Meewella | Critic

According to P

Tag: Jonathan Pytko

QuickView: Inside Out 2 (2024)

“Riley’s life is more complex now. She needs more sophisticated emotions than all of you. You’re just not what she needs anymore.

Anxiety

In 2015, Inside Out’s anthropomorphised emotions were a rare beacon of creativity in the midst of a Pixar slate populated by sequels. Now itself a sequel, Inside Out 2 loses some of that freshness — as well as director Pete Doctor, who went on to helm Soul — but it builds effectively on the original’s premise with a meaningful story to tell. With Riley now 13, puberty brings a flood of new teenage emotions — Anxiety, Envy, Embarassment, and Ennui — coinciding with a trip to ice hockey camp. The external coming of age story is familiar and rote; inside, Anxiety and Joy vie for control, with competing ideas about the person Riley should be. Despite a handful of cast changes, the voice acting is wonderfully engaging throughout. Visually, Inside Out 2 replicates the inner world of its predecessor without showing much new. The notable exceptions are two characters in Riley’s memory depicted in different art styles — a 2D children’s cartoon parody and a moody videogame protagonist. Their brief inclusion, whilst humourous, seems almost perfunctory and it stands in contrast to the cleverly blended animation styles found in titles like Across the Spider-verse or The Mitchells vs the Machines. This is an enjoyable but lesser sequel, then, but it contains a worthwhile message for adolescents that personality is multifaceted, a holistic reflection of our experiences and emotions.

7/10

QuickView: Turning Red (2022)

“This isn’t just our first concert. This is our first step into womanhood.”

Meilin Lee

Recently, Pixar’s strongest films have been those that draw inspiration from wider cultural backgrounds like Coco and Soul. Turning Red is the first to feature an ethnically Asian lead, and Domee Shi’s story about adolescence conflicting with familial duty and traditional expectations will likely be familiar to most of the Asian diaspora. This is a coming-of-age tale with the turmoil of Meilin’s adolescent hormones depicted by her literal transformation into a large red panda whenever she cannot control her emotions. I was aware of the “controversy” over the film’s direct references to menstruation, so was surprised to discover they were so limited ⁠— the title is unrelated, and there is simply a misunderstanding by Meilin’s mother who proffers a stack of sanitary pads; it does nothing more than normalise part of puberty in passing and in a healthy way. Rather, Turning Red’s focus is on Meilin’s strained relationship with her controlling mother and the fact it is her friends’ support that provides a calming influence. The sumptuous detail in food is noteworthy, recognising its cultural significance (Shi also wrote and directed Pixar’s Oscar-winning Bao short), but largely the engagement with Chinese heritage feels superficial despite the family running a temple. It is perhaps an unfair criticism since little is central to the story beyond lunar mysticism ⁠— like To All The Boys this is ultimately about the teenage experience and simply happens to be Asian American led (which is a key part of improving representation). A greater issue is that Turning Red rapidly runs out of steam in its second half, with a conclusion that feels outsized for its personal story.

7/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2023 Priyan Meewella

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