By Noel Vera
Movie Review
Kubo and the Two Strings
Directed by Travis Knight
TRAVIS KNIGHT鈥橲 debut feature (and Laika Studios鈥 fourth) Kubo and the Two Strings functions (as does most of the moviemaking outfit鈥檚 projects) as welcome alternative to the Pixar/Disney school of animation — darker and not without horrors.
Easily my favorite is Coraline, Henry Selick鈥檚 wonderfully creepy adaptation of Neil Gaiman鈥檚 novella, about the eponymous girl鈥檚 struggles with a quite-real situation: the family has just moved into a new house, and her parents are too busy with work to pay her much attention. She finds a door (a small hatch really) into another world, an exact copy of her own, with a near-exact facsimile of her mother offering the girl a newer happier alternative life, on one condition: that big black buttons be sewn over Coraline鈥檚 eyes.
The premise (and its macabre little detail) reminds me of a comic strip, where legendary children鈥檚 author and artist Maurice Sendak talks to acclaimed comix author and artist Art Spiegelman about childhood: 鈥淐hildhood,鈥 Sendak declares, 鈥渋s cannibals and psychotics vomiting in your mouth!鈥
As if realizing what he said maybe too much, Sendak qualifies his outburst: 鈥淚n reality childhood is deep and rich. It鈥檚 vital, mysterious, and profound.鈥 Part of that profundity I believe consists of suffering and loss, terror and pain — something Pixar and Disney like to soft-pedal or apply in brief easy-to-digest doses when they sell their digitally composed wares to children all over the world.
Laika, in this case represented by Knight and his crew, seems aware of Sendak鈥檚 words. Kubo鈥檚 premise like Coraline鈥檚 involves the eye: Kubo (voiced by Art Parkinson) lost his left orb when he was a child, and he and his mother Sariatu (Charlize Theron) have been hiding ever since. They will be found out, of course, and Kubo will have to set out without either parents (his father died long ago) to recover pieces of a magic armor, to defend himself against his evil grandfather, The Moon King (Ralph Fiennes).
You see the difference, of course — not so much the absent parents (every other Pixar/Disney movie has that) as the missing body parts and evil relatives. The stop-motion enhanced with hand-drawn animation and digital effects is superb of course; nothing like stop-motion and miniatures to add density of detail and tangible substance. Perhaps the most impressive of these sequences involves Kubo, Monkey (Theron again. This time as a magic talisman come to life) and Beetle (Matthew McConaughey) seeking The Sword Unbreakable imbedded in a giant skeleton鈥檚 skull — said skeleton bearing an uncanny resemblance to the God Warrior that rears its massive head above the Wasteland in Hayao Miyazaki鈥檚 classic Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind.
The resemblance is probably deliberate, this I assume being Laika鈥檚 tribute to Japanese anime. Kubo鈥檚 own power (inherited from his mother) is the ability to animate paper with music played on his shamisen, a three-stringed banjo-like instrument strummed with a large pick — an ability that reminds me of Agent Paper in Koji Masunari鈥檚 Read or Die, the difference being Kubo鈥檚 stop-motion animated powers feel clunky compared to Agent Paper鈥檚 quicksilver more visually inventive origami-folding.
All good stuff; in fact Kubo is riveting up to the point when we meet the movie鈥檚 big bad. We鈥檝e been prepared all along for The Moon King鈥檚 arrival, we鈥檝e been warned of his power and inherent rottenness (he took his grandson鈥檚 eyeball, for crying out loud!); when Fiennes finally makes his grand entrance the picture deflates a little. He鈥檚 basically your standard-issue elderly supervillain, with a petulant sense of entitlement. He has only one thing to offer — forgetfulness and immortality — and sells it like a bad used car commercial, loud and obvious.
It doesn鈥檛 help that Travis gives grandpa a generic green glow not unlike a cheesy Scooby Doo phantom; far better are the Moon King鈥檚 daughters (Rooney Mara) who glide along the ground with preternatural smoothness (they never seem in a hurry, as if confident that sooner or later they will catch up with you). They wear what look like Noh masks and late in the film when a mask is cracked the sight of the exposed mouth is a little startling — to realize that these chilling figures are women of flesh no matter how superpowered is a testament to the skill with which they have been introduced and developed in the picture.
In the film鈥檚 climax (skip the rest of the paragraph if you plan to watch!) I like the idea of the whole adventure going full circle back to the village, as if everything was just an extension of the villagers鈥 (and Kubo鈥檚) fears and submerged traumas. I like the idea of Kubo setting aside that silly sword-and-armor set and picking up his shamisen: of this being not a contest of powers — Kubo鈥檚 against his grandfather — but of stories, his grandfather鈥檚 (long and violent struggle culminating in cold sterile glory) and his own (a family fractured in body eventually brought together in spirit). I don鈥檛 like the filmmakers resorting to a light-and-sound show when it鈥檚 already been established that Kubo鈥檚 best and most powerful magic is over paper not alternate realities (I would have thought they鈥檇 remind us of the fact that paper is made from wood cut from trees — Kubo鈥檚 grandfather at this point being surrounded by a large extensive forest). I especially don鈥檛 like the fact that the grandfather loses his memories and is to be adopted by Kubo鈥檚 village — taking a child鈥檚 eye and killing his mother (and one鈥檚 daughter) deserves a thornier, more honest resolution than a mere slate-wiping.
The vague and awkward handling of the film鈥檚 climax suggests that the filmmakers are more inventive than inspired, are at most exploring material from another culture and not tapping into that culture鈥檚 most powerful resource, its subconscious (unconscious, childlike, pre-moral if you like) self. You see the difference in the nightmare images of Gaiman, Miyazaki, Sendak: a hand slowly unfolding to present a pair of black buttons; a child watching in horror as her greedy parents turn into pigs; another child declaring his intention to leave, the wild creatures he鈥檚 lived with replying: 鈥淥h please don鈥檛 go — we鈥檒l eat you up — we love you so!鈥
Or as Sendak himself summed it all up to Spiegelman, in that comic strip: 鈥淚 remember my own childhood vividly.
鈥淚 knew terrible things… but I knew I musn鈥檛 let adults know I knew…
鈥淚t would scare them.鈥
MTRCB Rating: PG

