imagination to create a future.