Saskatoon StarPhoenix

IT TAKES A TIME-TRAVELLING VILLAGE

Temper tantrums distract from beautiful animation in story of jealous older sibling

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

Are you one of the numberless hordes who hate Caillou, that annoying 1990s Canadian animated show about an obnoxious boy, his little sister and their parents? Then you may not want to take a chance on Mirai. Because for all its magic realism and gorgeous animation, in many ways it boils down to a series of temper tantrums by a coddled boy.

Meet Kun-chan, voiced by Moka Kamishirai­shi in the subtitled version and by Jaden Waldman in the dub. He’s an only child until the day his infant sister Mirai comes home from the hospital, at which point the kid becomes consumed with jealousy. Granted, he’s only four, so he’s not able to process this emotion very well. But his outbursts prove trying for Mom and Dad and, by extension, the viewer.

Fortunatel­y, Kun has time-travelling kin to help teach him life lessons. They include Mirai (her name is Japanese for “future”), who shows up as an adolescent, worried that the parents’ failure to put away the annual Hinamatsur­i (Girls’ Day), decoration­s will bring her bad luck. Kun also runs into his own mother as a little girl and his great-grandfathe­r just after the war — and all without a Delorean.

Mirai was written and directed by Mamoru Hosoda, a Japanese animator whose last film, 2015’s The Boy and the Beast, was a beautiful if perplexing story of

an orphan boy who becomes the apprentice of a warrior beast in a fantastica­l realm.

This one would seem to hew closer to reality, but between a human personific­ation of the family dog and a bullet-train station with an express to hell — well, it’s a tough slog for kids and parents alike. Particular­ly parents who have a thing about watching animated children lose their tempers. Kun eventually achieves a kind of wisdom, but for most of the film it’s very much a case of one step forward, two steps back.

 ?? TIFF ?? Mirai will test the patience of children and their parents, forced to endure one long never-ending temper tantrum of a movie.
TIFF Mirai will test the patience of children and their parents, forced to endure one long never-ending temper tantrum of a movie.

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