- Shrek and Fiona's (Mike Myers and Cameron Diaz, respectively) fairy-tale wedding has gone off without a hitch, yet just as the beaming newlyweds prepare to enjoy their blissful "happily ever after," the sudden death of King Harold (John Cleese) finds everyone's favorite ornery ogre being reluctantly fitted for the royal crown. Troubled to learn that not only will he be compelled to rule Far Far Away, but that he and Fiona are also expecting a little ogre, Shrek determines to track down his new bride's rebellious cousin, Artie (Justin Timberlake) -- the one true heir to the throne -- in order to focus on fatherhood without the added distraction of having to preside over the kingdom. As Shrek sets out with faithful companions Donkey (Eddie Murphy) and Puss in Boots (Antonio Banderas) to locate the medieval high-school slacker and bring him back to become the reigning sovereign of Far Far Away, handsome snake Prince Charming (Rupert Everett) slithers back to the castle in the company of the dreaded Captain Hook (Ian McShane) to stage a diabolically timed coup and assume control of the throne. Now, as Shrek, Donkey, and Puss in Boots do their best to wrangle up the feisty Artie, Fiona must enlist the aid of fighting princesses Snow White (Amy Poehler), Sleeping Beauty (Cheri Oteri), Rapunzel (Maya Rudolph), and Cinderella (Amy Sedaris) to barricade the castle and fend off Prince Charming's invading army of fairy-tale villains until her beloved husband can return with the cavalry to save the day. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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- Features
The Animators' Corner: picture-in-picture interactive storyboards (HD exclusive)
My Menus: customizable character menus (HD exclusive)
All new web-enabled extras: The World of Shrek, Shrek's Trivia Track
Learn the Donkey Dance
Big Green Goofs
Shrek's Guide to Parenthood
Lost Scenes
The Tech of Shrek
Merlin's Magic Crystal Ball
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Directors
Chris Miller
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Producers
Aron Warner
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Composers (Music Score)
Harry Gregson-Williams
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Co-Producers
Raman Hui
Denise Nolan Cascino
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Editors
Michael Andrews
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Screen Writers
Jeffrey Price
Peter S. Seaman
Aron Warner
Chris Miller
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Set Designers
Douglas Pierce
Others
Additional Dialogue - Cody Cameron
Additional Dialogue - David P. Smith
Additional Dialogue - Robert Porter
Additional Editing - Michelle Belforte Hauser
Additional Editing - C.K. Horness
Additional Editing - Daniel Ortiz
ADR Loop Group - Jack Blessing
ADR Loop Group - June Christopher
ADR Loop Group - Leigh French
ADR Loop Group - Oliver Muirhead
ADR Loop Group - Ruth Silveira
ADR Loop Group - Matthew Porretta
ADR Loop Group - Eddie Frierson
ADR Loop Group - Harry Van Gorkum
ADR Loop Group - Sierra French-Myerson
ADR Loop Group - Jonathan Nichols
ADR Loop Group - Lisa Wilhoit
ADR Loop Group - Jessie Marion
ADR Loop Group - Marshall Allman
ADR Loop Group - Chad Einbinder
ADR Loop Group - Darren Richardson
ADR Loop Group - Christine Mellor
ADR Loop Group - Travis Van Winkle
ADR Loop Group - Justin Moran Shenkarow
ADR Loop Group - William Ellis Calvert
ADR Loop Group - Emily Cramer
ADR Loop Group - Aaron Moody
ADR Loop Group - Paula Jane Newman
ADR Loop Group - Thomas Brunelle
ADR Loop Group - Crystal Foley
ADR Mixer - Thomas J. O'Connell
ADR Recordist - Rick Canelli
ADR Voice Casting - Leigh French
Animation Effects - Matthew Baer
Animation Effects - Mark Manfrey
Animation Effects - Tadao Mihashi
Animation Effects - Markus Burki
Animation Effects - Greg Hart
Animation Effects - Martin Usiak
Animation Effects - Jason Waltman
Animation Effects - Taylor Shaw
Animation Effects - Kevin Vassey
Animation Effects - Florent Andorra
Animation Effects - Alan Cheney
Animation Effects - Matthew Head
Animation Effects - Andrew Dickinson
Animation Effects - Jonathan Dinerstein
Animation Effects - Laurent Kermel
Animation Effects - Arnauld Lamorlette
Animation Effects - Krzysztof Rost
Animation Effects - Joon Taik Song
Animation Effects - Joanne Thiel
Animator - Sean Mahoney
Animator - Lou Dellarosa
Animator - Paul Chung
Animator - Cassidy Curtis
Animator - Anthony Hodgson
