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Dreamworks Shark Tale -usa Europe- < ULTIMATE >

Why? Because the film that American audiences tolerated was not the same film European critics lambasted. Shark Tale didn’t just flounder on one side of the Atlantic; it revealed a seismic rift in what two continents consider funny, tasteful, and even watchable. In the US, Shark Tale was marketed as an animated Analyze This meets Saturday Night Fever . The plot: Oscar (Will Smith), a fast-talking, lowly cleaner fish at a whale wash, dreams of being “somebody.” After a freak accident involving a dead shark and an anchor, Oscar is mistaken for a fearless “Sharkslayer.” He leverages the lie to climb the social ladder, only to get entangled with a mobster shark family—Don Lino (Robert De Niro), his dim-witted son Lenny (Jack Black), and his vengeful son Frankie (Michael Imperioli).

In Europe, the appeal of Will Smith, Jack Black, and Robert De Niro doing cartoon voices was far more muted. Dubbing cultures (Germany, France, Italy, Spain) replace American stars with local actors, stripping the film of its primary marketing hook. What remained was a story that felt derivative of Finding Nemo (released just 18 months earlier) but without the heart or visual fidelity.

The American voice cast was a who’s who of turn-of-the-millennium cool: Smith’s brash charisma, Black’s physical comedy, De Niro parodying himself, Angelina Jolie as a sultry lionfish, and Martin Scorsese as a pufferfish. For US audiences raised on The Sopranos and hip-hop culture, the references landed. The film’s soundtrack, featuring Smith’s “Gettin’ Jiggy wit It” remix and Mary J. Blige, cemented its urban, post- Shrek pop-culture pastiche. Then the film crossed the pond. European critics—particularly in the UK, France, and Germany—did not just dislike Shark Tale ; they treated it with a level of disdain usually reserved for jury duty. The late Roger Ebert (US) gave it 2.5 stars. The Guardian (UK) gave it one. Le Monde called it an “assault on the intelligence.”

Why? Because the film that American audiences tolerated was not the same film European critics lambasted. Shark Tale didn’t just flounder on one side of the Atlantic; it revealed a seismic rift in what two continents consider funny, tasteful, and even watchable. In the US, Shark Tale was marketed as an animated Analyze This meets Saturday Night Fever . The plot: Oscar (Will Smith), a fast-talking, lowly cleaner fish at a whale wash, dreams of being “somebody.” After a freak accident involving a dead shark and an anchor, Oscar is mistaken for a fearless “Sharkslayer.” He leverages the lie to climb the social ladder, only to get entangled with a mobster shark family—Don Lino (Robert De Niro), his dim-witted son Lenny (Jack Black), and his vengeful son Frankie (Michael Imperioli).

In Europe, the appeal of Will Smith, Jack Black, and Robert De Niro doing cartoon voices was far more muted. Dubbing cultures (Germany, France, Italy, Spain) replace American stars with local actors, stripping the film of its primary marketing hook. What remained was a story that felt derivative of Finding Nemo (released just 18 months earlier) but without the heart or visual fidelity.

The American voice cast was a who’s who of turn-of-the-millennium cool: Smith’s brash charisma, Black’s physical comedy, De Niro parodying himself, Angelina Jolie as a sultry lionfish, and Martin Scorsese as a pufferfish. For US audiences raised on The Sopranos and hip-hop culture, the references landed. The film’s soundtrack, featuring Smith’s “Gettin’ Jiggy wit It” remix and Mary J. Blige, cemented its urban, post- Shrek pop-culture pastiche. Then the film crossed the pond. European critics—particularly in the UK, France, and Germany—did not just dislike Shark Tale ; they treated it with a level of disdain usually reserved for jury duty. The late Roger Ebert (US) gave it 2.5 stars. The Guardian (UK) gave it one. Le Monde called it an “assault on the intelligence.”

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