Wednesday, December 2, 2009

FANTASTIC MR. FOX

The first reassurance of Fantastic Mr. Fox is that it is very much in the tone and spirit of filmmaker Wes Anderson’s other films. This is the coolest animated film of the year, one of the reasons it dazzles is the fact that stop-motion animation is so rare. But when stop-motion is done well it feels like the fanciest art form out there. Anderson isn’t going for fancy though (but he achieves it anyway with his impeccable craft), he’s going for hip.

Working with clean dolly shots and pans that must have been excruciatingly difficult to pull off, Anderson attains the same droll picture-frame exuberance that he brought off in “The Royal Tenenbaums” and “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou.” This time he is adapting a Roald Dahl’s 1970’s children’s book. Dahl was also the author behind “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.” It feels as if Anderson is in love with this story, unlike Spike Jonze with his lumbering “Where the Wild Things Are.”

Mr. and Mrs. Fox are voiced by George Clooney and Meryl Streep, but you come out of it
remembering the vocal intonations of Clooney more than Streep, and more than his co-stars Jason Schwartzman, Willem Dafoe and Bill Murray. Clooney is as authoritative and in-charge of his character as, in say, “Up in the Air.” In the film, Mr. Fox is for a short period satisfied with his upscale condo, i.e., a hole in a stout tree. But restless, he soon has a problem with the greedy human world, and steals chickens from the local slaughterhouses which offend the industrial presidents. Now the humans want to demolish the fox community and take prisoners.

The tireless filmmaker in Anderson digs deep (literally in one eye-popping sequence) to up the ante on children’s films and gives his voice actors lots of Tenenbaum-esque dialogue that is never dumbed-down and yet accessible. Mr. Fox has a depressed kid named Ash (Schwartzman) who is constantly upstaged by a cousin named Kristofferson (Eric Anderson). Ash, who could have been voiced by Luke Wilson if it wasn’t Schwartzman, wants to be a hero like his father, Kristofferson is naturally prompt in responding to heroism. Mrs. Fox harangues Mr. Fox for being too madcap and irresponsible. When asked why he has the compulsion to steal poultry Mr. Fox explains, “Because I’m a wild animal.”

You could get all caught up in checklisting the usual Wes Anderson motifs, but it’s the touches, the fancy touches, that brings delight to a very big-screen tale. Particularly beautiful are the orange skies (who needs blue?), the frizzy chemical smoke, and the textured hairs on the animals that bristle so lifelike. The climax is so Wallace and Gromit, but the ending resolution, inside a supermarket, is so… so… wow! How did Anderson pull off that scene with such grace and precision?

Go to the official site at http://www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com/

Grade: B+

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