This week in Tortured Pixar Concepts of Anthropomorphism Theatre is Elemental (now streaming on VOD services like Amazon Prime Video), the story of a fire being and a water being who fall in love and THEN what? Evaporation? Extinguishment? Who knows! Peter Sohn directs, following up his previous Pixar effort The Good Dinosaur with a similarly middling outing for the top-flight animation studio, which has settled into a groove of putting out solid-if-unspectacular films in the wake of a parade of classics (its last great film? Inside Out, which is now eight years old). Yet we can’t help but praise Pixar for its original, sometimes experimental concepts – and for trying, maybe a little too hard with Elemental. The film notably struggled to find an audience, opening with an underwhelming smolder and never really creating a big flame, even though it eventually became a relative sleeper hit with a $440+ million international box office take. And it’s fine, I guess; more importantly, maybe it’s time to accept the fact that we’re past peak Pixar.
ELEMENTAL: STREAM IT OR SKIP IT?
The Gist: In this universe, there are fire people, water people, air people and earth people, and they all kinda live in their own segregated boroughs in Element City (which sometimes bears a more-than-passing resemblance, visually at least, to Tomorrowland at Disney World). Bernie (Ronnie Del Carmen) and Cinder (Shila Ommi) are fire people because, I mean, look at their names. GET IT? THIS IS AN ELBOW AND IT’S IN YOUR RIBS. They’re fresh off the boat from the “old country” and struggling to find a place to live, primarily because the water and air and earth people – to dance around the racism word – aren’t so sure about the fire people, and the feeling’s sorta mutual. Bernie and Cinder finally find an old fixer-upper and open a shop called The Fireplace, where fire folk in the Fire Town district can buy goods catered for them. There, they raise their daughter Ember (Leah Lewis) to adulthood, and she’s all set to take over the business so her ailing dad can retire.
That’s the plan, anyway. What does Ember think of this scenario? Hm. Perhaps her flawed customer-service skills not being quite up to (I choose my words carefully here) snuff reflects her feelings: She has a fiery temper because, I mean, you know why. It’s in her nature, and that’s not the first The Crying Game reference we’re gonna make here today. Anyway, retail isn’t for everybody, you know, and Ember doesn’t want to break her father’s heart by defying his wishes. But she soldiers on. One day, the pipes in the basement burst, and before Ember can seal the ruptured metal with her damn bare hands (!), in seeps Wade Ripple (Mamoudou Athie), whose name clearly reflects the fact that he’s not an earth or air or fire person. Even worse, he’s one of those pedants from the local government who notes all the code violations in the shop, and threatens to shut it down. Frickin’ bean counters, man.
But Ember agrees to help Wade seal a crack in a levee in exchange for letting those violations slide – she heats up sand and creates a hardened glass seal to keep water from flooding into Fire Town. And that’s not all that’s heating up around here (and I say that not knowing the specifics of these characters’ anatomies, and this being a family film, they’ll remain a mystery). Wade and Ember sure seem to be enjoying each other’s company, which is like oil and water or something, except he’s already water, so maybe the analogy doesn’t quite work here? Yet they follow their feels anyway, and we get a romantic montage, and a scene where she meets his parents and learns that he’s a child of relative privilege, which really seems like the least of the problems with their potential relationship, considering their physical makeup makes hand-holding and the like a major issue. Will love supersede the fact that they’re likely to murder the hell out of each other with a single hug? NO SPOILERS!
What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: It’s hard to tell which post-Inside Out concept is more closely flogged within an inch of its life, Soul or Elemental. The former is overdeveloped to the point of impenetrability; the latter is disappointingly underdeveloped. (And Inside Out is perfectly developed, the benchmark for Pixar’s poignantly existential conceits.)
Performance Worth Watching Hearing: I enjoyed Athie’s characterization of Wade as a sensitive sweetheart of a chap with hair-trigger tear ducts (considering Ember’s emotional flare-ups, if she and Wade do pursue a relationship, I anticipate this being an issue). Note: You saw star-on-the-rise Athie in Jurassic World: Dominion, and he was the best thing about the Amazon horror film Black Box.
