![]() ![]() Tad is your eccentric hopeful, the main female, Sara is your plain Jane character, and Cheech Marin’s character is your con artist with a heart of gold. Well, if you really wanted something like Indiana Jones, but for a younger audience, you are better off finding a copy of the Ducktales movie, since the characters in Tad the Lost Explorer are very boilerplate for this kind of movie. So, with all the Indiana Jones name dropping, it should be a fun action movie for kids. Along the way, Tad meets up with a female archeologist voiced by Ariel Winter of Modern Family fame, a “quirky” con man voiced by Cheech Marin, and a voiceless parrot, as they try to stop an evil group of modern day pirates from reaching the lost city first. After bringing a bottle that was buried underground to a professor at a museum, Tad ends up taking the professor’s place on a plane to Peru to solve some long lost puzzle that could lead the archeologist group to a mysterious city and the power of immortality. Unfortunately, his aspiring goals seem to get him in a lot of trouble at his construction job. He is an aspiring archeologist who wants to hit it big and find treasure from all over the world. The story revolves around Tad, voiced by Kerry Shale, who you might know better as Rufus from the popular Deponia adventure games. It’s at least better than Temple of Doom, though. It’s harmless and entertaining to an extent, but it’s also not as good as the really good Indiana Jones movies. ![]() It’s essentially baby’s first Indiana Jones. Directed by Enrique Gato, Tad the Lost Explorer was released in 2012 to a positive reception in its home country of Spain, but to a more lukewarm reception everywhere else. For example, today’s review will cover one of the winners of the Goya award for animation. I have seen a lot of these movies that won a Goya award, and they are usually those movies that are brought over and slapped onto the early morning run of Cartoon Network or Nickelodeon when no one is watching the channel. For now, I just want to say that the standard of entry for a Goya must be rather low. Chico & Rita, Nocturna, and Wrinkles, are obviously going to appear later on down the review line. I decided to do some digging to see what other films won, and you won’t believe how many other animated films that I want to cover, ended up winning this award. I bring this up because Nocturna was a film that won the Goya award for best animated feature back in 2007. It’s basically Spain’s answer to the Oscars. While doing research for a film I want to review, Nocturna by Adrià Garcìa and Victor Maldonado, I came across Spain’s film award system known as Goya. ![]()
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