The new French animated film Arco is a time travel movie about a boy from the far future accidentally stranding himself in the slightly less far future. It’s done in a lovely hand-drawn style that’s clearly anime influenced, and with its slow pace, flying suits, kindly robots, bickering sorta-antagonists, and sweet child protagonists, it’s unmistakably a work of Studio Ghibli karaoke. I can’t blame director Ubo Bienvenu and his collaborators for copying from the best; who doesn’t love Ghibli? In practice, it means the characters have rounded expressions and subtle movements, we spend time watching water bubbling in a stream, wind in piles of leaves, attentive food prep and other subtleties quietly and matter-of-factly rendered in clean lines. The characters are adorable, and the main boy’s plight is rendered with some degree of both whimsy and emotion, sometimes blending the two. In the far future, people can time travel in multicolored flying suits, leaving rainbows behind them in the sky like Tron light cycles. One boy too young to explore like that sneaks out and ends up crashing with a girl centuries earlier. She has been left in the care of a nanny robot while her parents are away. She needs a friend, and the boy needs help finding the right materials to get back home. Together they form a fast bond that’s a sweet childlike tumble toward softly rendered suspense, building to a bittersweet ending that feels just right. Its simple, colorful images are finely layered and textured with colorful graphical style that carries along the low-key tone with some genuine feeling. However much a jumble of influences, it manages to hit the notes even if it’s borrowing the melodies.
Speaking of familiar: Zootopia 2. If you, like me, had, in the aftermath of the disappointing Wish and Moana 2, started wondering if Disney Animation had lost its magic, here’s a temporary reprieve for those doubts. Like its predecessor, the sequel is a cleverly plotted mystery that plays like a hard-charging buddy-cop action-comedy. The cops just happen to be a bunny (Ginnifer Goodwin) and a fox (Jason Bateman) in a sprawling metropolis populated by anthropomorphized animals. The first was a broad allegory for racial profiling and unconscious bias as the mismatched heroes stumbled into the mayor’s plot to exploit prejudice to consolidate power. This one picks up with the duo thrust into another conspiracy that goes all the way to the top, this time with a crooked family of billionaires plotting to hide the true history of the city and their complicity with its past of pushing marginalized species out of their neighborhoods. They don’t want anything stopping their attempt to expand their real estate empire by doing it again. Sounds like it could be tough medicine or obvious messaging, but the screenplay wears that all pretty lightly, as grist for racing through different biomes and introducing new animal characters and revisiting some favorites from last time while uncovering the plot. The animation is bright and colorful and vivid, with the best in CG furs and water and scales, and broad cartoony expressions. There’s that weird charge of seeing, say, a bunny’s legs in yoga pants or a sloth driving a sports car (and how are its reflexes fast enough for that?), in a city that’s slightly more New York than Busytown in its construction. It’s a funhouse mirror version of our world, with abstracted political cartoon social commentary and pun-laden gags mixed in with the high-energy chases and danger just real enough for suspense and just slapstick enough to keep from scaring the kids too badly. But of course, none of it would work if it didn’t care so much for its characters, and want to see them succeed. Like the original, it balances it all and makes it easy, breezy entertainment.
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