Showing posts with label The Boxtrolls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Boxtrolls. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

The Boxtrolls


The Boxtrolls
Dirs. Graham Annable and Anthony Stacchi

3.5 out of 5

The first comparison that springs to mind when describing the house style of stop-motion animation studio Laika is that of an old-fashioned pop-up storybook, so it's no surprise that the makers of the painstakingly detailed supernatural fables Coraline and Paranorman have turned to more antique inspirations for their latest film, The Boxtrolls.  Based on the Alan Snow's novel Here Be Monsters!, The Boxtrolls takes place in the whimsical Dickensian-steampunk setting of Cheesebridge, an impossibly vertical seaside town where the social elites wear tall white hats and chow down on brie and limburger.  When a ruthless pest exterminator named Archibald Snatcher (Ben Kingsley) conspires to join their ranks, he creates a civic panic involving the Boxtrolls, curious and timid creatures who live beneath Cheesebridge and tinker with Rube Goldberg contraptions made from the mechanical detritus of the world above.  Their ranks include Eggs (Isaac Hempstead-Wright), a human boy raised from infancy as a Boxtroll, who emerges from the underground to discover his true ancestry, only to be caught in the middle of Snatcher's demagoguery.

While not as fresh or as esoteric as Laika's earlier efforts - The Boxtrolls repeats a lot of the same messages about family, self-identity, and the perils of groupthink - it still captures the singular joy of watching a beautifully-illustrated story come to vivid life.  The studio attempts some of its most complicated sequences here, the achievements piling up like the cliffside shanties of Cheesebridge: a formal dance with dozens of individual puppets twirling around a ballroom, a gigantic wheel of cheese tumbling down a hill and into the ocean, a demon-like death machine belching smoke as it rips up cobblestone streets.  The creative spark extends to the stellar voice cast, another element of the film that is filled with pleasant surprises.  The character voice work here is so good and so tailored to maximum emotional effect - as opposed to immediate recognition - that I hesitate to single out specific performances for fear of creating preconceived notions and spoiling the effect.

Despite its fondness for tidy narrative reversals and reveals (that will admittedly read as big twists for its intended demographic), The Boxtrolls has an ingratiating quality that I suspect is tied up in the titular creatures themselves.  These Boxtrolls are straight from the E.T. school of ugly-cute: strange, deformed, alien beings that are nonetheless cuddly and charming.  As a species, they possess many wonderful idiosyncrasies - the way they retreat into their boxes when frightened, or drum on them in joyous approbation - yet have plenty of individual personality as well.  That's important when the human side of the story leans on pro forma conflicts and characters, save for Winnie (Elle Fanning), the headstrong, morbidly curious daughter of the town's head aristocrat and the Boxtrolls' lone ally aboveground.  The Boxtrolls advances the familiar notion that accepting diversity makes better citizens of us all, a sometimes obvious but utterly sincere message served up, fittingly, with just the right amount of weirdness. 

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

The Catch-Up: Amblog Extracurriculars

Question: What does an Ambler do when he's not Amblogging?

Answer: A lot.

Comic-Con 2014

I recently traveled to America's Finest City to experience San Diego Comic-Con for the fifth time and my second trip as a member of the press.  Covering the event for Screen Invasion, I met more fascinating artists, creators, writers, actors, cosplayers, journalists, and fans than you could fit in a TARDIS.  I partied on a decommissioned aircraft carrier.  I sang along with a backpacking troubadour who knew Weird Al's entire discography by heart.  I saw a sports bar overrun by sweaty nerds gyrating to the soundtrack from A Goofy Movie.  And I did a little bit of writing:

- The minds behind the beloved cult sitcom Community expressed optimism and bemusement about their miraculous renewal by Yahoo.  (I also interviewed showrunner Dan Harmon a while back about his new documentary.)

- I learned that '90s metal gets Daniel Radcliffe in touch with his darker side at a press conference for the horror/fantasy/dark comedy Horns.

- LAIKA Studios is (almost) single-handedly keeping the stop-motion animated feature alive, and the roundtable interviews for The Boxtrolls renewed my confidence in their mission.

- Mike Tyson talked about his new animated series for Adult Swim...as well as a bunch of other stuff.  Hands down the most unpredictable encounter to be had at this (let's face it) glorified trade show.

- And in my biggest coup of the Con, I had a wonderful conversation with Guardians of the Galaxy screenwriter Nicole Perlman, who had plenty to say about writing, the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and science in popular culture.


What Were We Watching? Podcast

Oh, you want more?  How about a brand-new podcast where I join forces with the analytical genius of my filmmaker friend Cam Siemer (@CinematicESP)?

On What Were We Watching? we re-examine the movies of our childhood and find out how much of them we're still carrying with us today.  It's more biographical than critical - it's not about good and bad, but then and now.

The podcast accessible on our new blog as well as through iTunes, and you can reach out to us via our Twitter account, @w4podcast.  The first episode, tackling Good Burger, is already available for your listening pleasure, with episode two coming in the next couple of days.  New episodes will post every other week.  Subscribe, and hold onto your butts.


Blog-iversary 3: Senior Year

I continue to get worse at recognizing my own milestones, so here's where I belatedly mention that Ambler Amblog celebrated its third anniversary last month.  I started this project primarily as a creative outlet with no expectations/delusions of becoming anyone's trusted source for movie reviews, so I'm genuinely touched that you all continue to read and discuss and have faith in what I write.  Without you, the reader, this would have faded into obscurity (well...a greater obscurity) a long time ago.  I sincerely thank you.  Now go to the movies!