Animator - Eric Lessard
Animator - Dave Rader
Animator - Carlos Rosas
Animator - Patrick Bonneau
Animator - Kenny Chung
Animator - Melanie Cordan
Animator - Nick Craven
Animator - Mariko Hoshi
Animator - Jeffrey K. Joe
Animator - Heather Knight
Animator - Julie Nelson
Animator - Kevan Shorey
Animator - David Spivack
Animator - Don Venhaus
Animator - Denis Couchon
Animator - Mark Donald
Animator - Cory Rogers
Animator - Mark Behm
Animator - Chung Nin Chan
Animator - Katrina Conwright
Animator - Bryce McGovern
Animator - Carlos Fernandez Puertolas
Animator - Mark Roennigke
Animator - Jason Schleifer
Animator - EunJin Suh
Art Director - Peter Zaslav
Assistant Sound Editor - Mark Coffey
Assistant Sound Editor - Andy Sisul
Book Author - William Steig
Casting - Leslee Feldman
Casting Assistant - Ania Kamieniecki
Casting Associate - Christi Soper
Character Animation - Tim Cheung
Character Design - Tom Hester
Chorus Master - David Hill
Co-Director - Raman Hui
Color Timing - Terry Claborn
Composer (Music Score) - Harry Gregson-Williams
Consultant/advisor - Dan Arriaga
Costume Designer - Israel Segal
Dialogue Editor - Patrick Hogan
Dialogue Editor - Michael Hertlein
Executive Producer - Andrew Adamson
Executive Producer - John H. Williams
First Assistant Editor - J. John Dorst
Foley Artist - Christopher Moriana
Foley Artist - Catherine A. Harper
Foley Mixer - Darren Mann
Historical Consultant - Andrew Adamson
Layout - Nick Walker
Lighting - Philippe Denis
Lighting - Susan Hayden
Lighting - Annmarie Koenig
Lighting - Jin Liou
Lighting - Milton E. Rodríguez-Ríos
Matte Artist - Tony Halawa
Matte Artist - Michael Collery
Matte Artist - Patrick Jensen
Matte Artist - Ruben Perez
Model Effects - Facundo Rabaudi
Model Effects - Bill Stahl
Model Effects - Steve McGrath
Model Effects - Joshua West
Model Effects - Benjamin Williams
Model Effects - Angela Ensele
Model Effects - Min-Yu Chang
Model Effects - Cristian Dumitriu
Model Effects - Hyun Jeong Shin
Mold Department - Tim Lawrence
Music Editor - Richard Whitfield
Musical Performer - Randy Crenshaw
Musical Performer - Bach Choir
Musical Performer - Megan Hilty
Musical Performer - Michael Himelstein
Negative Cutter - Mo Henry
Personal Assistant - Anne-Marie Barreau
Personal Assistant - Michelle Jurado Godoy
Personal Assistant - Melissa Mackay
Personal Assistant - Stephanie Webster
Post Production Coordinator - Wayne Hellinger
Post Production Coordinator - Mark Schoellkopf
Post Production Manager - Andrew Birch
Post Production Supervisor - David Yanover
Production Assistant - Matt Eshew
Production Assistant - April Henley
Production Assistant - Tiffany Navarro
Production Assistant - Matthew Harold Sharack
Production Assistant - Sun de Graaf
Production Controller - Gary Wohlleben
Production Designer - Guillaume Aretos
Production Executive - Jill Hopper
Production Executive - Kristina Reed
Production Executive - Kristen D. Chidel
Production Executive - Suzanne Buirgy
Production Executive - Beth Sasseen
Production Executive - Germaine Yokoyama
Production Manager - Holly Edwards
Production Manager - Latifa Ouaou
Production Supervisor - Kelly Cooney
Recording - Carlos Sotolongo
Recording - Craig Heath
Recording - Blake Cornett
Recording - Larry Winer
Recording - Chad Roucroft
Recording - Roy Latham
Screen Story - Andrew Adamson
Sound Effects Editor - Michael Chock
Sound Effects Editor - David A. Whittaker
Sound/Sound Designer - Andy Nelson
Sound/Sound Designer - Anna Behlmer
Story Editor - Technicolor Sound Services
Storyboard Artist - Walt Dohrn
Supervising Sound Editor - Richard L. Anderson
Supervising Sound Editor - Thomas Jones
Supervising Technical Director - Lucia Modesto
Supervisor/Manager - Nasser Sharif
Technical Director - Matt Authement
Technical Director - J. Corban Gossett
Title Design - Ariandy Chandra
Visual Effects Supervisor - Ken Bielenberg
Visual Effects Supervisor - Philippe Gluckman
Visual Effects Supervisor - Ken Beilenberg
From the very first appearance of the giant Scottish ogre,
"Shrek" has been about fart and poop jokes. By infusing the overly familiar storytelling conventions of children's classics with the kind of laughs the MPAA tags as "crude humor," the producers found a financially successful way to seem both edgy and familiar to kids and parents alike. In the first film, the exhausting energy helped carry it along, but the message about beauty being on the inside got lost among the endlessly cruel short jokes made at the expense of bad guy Lord Farquaad.