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Memorable Dialogue: There’s enough cornball wordplay in this script to prompt the pun-averse to abandon civilization for a yurt in Antarctica. Case in point, this line delivered by a water person: “I just dabble in watercolors. Or, as we call them, colors!”
Sex and Skin: None.
Our Take: There’s a funny bit where the Ripple family – who, like Wade, are prone to tearful outbursts – plays “the crying game,” in which they tell sad stories and they do their damnedest not to bawl their eyes out (or bawl their entire bodies out, maybe?). But that’s about the peak of Elemental’s inspiration. The screenplay feels first-drafty: HEAPS and HEAPS of easy puns, too many overly familiar rom-com tropes, a simplistic narrative about the immigrant experience. Its heart is in the right place, and there’s no questioning Sohn’s sincerity, considering he based the story on his Korean family’s experience moving to New York City and opening a grocery store, but I’m not sure the core concept of anthropomorphic elements ever truly catches fi-, er, flow-, er, works. I’m not sure it ever works.
Visually, the film generally makes up for its dubiously executed premise and underwhelming conflict resolution – it had better, considering the $200 million budget. The character designs are original and otherworldly; the backgrounds are rich and vibrant, eye candy for a fictional cartoon travelog. Subtextually, it’s very much a mixed bag: The flooding subplot recalls the post-Katrina experiences of New Orleans’ Black neighborhoods and the struggles of Ember’s family are poignant, although they’re reflected within a frustrating plot that could be resolved with some simple communication between characters (you know, the ol’ Idiot Plot). Beneath all that is the American optimism that individuals of differing creeds and histories can function in harmony, which goes a long way towards enticing us to like a movie that, considering its intent and pedigree, should be easier to like/love/appreciate/comprehend.
Our Call: Bottom line on Elemental: clunky concept, good message, great visuals. Sum total? Good enough. STREAM IT.
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John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Satya Dev’s upcoming heist drama, Zebra, is set for a grand release tomorrow, with the actor expressing high hopes for its success. Kannada star Daali Dhananjaya plays a pivotal role alongside Satya Dev.
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To build anticipation, the makers recently released a sneak peek and hosted a special show for a select audience. The latest update reveals that the film’s runtime has been set at 164 minutes (2 hours and 44 minutes), which may feel a bit lengthy for a heist thriller. It remains to be seen how well the film engages its audience.
The movie also stars Priya Bhavani Shankar, Sathyaraj, Amrutha Iyengar, and others. Produced by OldTown Production and Padmaja Films Private Limited, the film’s music is composed by Ravi Basrur, known for his work on KGF.
Directed by Amber Sealey. Starring Phoebe-Rae Taylor, Jennifer Aniston, Rosemarie DeWitt, Luke Kirby, Judith Light, Emily Mitchell, Michael Chernus, Courtney Taylor, Catherine McNally, Kate Moyer, Maria Nash, Jeff Roop, Sharron Matthews, Kim Huffman, Ian Ho, Gabriela Francis, Gavin MacIver-Wright, Maya Lee O’Connor, Nicholas Fry, Miley Haik, Lauren Plech, Nylan Parthipan, Pip McCallan, Isaak Bailey, Christian Rose, Cristiano Buchanan, Anabelle Dietl, and Mia Burke.
SYNOPSIS:
Melody Brooks is navigating sixth grade as a nonverbal wheelchair user who has cerebral palsy. With the help of some assistive technology and her devoted allies, Melody shows that what she has to say is more important than how she says it.
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Born with cerebral palsy, Melody Brooks (played by Phoebe-Rae Taylor, also born with that condition and unquestionably a significant key to the authenticity on display) is a nonverbal wheelchair user. She is also knowledgeable with ambitions and has a lot to say, but she is limited to communicating through a board attached to her wheelchair tray (a slight, realistic touch that most films about disability seem to ignore the existence of for some inexplicable reason) containing a chart of basic sentences, thoughts, feelings, and moods for simple expression.
Directed by Amber Sealey (from a screenplay by Daniel Stiepleman and based on the novel by Sharon M. Draper), Out of My Mind mainly works because it understands that giving Melody a Medi-Speak device (an electronic tool that reads off whatever is prompted, while also coming with preprogrammed basic phrases and sentences, read aloud in the usual generic computerized voices) won’t entirely solve the problem if everyone from the school faculty to her friends and immediate family vary in their struggles to listen to those words. The issues raised stem from society and the education system, not the disability itself. That’s not to say electronic voice communicators are useless. A voice is a voice, and her father Chuck’s (Luke Kirby) reaction to hearing her daughter “speak” for the first time in which he lets the waterworks flow is a heartstrings-pulling moment that doesn’t ring false.
However, even he sometimes misses the point and gets so caught up discussing what’s best for Melody with his wife, Diane (Rosemarie DeWitt), that they both end up ignoring her in the heat of the moment. He does happen to be the more forward-minded of the parents, as fearless as his daughter is about enrolling into a standard 6th-grade class rather than overachieving in special education. If expectations are already met, why not raise the bar? That alone feels like a mantra most disabled people already live by, consistently feeling the need to prove themselves to able-bodied people who can’t even be bothered to learn that they don’t have to talk to someone in a wheelchair with an awkwardly kind, pitiful tone. Nevertheless, Diane is the helicopter parent raising justifiable concerns over ostracism and bullying.
As for the speaking device, what Melody chooses to say first is equally moving, as it encapsulates and sums up the frustrations and misunderstandings she has felt, even from her family, her whole life. It’s also important to point out that the film isn’t vilifying the parents; caring for a disabled child is tricky, will wear anyone down, and inadvertently cause those miscommunications, or lack thereof. Despite one or two powerful scenes of them standing up for Melody, whether it be from an ablest school system (including a teacher played by Michael Chernus who is technically qualified at the job but is immensely punchable when it comes to his ableism and treating Melody’s classroom presence as a distraction and nuisance), the film primarily sticks with her perspective, sprinkling in some inner thoughts using the voice of Jennifer Aniston.
It’s a device used sparingly, thankfully not overdone. As for why Jennifer Aniston, Melody loves watching Friends, but one is eager to know if that’s also a choice from the book or one encouraged by Phoebe-Rae Taylor. From little details such as classroom desks placed too close together for wheelchairs to fit through the aisles, classmates feeling an awkward pressure of losing “cool” status if they are caught giving friendship a chance with Melody, and grossed-out glances her way as eating messier foods becomes, well, messy to her face, the film understands the pitfalls of public and social disabled life. Again, maybe that’s already in the novel or screenplay, but it can’t be overstated enough that when filmmakers cast disabled actors, it comes with extra layers of authenticity and insight.
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Remember that this is still a Disney+ production, so the material has a sanitized, sentimental feel while broadly playing every narrative beat. Once a nationwide quiz competition comes into play, the narrative’s focus shifts there, perhaps too much, even if it still explores Melody’s othering by some of her peers and that enraging teacher. Bluntly put, it all becomes too plot-focused and even contrived. Feel-good songs also repeatedly pop up to remind viewers that the material will never get too challenging. However, a film is sometimes so well-meaning and educationally beneficial that such saccharine material is worth overlooking. Out of My Mind offsets that with a huge heart and a dignified, optimistic, touching performance from Phoebe-Rae Taylor.
Robert Kojder is a member of the Chicago Film Critics Association and the Critics Choice Association. He is also the Flickering Myth Reviews Editor. Check here for new reviews, follow my Twitter or Letterboxd, or email me at MetalGearSolid719@gmail.com
And a pussycat shall lead them! Flow, the animated film that’s Latvia’s submission for the Best International Feature Oscar, kicks off with a beautiful moment of tranquility: A small, black feline, staring wide-eyed at itself in a rippling puddle. It’s somewhere in a forest, surrounded by foliage, and the ambient sounds of nature fill the soundtrack. A rabbit runs by, momentarily startling the cat. It’s soon followed by a pack of dogs, chasing the bunny and barely registering the meowing bystander’s existence. The creature will eventually amble up to a house with a cracked attic window, slipping inside for an early afternoon nap.
It’s all very soothing, giving you the sense that you’re watching the animation equivalent of ASMR. Then, after some business involving a stolen fish, our furry little friend finds itself in the same patch of green earth as before. Once again, the dogs sprint past it. This time, however, they’re followed by a thundering herd of deer. The animals appear to be running away from something. In the background, the trees begin to violently sway back and forth. And then, a huge wave rushes through and washes away everything in its path, including the cat. It eventually gets back to dry land, but then the water keeps rising. And rising. And rising….
A survivalist thriller that’s designed to appeal equally to animal lovers, avant-garde-cartoon aficionados and environmental doomsayers, Flow will spend the next 80 minutes following this feline and his fellow interspecific travelers as they try to navigate the end of the world as we know it. Eventually, the Golden Retriever who’d been part of that roving gang of doggy miscreants will join the freaked-out kitty on a boat they happen to spy passing by. So will a capybara, a lemur and a secretarybird. When the cat falls overboard and can’t paw its way back to the surface, it’s rescued from drowning by the opportune passing of a mammoth humpback, who catches the animal on its nose and breaches just in time. Saved by the whale! One life down, eight to go — although given the obstacles it will continually face, you worry that this resourceful lil’ buddy will eventually run through all of them before the day is over.
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Director Gints Zilbalodis may be gathering an admittedly adorable posse of all creatures bright and beautiful, each of them rendered in a gorgeous, sometimes crude style of animation that would be best characterized as Early PlayStation Cut-Scene Chic. But in terms of storytelling, he’s going a specifically anti-Disney route here, and this road less traveled makes all of the difference. There’s no dialogue, at least none decipherable to human ears — everything is a symphony of meows, woofs, squawks, grunts, squeaks, squeals and simian cries. With the possible exception of one act of heroism late in the film, none of the animals are anthropomorphized. They more or less act in accordance with their IRL counterparts. There is no identification regarding where this is taking place — some of the stunningly detailed backgrounds suggest Angkor Wat, others bear a striking resemblance to Venice — though the predominance of both medium-sized and massive cat statues suggest it’s some sort of SPCA-sponsored sanctuary city. No explanation is given as to where the humans have gone. No explanation is given as to why a biblical flood is threatening to destroy it all, though for anyone who’s cared to keep their eyes open and their heads out of the sand, no explanation is necessary.
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There’s little to no hand-holding — and/or paw-, talon-, or hoof-holding — in Flow. There’s simply making sure you keep your nose above water. There’s another enigmatic sequence that occurs as Zilbalodis ushers us into the third act, in which some sort of cosmic force grants one of these critters what appears to be a last-minute reprieve from terra firma. But the real takeaway is that we have to rely on each other for salvation. And it’s here where this experiential experiment in empathy, eco-activism and elation over the creative possibilities of a medium too often hijacked to sell toys truly hits its marks. Most of these animals either show up with or encounter a group of their fellow species (monkeys, dogs, birds). Most of them are abandoned or rejected by their peer groups, thanks to tribalism or simple self-preservation. The one moment in which these four-legged beasts resemble their furless, featherless two-legged neighbors is when several of them abandon a rescue mission midway through because of a passing distraction. Ain’t that just like a Homo sapien?
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Yet this disparate band somehow manages to endure, and though you can’t accuse Flow of having a happily-ever-after ending, it somehow does go out on a optimistic note — a water-logged Planet Earth half empty, rather than half-fully ruined. There is a reprise of that lovely opening shot, basking in a calm before the inevitable storm to come. The movie ends as it begins, with no easy solution in sight. Only now we see a makeshift community staring back at themselves, no one alone, everyone companions in the apocalypse. It’s a timeless moral. And yet, at this particular moment, for many of us staring down the next four years, the idea that a community can come together to take on the rising tides couldn’t be more welcome or needed.