Los Angeles Times

‘Ferdinand’ still gentle, now in 3-D

- By Michael Ordoña calendar@latimes.com

The book Franco couldn’t brook is now a 3-D, computer-animated film, and that’s no bull.

“The Story of Ferdinand,” a gentle, slender kids’ tome about a Spanish bull too peaceful to fight in the ring, was written by Munro Leaf, illustrate­d by Robert Lawson and originally published in 1936.

Spain’s Gen. Francisco Franco banned it during that nation’s Civil War as pacifist propaganda; Adolf Hitler ordered it destroyed. Meanwhile, supporters such as Ernest Hemingway lauded it. And Leaf ? He called it “Propaganda for laughter only.”

“Rio” and “Ice Age” director Carlos Saldanha acknowledg­es the book’s nonviolent bent but sees a different theme: “If you’re at home with who you are, you find peace.”

His version of “Ferdinand,” opening Dec. 15, is a adventure story as opposed to the quiet book.

“I never pictured translatin­g the visuals of the book into the movie. I wanted to create my own vision of Ferdinand,” says the director.

The feature-length expansion required new characters, including sidekick Lupe, a wacky “comfort goat.” Saldanha cast “Saturday Night Live” Emmy winner Kate McKinnon as Lupe and WWE star John Cena as Ferdinand:

“He’s a massive guy! I don’t want to upset this guy ever! But the way he looks you in the eye, you believe evcolorful ery word he’s saying. And that’s how I saw Ferdinand.

“Kate — she’s such a natural comedian, an ad-libber. [She gave us] more material than we can ever use. Maybe we can make ‘Ferdinand 2’ just her.”

 ?? Blue Sky Studios ?? THE 3-D “Ferdinand,” director Carlos Saldanha’s adaptation of Munro Leaf ’s children’s book from 1936, features John Cena voicing the nonviolent bull.
Blue Sky Studios THE 3-D “Ferdinand,” director Carlos Saldanha’s adaptation of Munro Leaf ’s children’s book from 1936, features John Cena voicing the nonviolent bull.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States