Shrek 2 was as a real mess, telling a story too emotionally complicated for the average child, and relying too heavily on uncreative pop-culture references for humor. However, the director of those first two films,
Andrew Adamson, abdicated the director's throne to
Chris Miller for this installment, a decision that seems to have given everybody involved a chance to rethink the direction they wanted to take with the most successful DreamWorks franchise.
The confident rhythm of
Shrek the Third is apparent from the opening sequences, a series of gags showing that Shrek has a tough time filling in for his father-in-law, the king of Far Far Away, who's become too sick to handle official duties like knighting ceremonies. This humorous sequence works well to set up the story, largely because the pacing allows viewers to take in the detailed animation. Instead of hammering the viewer with the umpteenth variation of
Smash Mouth's
"All Star," or packing in more jokes per second than we can possibly keep up with, the gags in
Shrek the Third actually help move the story along -- and they get maximum laughter. One bit, for instance, finds the court trying to make the ogre appear more regal, resulting in a scene where he's made up like a lime-green Louis the XIV. This scene ends up being hilarious in the premise and in the sight gag as the outfit is full of funny details that provoke more giggles that you'd get with the mere idea of having Shrek in such a getup. Another standout scene finds Prince Charming down on his luck and reduced to acting out his heroics for an unappreciative dinner-theater audience. The humor in this sequence comes not just from how ridiculous it is for the vain prince to have hit such a low, but also because the filmmakers get in more than a few digs about cheap theater. In addition, this sequence pays off in the finale when Charming gets the chance to set right all that went wrong for him in
Shrek 2.
Miller and the rest of the crew maintain that level of quality throughout almost all of
Shrek the Third. All the scenes get maximum impact because they are true to the characters, they always advance the story, and they find something funny to satirize, whether it's pop culture or fairy tales.
The
"Shrek" movies have always aimed to offer a new spin on the tried-and-true conventions of fairy tales, but poop and fart jokes are rarely subversive. Making an ugly, gaseous, and green ogre a heroic figure is certainly unique, but Shrek loses most of that uniqueness when it turns out he's just as brave and noble as any good-looking hero from any straight-laced fantasy -- he just looks funny. Fortunately, this time out, the filmmakers offer some very strong genre commentary thanks to the female characters. The famous fairy-tale princesses like Snow White, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty team up with Princess Fiona when Far Far Away comes under attack, and instead of sitting around waiting to be rescued, they stand up for their homeland and kick all kinds of butt. This concept pays off in the single funniest scene of the movie when Snow White summons all the animals of nature with her familiar sing-song, and then has them storm the castle when her lilting soprano voice slides from an ethereal melody into the opening cry of
Led Zeppelin's
"Immigrant Song." Once again the movie works on multiple levels, getting the viewer to laugh at the pop-culture smarts, and the twisting of fairy-tale clichés, as well as advancing the story (because really, what's a fairy tale without a good castle storming). What's genius about the moment is that the joke isn't in hearing the
Zeppelin tune, it's in how massively it contrasts with the sweet innocence of Snow White, an innocence that this film transforms into a girl-empowerment lesson that offers a needed corrective to the insidious Disney Princesses marketing campaign of the last few years.
Shrek the Third finally fulfills the artistic potential of the first two movies, offering a solidly constructed story with a good moral, some welcome genre commentary, and a bunch of quality laughs, all presented in a style that exudes confidence and craftsmanship. Instead of treating the movie like the cash cow it is, DreamWorks cared enough to make a movie that actually seems worthy of the gargantuan box-office numbers they expected. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
- Chris Miller : Best Animated Feature - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2007