(Stéphane Aubier & Vincent Patar, Belgium/France, 2009, 75 mins.)
Click here for part one
In attempting to solve the mystery, the trio ends up falling through the Earth's core to the other side, where they land in an Arctic research center shaped like a giant penguin. Along the way, they find the culprits while evading selfish scientists and swordfish-wielding sea creatures (that's to say nothing of the lava pit). Now Indian, Cowboy, and Horse must figure out how to get back home with the walls.
Though some observers might describe Indian and Cowboy as stupid or childish, they're more naïve and impetuous than anything else. Further, all of the characters, to quote the press notes, speak "as if they are filled with laughing gas" (and it's even funnier in French). Better yet, Cowboy and Indian are semi-permanently affixed to display stands, but they still seem to wobble around pretty well.
By the end, the three have recovered the walls and Horse gets back in time for his piano lesson with Miss Longray. To say how would spoil the fun, but I will say that I particularly liked the way scales are mixed throughout: Indian, Cowboy, and Horse brush their teeth using human-size implements, while Steven starts the day with a towering slice of Nutella toast, even though all four are only a few inches high.
According to indieWIRE, A Town Called Panic is "the first full-length stop-motion animation to screen at Cannes." If the film's figures are cruder than those of Coraline or Fantastic Mr. Fox, it's every bit as enjoyable, if far more anarchically silly.
A Town Called Panic continues at the Varsity Theater through Thurs., 1/28. The Varsity is located at 4329 University Way NE. For more information, please click here or call 206-781-5755. Poelvoorde, incidentally, probably remains best known in the States for Man Bites Dog. Suffice to say, the feisty farmer he voices here is far less chilling than that film's unrepentant serial killer. Images from Zeitgeist.
1/28 update: the film has been held over through 2/4.