Times Colonist

My Little Pony zigs where others zag

- KATIE WALSH

My Little Pony: The Movie Where: SilverCity Starring: Voices of Uzo Aduba, Emily Blunt, Liev Schreiber, Kristin Chenoweth Directed by: Jayson Thiessen Parental advisory: G Rating: 1 1/2 stars out of four

Perhaps it’s unfair, but one has to wonder for whom the animated feature film My Little Pony: The Movie has been made.

Ostensibly, it’s for young kids, who count for double the ticket money with their parents in tow. But there’s also a large market to be found in the “bronies” and “pegasister­s,” young adults who have developed a cultish fandom around the animated series My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic.

No matter who you might encounter in the theatre, My Little Pony: The Movie signals that the unrelentin­gly positive pastel ponies have hit the big time.

My Little Pony is a brand that has been ubiquitous since the 1980s. A toy line from Hasbro, My Little Pony was the more popular younger sibling of the hard plastic full-grown My Pretty Pony. Girls of the 1980s will remember the soft, rubbery My Little Pony dolls for their resplenden­t and colourful manes and rump tattoos.

Like most kids merchandis­e, there was an accompanyi­ng animated series. And though a revival of the brand in 1997 was unsuccessf­ul, the relaunch in 2010 has proved to be wildly popular, and there’s a whole dissertati­on to be written about the cultural factors that might be at play in the brand’s contempora­ry success. But who can resist pretty pink ponies?

My Little Pony: The Movie, directed by Jayson Thiessen, has a remarkably retro vibe. The film is done in the classic 2-D animation style and embraces the flat, colourful, Saturdaymo­rning cartoon look and feel. If part of the appeal of the My Little Pony renaissanc­e is the nostalgic warm-fuzzies about childhood cartoons, then this film fully delivers. All we’d need is a bowl full of sugary cereal to complete the experience.

Storywise, the stakes start out quite low. Princess Twilight (Tara Strong) wants to throw the best Friendship Festival in Equestria, and her pony friends support her by singing about it. But all too soon their happy kingdom is invaded by the Storm King (Liev Schreiber), an ape/ox hybrid beast, his army led by fallen pony Tempest (Emily Blunt), a unicorn who lost her horn many years ago.

The Storm King is essentiall­y a corporate fascist overlord. He wants to steal the ponies’ magic so he can control the weather, and everything else. Little Princess Twilight is the only one to escape, and so she sets off with her pals to ask for help from the Queen of the Hippogriff­s (Uzo Aduba).

It’s a classic children’s story — parental figures in peril, a misfit group of pals, a hero’s journey, and lots of songs along the way to underscore the pertinent message and pad out the running time.

Truthfully, this film feels like four episodes of a cartoon strung together, and there are times, especially during some of the latter musical numbers, where it truly drags.

The approach to animated features these days is to create technologi­cal spectacle, line up an all-star cast of voice talent and pack the script with jokes for the accompanyi­ng parents to enjoy.

But My Little Pony: The Movie zigs where others zag, throwing it back to the old school with its traditiona­l animation and musical structure.

 ??  ?? My Little Pony: The Movie embraces the flat, colourful, Saturday-morning cartoon look.
My Little Pony: The Movie embraces the flat, colourful, Saturday-morning cartoon look.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada