[portable] — D3 Film
D3 is a messy, poorly paced, often cynical film. But it is also the only children’s film honest enough to admit that growing up means turning your passion into a job, and hating it just a little bit. It is not a good sequel. It is a great requiem for childhood.
Where D2 was a cartoonish victory lap, D3 is a Kafka-esque nightmare of hazing, GPA minimums, and locker room politics. The film’s most subversive moment arrives when Captain Charlie Conway—the moral center of the franchise—has a panic attack on the ice and deliberately checks an opponent out of rage. He is benched. He fails. In any other Disney film, the power of friendship solves this. Here, Charlie has to be stripped of the "C" on his jersey. d3 film
The film is saved not by a goal, but by (a perfectly deadpan Kenneth Tigar), who represents the old-money establishment. He threatens to disband the team if they don't win. The Ducks win the championship not out of love, but out of extortion . D3 is a messy, poorly paced, often cynical film





