CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.8/10
303 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Manny, Sid y Diego descubren que la edad de hielo está llegando a su fin, y se unen para un viaje a un terreno más alto. En el viaje, descubren que Manny en realidad no es el último de los m... Leer todoManny, Sid y Diego descubren que la edad de hielo está llegando a su fin, y se unen para un viaje a un terreno más alto. En el viaje, descubren que Manny en realidad no es el último de los mamuts lanudos.Manny, Sid y Diego descubren que la edad de hielo está llegando a su fin, y se unen para un viaje a un terreno más alto. En el viaje, descubren que Manny en realidad no es el último de los mamuts lanudos.
- Premios
- 8 premios ganados y 16 nominaciones en total
Ray Romano
- Manny
- (voz)
John Leguizamo
- Sid
- (voz)
Denis Leary
- Diego
- (voz)
Queen Latifah
- Ellie
- (voz)
Chris Wedge
- Scrat
- (voz)
Connor Anderson
- Rhino Boy
- (voz)
- …
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe 3rd highest grossing film of 2006, and the highest grossing animated film of 2006.
- ErroresFor much of the movie, Diego shows a great fear of being in water. In the previous film, La era del hielo (2002), Diego shows no fear or hesitancy to enter the river while chasing the baby and his mother.
- Créditos curiososJust like the original movie, the end credits are alongside drawings made by the children of the Blue Sky employees.
- Versiones alternativasIn the UK version, Lee Ryan is the voice of the Elk Dad and the song 'Real Love' is played during the credits. Also, the credits and drawings are rendered in blue instead of white. This version, however, did not end up in the UK DVD release, even though Lee Ryan and his song were credited.
- ConexionesEdited into Padre de familia: Sibling Rivalry (2006)
- Bandas sonorasThe Way You Look Tonight
Written by Dorothy Fields and Jerome Kern
Opinión destacada
The children liked it but they weren't riveted. That's the short of it. It wasn't a shocking disaster, but it was just a bit muddled. A little scattered. Fragmented. It failed to engage me.
But let's be positive. The writers wisely decided to vastly expand the role of Scrat the Squirrel in this version. Periodically we get to take a break from watching the mammoth, sloth, tiger, possums, and other mammoth walk very slowly along toward the vague "other end" of a vague "valley" to avoid a flood that is being caused by global warming. We get to step back from the grindingly uninspired mammoth love story and the other many subplots that go with the many characters. We get to watch a squirrel chase an acorn. And those sequences present some of the funniest bits in the film.
The rest of it is just kind of there. One problem is that there's really no reason for a sloth, a tiger, and a mammoth to be casting their lots together, except that they did in the first movie. That movie, I felt, had a storyline that involved actual characterization, growth, change, a real tension, etc. When the tiger almost fell off the cliff in Ice Age #1, I gasped. This time, I fidgeted. It just didn't seem real. And that's what I want from an animated movie about talking prehistoric animals -- REALNESS. No, but seriously, without some degree of actual jeopardy, of actual question of what will happen from scene to scene, without someone to root for and embrace -- it's just pointless.
The only character I was getting that for was the saber tooth squirrel. They could have saved a lot of money in celebrity voices.
Everyone had a subplot because they had to have something to do, so that was tidily arranged for them. But nobody's subplot had anything to do with the others'. And the global storyline about the flood was just a reason to walk... slowly. Slowly walk. And pester each other half-heartedly about how they were all going to die. Or not.
Like I said, the children didn't complain. I did laugh, many times, at the places I was supposed to. But it wasn't great.
But let's be positive. The writers wisely decided to vastly expand the role of Scrat the Squirrel in this version. Periodically we get to take a break from watching the mammoth, sloth, tiger, possums, and other mammoth walk very slowly along toward the vague "other end" of a vague "valley" to avoid a flood that is being caused by global warming. We get to step back from the grindingly uninspired mammoth love story and the other many subplots that go with the many characters. We get to watch a squirrel chase an acorn. And those sequences present some of the funniest bits in the film.
The rest of it is just kind of there. One problem is that there's really no reason for a sloth, a tiger, and a mammoth to be casting their lots together, except that they did in the first movie. That movie, I felt, had a storyline that involved actual characterization, growth, change, a real tension, etc. When the tiger almost fell off the cliff in Ice Age #1, I gasped. This time, I fidgeted. It just didn't seem real. And that's what I want from an animated movie about talking prehistoric animals -- REALNESS. No, but seriously, without some degree of actual jeopardy, of actual question of what will happen from scene to scene, without someone to root for and embrace -- it's just pointless.
The only character I was getting that for was the saber tooth squirrel. They could have saved a lot of money in celebrity voices.
Everyone had a subplot because they had to have something to do, so that was tidily arranged for them. But nobody's subplot had anything to do with the others'. And the global storyline about the flood was just a reason to walk... slowly. Slowly walk. And pester each other half-heartedly about how they were all going to die. Or not.
Like I said, the children didn't complain. I did laugh, many times, at the places I was supposed to. But it wasn't great.
- lostcheerio
- 23 abr 2006
- Enlace permanente
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Ice Age 2: The Meltdown
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 80,000,000 (estimado)
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 195,330,621
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 68,033,544
- 2 abr 2006
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 667,094,506
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta