by
Julien Faddoul
*** (3 stars)
d – Travis Knight
w
– Marc Haimes, Chris Butler, Shannon Tindle
ph
– Frank Passingham
pd – Nelson Lowry
m
– Dario Marianelli
ed
– Christopher Murrie
cos – Deborah Cook
p – Travis Knight, Arianne Sutner
Cast: Art Parkinson, Charlize Theron, Rooney Mara,
Matthew McConaughey, Ralph Fiennes, Brenda Vaccaro, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa,
George Takei
Stories,
like any art form, are a way for people to express their inner most feelings
with one another. Therefore, their importance is irrefutable. It’s their
fragility that can sometimes be cause for concern. Stories, depending on who is
telling them, can inspire both love and hate; truth and lies; illusion and
insight.
The
effectiveness of stories is why the art of cinema circumnavigated itself
towards narrative early on in its development, and is of course now its
dominating genus. And I would be foolish to not acknowledge that delighting in
stories is what the mainstream audience member thirsts for. It makes the
calamity of having to survive in a mortal world worthwhile.
Mortality
vs. immortality is an acute debate in Kubo
and the Two Strings, the new stop-motion animated film from Laika Studios,
a film that anatomizes the power of storytelling with more intelligence and
beauty than any film in recent memory. It contains all the serenity of a
classic folk tale, the agility of a coming-of-age adventure and the grace of a brimming,
culturally obeisant period epic.
Before
we see anything we hear a voice telling us “If you must blink, do it now.” This
turns out to be very good advice. The first thing we see is a Japanese woman on
a boat in the middle of a furious ocean at night. A great tsunami appears before
her and then, with one swift stroke, strums down, fast, on her shamisen, a
banjo-like Japanese instrument. Suddenly, like the book of Exodus, she parts
the wave and sails on through. This is one stunning opening.
In
ancient Japan, Kubo (voiced by Art Parkinson), is a skinny kid who now uses the
shamisen to spin tales of origami-puppet fights for busking. Although Kubo’s
abilities may be puzzling, they won’t be to people familiar with that country’s
history and culture and Kubo and the Two
Strings befittingly expects its audience to grasp the rhythms and logic of
the east. Those who do will be boundlessly rewarded.
Kubo
does all this for his mother, who is mentally very ill due to past trauma; his
father, a legendary samurai, perished trying to save Kubo in a battle that lost
the young one his left eye. Kubo misses his father and attempts to find his
spirit by praying. That night, something catastrophic occurs and Kubo finds
himself on a quest to find three tokens that belonged to his dad: his sword, his
armor and his helmet. He is pursued by his witchy aunts (Rooney Mara), both of
which have been sent by his grandfather, the Moon King (Ralph Fiennes).
Accompanying him on his trek are a snow monkey (Charlize Theron) and a giant,
dim-witted warrior beetle (Matthew McConaughey). Both of which have been
brought to life by powers unknown to Kubo yet.
Kubo and the Two Strings is the 4th
feature film by Laika, an American stop-motion animation studio located in
Portland, Oregon. It is owned by Nike co-founder Phil Knight and is run (as CEO
and President) by his son and master animator Travis Knight. This film is
Travis Knight’s first as director and, along with Coraline (2009), ParaNorman
(2012) and The Boxtrolls (2014),
Laika has proven to be totally unique, not only in the world of animation but
in cinema at large. Their films have an elegiac quality that I find extremely
rare in any kind of film, with a gloriously mystifying sense of tone.
Visually,
they are unparalleled and this feature is no exception. Literally every frame
of Kubo and the Two Strings is
ravishing (designed by the great Nelson Lowry), with gorgeous sets, elegant
character designs and some of the most subtle, poignant acting ever
accomplished by the animators at Laika. Action set-pieces move so vividly that,
for me, it was emotionally overwhelming: a sword battle with a giant
Gashadokuro (humongous skeleton), an underwater escape surrounded by floating
eyeballs or a climactic stand-off with a serpent-like moon beast, each sequence
is as breathtaking as the last.
Many
may find the plot that Mr Knight has constructed here (along with Head of Story
and co-writer Chris Butler) to be less enthralling. None of the Laika films
move with a propelled sense of purpose; they’re too particular for that. Mr
Knight is striving for a sense of spirit, a surrealistic tenor, an objective
never sought after in American animation today. Here, it works. I obviously recommend
this film with total conviction but I also plead with you to watch it with
both eyes open. Pay careful attention to what the film is saying.
We
live in a time where alienation and condemnation are no longer instruments for
security because they have become intrinsic conditions. Thus, we don't have any
real sense of community anymore. Kubo and
the Two Strings understands this and at the film’s denouement Mr Knight is
able to make an incredible statement. The influence of a community and its
stories are able to not only change the emotional state of one of the film’s characters,
but also his perspective. It is a power greater than any of the magic that we
witness and, as the film demonstrates, can save people from themselves. Harmony
is not obtained through agreement or concurrence; it is obtained through
understanding.
I
admittedly spend a lot of my time watching movies because I often times prefer
them to the real world. But that is because I always believe that the former
affects the latter in ways that are purely positive. And since no one in my
personal life would ever accuse me of being a cockeyed optimist, you should
probably believe it too. It’s just difficult for one to watch humanity constantly
trip over before it picks itself back up again. To paraphrase George Harrison:
With every mistake, we must surely be learning. Still, my guitar gently weeps.
This review is on the list as one of my favorites. Once again, you've made me consider concepts that I would not have given a second thought to, until now. It's always a pleasure to read a piece that is so in depth. Also, I'm with you on the "cockeyed optimist" thing...that made me giggle.
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