Times Colonist

Dark, wacky Ferdinand stays true to heart of book

- MARK KENNEDY

REVIEW Ferdinand Where: Cineplex Odeon Westshore, SilverCity Starring: Voices of John Cena, Kate McKinnon, Gina Rodriguez. Directed by: Carlos Saldanh Parental advisory: G Rating: Three stars out of four This holiday season, there’s all manner of conflict at your local movie theatre — Jedis battling in the stars, Winston Churchill warring in Europe and Olympic athletes duelling on ice. And then there’s that 2,000-pound bull who refuses to fight.

Ferdinand is a first-rate animated tale adapted from the beloved 1936 children’s book about a pacifist Spanish bull who just loves to sit around and sniff flowers. It’s often dark, sometimes wacky, but true to the heart of the book and beautifull­y brought to life in modern Spain.

Carlos Saldanha, the director of Rio and The Ice Age movies, and screenwrit­ers Robert L. Baird, Tim Federle and Brad Copeland faced a daunting task turning a spare 66-page book by Munro Leaf and Robert Lawson into more than 100 minutes of film.

But they’ve largely succeeded, while adding more serious issues along the way, including animal rights, rigged economic systems, nature versus nurture, cowardice, and the importance of looking out for each other. Not bad for a kids’ flick, huh? It also plunges another sword in the sport of bull fighting.

At its core, Ferdinand is an anti-bullying statement that stars a bull. In a neat twist, that bull who refuses to fight is voiced by profession­al wrestler John Cena, a man who makes his living with violence.

Ferdinand is bred to fight but won’t. His dad and peers at a bullfighti­ng ranch all want to go into the ring and take on a matador. “Is it OK if it’s not my dream?” the young Ferdinand asks. No, he’s told. “You’re either a fighter or you’re meat.”

After his father disappears, our bullish conscienti­ous objector manages to escape and ends up in a peaceful flower farm, lovingly taken care of by a young girl. Good for Ferdinand, but bad for the filmmakers, who have more than another hour more to fill.

Enter a cavalcade of strange and bewilderin­g creatures: three crafty hedgehogs, three condescend­ing Lipizzaner horses and an unhinged goat called Lupe. Kate McKinnon voices the goat and her performanc­e is Robin Williams-in-Aladdin level work. A film that was overly dark suddenly gets an infusion of silliness and comic genius.

We take a few detours — there’s a brilliant dance competitio­n between break-dancing bulls and the prancing horses; an unorthodox running of the bulls, this time with the animals chased by bad guys on Segways; and an utterly wonderful interpreta­tion of a bull in a china shop.

Ferdinand is the only bull to realize that the entire bullfighti­ng game is fixed and tries to convince his peers to flee (the voice actors include a very good Peyton Manning — yes, that Peyton Manning — as a bull prone to vomiting, and a hysterical David Tennant as a very hairy Scottish bull.)

Ferdinand rescues some of his pals from the “chop shop” — note: seeing this with your kids may become uncomforta­ble if you promised hamburgers afterward — then sacrifices himself for the good of the group and ends up facing the meanest matador in all of Spain in the ring in Madrid. Will he finally fight? Will he die for his conviction­s?

There are a few weird notes. It’s a little strange to hear the Ferdinand we grew up with under a Spanish cork tree now have a SoCal surfer accent, saying he’s “stoked,” “hold that thought” and “this is some next-level stuff.” He also does that weird thing where he talks to fellow animals but is mute when it comes to communicat­ing with humans.

Still, this is a film with worldclass animation, revealing everything from astonishin­gly rich crowd scenes to rusty details on an old pail. The animators have managed to make wet fur feel tactile and show the headlights of cars bouncing off other cars.

So for the overall message of the film — “Live your own life” — plus the rich animation and the completely looney McKinnon, we have one word: Ole!

 ??  ?? Pacifist bull Ferdinand frolicks at a flower farm with a new friend in a scene from the animated film Ferdinand.
Pacifist bull Ferdinand frolicks at a flower farm with a new friend in a scene from the animated film Ferdinand.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada