The New Zealand Herald

Toon can charm and repulse all at once

Big Mouth just can't resist crossing several lines of decency

- Hank Stuever — Washington Post

Netflix's provocativ­e yet adorable animated series Big Mouth is only about the zillionth cartoon for grownups that attempts to plumb the awkward indignitie­s of puberty. Nobody in their right mind would accept an offer to time-travel back to their middle-school days, but comedians depend heavily on the horrors of adolescenc­e for material — and somehow it still provides.

Comic actor Nick Kroll and his buddy John Mulaney, who found recent success on Broadway with their Oh, Hello routine, provide voices for Big Mouth's main characters, Nick and Andrew, who are seventh-grade boys. Their growth spurts operate on separate schedules. Andrew has sprouted pubic hair and is haunted by a randy Hormone Monster only he can see, whose suggestive powers produce constant erections.

“What is wrong with me?'' Andrew wonders, on yet another trip to the boys room during class.

“Nothing,'' the Hormone Monster replies. “You're a perfectly normal, gross little dirtbag.''

Andrew's Hormone Monster (also voiced by Kroll, who plays several characters) is summoned by almost any occasion, be it a sex-ed filmstrip about fallopian tubes or an online trailer for a Paul Bunyan movie starring Dwayne “The Rock'' Johnson.

The latter causes Andrew to worry that he might be gay, which brings forth the spirits of Freddie Mercury, Socrates and Antonin Scalia for a musical number called When You're

“What is wrong with me?'' Andrew wonders ... “Nothing,'' the Hormone Monster replies. “You're a perfectly normal, gross little dirtbag.''

Gay. Turns out Andrew is straight, but it's neverthele­ss a fun song.

Apparition­s figure prominentl­y in the boys' lives. The ghost of Duke Ellington (voiced by Jordan Peele) lives in Nick's attic, dispensing inappropri­ately worldly but sometimes sound advice about life and relationsh­ips. “I saw Andrew's penis,'' Nick tells Duke, “and it was, like, way bigger and hairier than mine.''

“Ha-ha! Happened to me once, too,'' Duke replies. “The Cotton Club, 1938. I saw Charlie Parker's penis in the bathroom and good lord, I felt inferior.''

At a school dance, Nick has his first kiss with Jessi (Jessi Klein), which, while unsatisfyi­ng, ushers the two into a hotly scrutinise­d middle-school dating scene, the latest gossip of which is duly covered in the morning announceme­nts by a catty gay boy, Matthew (Andrew Rannells).

Thus Jessi and Nick must now reluctantl­y ride together in the back of the bus and hold hands all day on a class field trip to the Statue of Liberty, which makes Andrew jealous.

It's on the field trip that Jessi, wearing white shorts, has her first menstrual period and is visited by a Hormone Monstress (Maya Rudolph), who, in a later episode, encourages Jessi to get to know herself with a hand-mirror.

What a flash of genius to ask Kristen Wiig to provide the friendly, talkative voice of Jessi's vagina. ( Hey, girl!)

Big Mouth can't resist crossing several lines of decency, otherwise I'd happily recommend it as sympatheti­c viewing for the age group it portrays (and I still might, for older teenagers whose sense of humour has matured). There's a frankness and honesty beneath the show's raunchines­s that sometimes echo the best work of Judy Blume and other great chronicler­s of adolescent angst, especially where the fraught and seldom-discussed feelings of boys are involved. It's charming and repulsive all at once.

And after about six episodes, it starts to feel like enough, even though the series stretches itself to 10 episodes, culminatin­g in Jessi's anxiety-ridden bat mitzvah party, where it becomes clear that middle school is not the only hell in store for this circle of friends. The adults in their lives contend with plenty of awkward situations and personal crises, too, triggered by their own monstrous hormones. Some problems never go away.

 ?? Picture / Netflix ?? Big Mouth crosses lines of decency in tackling puberty’s awkward indignitie­s, but there’s honesty too.
Picture / Netflix Big Mouth crosses lines of decency in tackling puberty’s awkward indignitie­s, but there’s honesty too.

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