Macclesfield Express

Your film review...

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OUR film reviewer James Burgess is a 27-year-old performanc­e, drama and theatre graduate.

The former Fallibroom­e High School pupil has attended the BAFTA Film Awards in London every year since 2009, meeting stars including Dame Helen Mirren, Christian Bale, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Emma Thompson. James lives on St Ives Close in Macclesfie­ld. You can visit his website at www.jabfilmrev­iews. blogspot.com. The Boss Baby – Certificat­e PG, 97 mins, Dreamworks Animation Showing at Cinemac until Thursday, April 27. Rating: MOANA, Trolls, Zootropoli­s, Kubo and The Two Strings, The Secret Life Of Pets – 2016 was the crème-da-la-crème year for inventive animation (with the exception of Finding Dory, a middling retread, sucked down into its own current of over-hyped mediocrity). 2017 had an excellent start too, with Sing, a zany, astutely allegorica­l take on the saturation of talent/reality television. The Boss Baby is another, less overtly political satire of sorts (the much-publicised similarity between the appearance of the titular toddler and a certain extreme political polariser is notable, but most likely coincident­al). Many reviews have also rightly made immediate comparison­s with the recent Storks, the animated feature from Warner Bros last autumn. However, whereas that had its cheery cherubs delivered by carrierpig­eon, here it’s via the prolific mode of multiplici­ty: automated, factorylin­e infancy through means of corporate manufactur­e. This is amusingly rendered in an early sequence, where each is customaril­y equipped with dummy (sorry, pacifier) and a liberal sprinkling of talcum powder, before being categorise­d into either: ‘Family’ or ‘Business’ – fondly reminiscen­t of the same studio’s soldier/ worker scenario in 1998’s Antz. When a mix-up sends the slick ‘bundle of ploy’ to the apparent normality of the Templeton’s dappled suburbia, his cutesy act fools everyone but his older brother Tim, especially as his secret is rumbled: he can talk! He’s a ruthless dollydicta­tor, with the dulcet tones of Alec Baldwin, in the midst of a career resurgence, again playing a character who revels in moral ambivalenc­e; it’s a gleefully sarcastic performanc­e. Also very strong and funny are Lisa Kudrow, (Friends’ Phoebe, also making a comeback of interestin­g supporting choices – this and Girl On The Train), and this year’s fated Oscars host Jimmy Kimmel, as Tim’s parents, by turns oblivious and flustered. The script is strewn with clever in-jokes of self-referentia­lity, spoofing everything from Fellowship Of The Ring to Raiders Of The Lost Ark, with an aesthetic which, at its most fantastica­l is straight out of The Incredible­s. It’s a Dreamworks animation – those trademark, expressive, inimitably plastic faces. The film it reminded me the most of theirs, was 2010’s far better superhero-centric Megamind. But, this is light, bright fun, with powerhouse Hans Zimmer’s heartfelt arrangemen­t of Lennon and McCartney’s Blackbird.

 ??  ?? The Boss Baby is the latest offering from Dreamworks Animation
The Boss Baby is the latest offering from Dreamworks Animation
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