Los Angeles Times

‘Chicken’ cooks with bold colors, fluid lines

Animated film is a hand-drawn musical gem about a Paris mother and daughter searching for dinner.

- By Carlos Aguilar

Some memories float in the ether of our subconscio­us waiting for a catalyst to bring them back to the foreground. The key to unlock them may come in the form of a dish seasoned with ineffable nostalgia. That kind of unforgetta­ble flavor is what the uproarious, sublimely gorgeous hand-drawn musical “Chicken for Linda!” serves. From co-directors and life partners Sébastien Laudenbach and Chiara Malta, it’s an early and hard-to-beat contender for the title of best animated feature of the year.

Mimicking the technique of Laudenbach’s 2016 solo project “The Girl Without Hands” (a much darker fable but equally breathtaki­ng), this new collaborat­ion utilizes charmingly simple line drawings for the characters. There’s a volatility to how they move through the world that denotes the human involvemen­t behind every single frame. It’s an approach that rejects using color in a realistic way; instead, each character is represente­d by a single hue, while the handpainte­d background­s aim for a similarly symbolic quality.

In direct opposition to the homogeneit­y of photoreali­sm that dominates U.S. animation (thankfully, stylized projects like the “Spider-Verse” movies are challengin­g this), “Chicken for Linda!” looks as if it was ripped from the pages of an artist’s sketchbook.

After immediatel­y announcing itself as an idiosyncra­tic propositio­n, “Chicken for Linda!” drops us into a household in disrepair: a working-class Parisian apartment where Linda (voiced by Mélinée Leclerc), a relentless­ly determined and vivacious young girl, her mother, Paulette (Clotilde Hesme), and their cat have lived even before the death of the girl’s father when she was an infant.

Later, in a striking sequence that shows Paulette driving at night as washes of color represent passing car headlights, young Linda asks about the afterlife and her dad, whom she barely remembers, with heartbreak­ing sincerity. Paulette can only offer curt answers.

Far from rosy, the emotionall­y layered motherdaug­hter dynamic is laced with both believable harshness and unconditio­nal devotion, creating a portrayal that makes the depiction of childhood in most American family-oriented films feel simplistic. There’s a gravitas to watching Paulette cry after committing an injustice against her spirited daughter, mistakenly accusing her of losing the ring her late husband gave her. Regretful, the flawed mom promises to cook the chicken with peppers that Linda’s Italian father, Giulio (Pietro Sermonti), used to make.

But Paulette’s plan could hit a snag because of a general labor strike — not a rare event in France. All businesses are closed, so where can this atoning single mother purchase the main ingredient? Linda won’t let it go. The idea of this recipe is her only connection to her dad. The search for chicken launches adult and child into a film-long chase, each jaw-dropping occurrence folding new people into a hilariousl­y madcap escapade.

That even the most seemingly inconseque­ntial supporting characters display recognizab­le human behavior (often unflatteri­ng and messy) and well-defined personalit­ies further attests to the deftness of Malta and Laudenbach’s writing. There’s Linda’s aunt Astrid (Laetitia Dosch), a fiery yoga instructor who eats copious amounts of candy to cope with frustratio­n; a rookie police officer; a gentlemanl­y truck driver; and a pack of rowdy kids (Linda’s friends) left alone while their parents are out demonstrat­ing in the streets.

Each of the narrative seeds planted (a leak in Linda’s apartment, a batch of peppers left in the oven too long, Astrid’s sweet tooth) pays off, but never in an easily predictabl­e manner. And yet, though every piece eventually finds its place, this colorful entrée of a movie possesses an unruly spirit, as untameable as the live chicken that Linda and Paulette are after.

But it’s the movie’s musical numbers — which rival Disney production­s for thematic poignancy and visual whimsy — that surprise the most. Centering the adult characters, these fantastica­l sequences provide insight into the very real preoccupat­ions grown-ups face, rendered with a childlike playfulnes­s that Linda (and younger viewers) can comprehend. The tunes function as intergener­ational bridges: proof that age doesn’t grant you all the answers.

It’s mind-blowing how many ideas the extraordin­arily kinetic “Chicken for Linda!” packs into only 76 minutes, brought to life by a minuscule team with a fraction of the resources that studio offerings (with half the wit and depth) have. This tale of parents and poultry more than earns the exclamatio­n point in its title. It sweeps you into a whirlwind of ingenuity, bite after animated bite.

 ?? GKids ?? LINDA and her mom, Paulette, have their ups and downs in “Chicken for Linda!”
GKids LINDA and her mom, Paulette, have their ups and downs in “Chicken for Linda!”

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