Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Elliot: The Littlest Reindeer

- KAREN MARTIN

A fresh face on Christmas fantasy arrives in the form of a small, saucy equine with the spirit and gumption to dream big. His name is Elliot, and he’s adorable in the role of a miniature horse who aspires to become one of Santa’s reindeer. Never mind that there’s never been a non-reindeer in the jolly old elf’s sleigh-pulling stable.

Along with out-of-the-box thinking like this, the best part of Elliot: The Littlest Reindeer is that it’s sweet, funny, fast-moving, and holiday-heavy without being overly sentimenta­l.

Voiced by Josh Hutcherson, Elliot (don’t offend him by calling him a pony; miniature horses are just that — built like a regulation horse on a small scale — and ponies are stockier, fuzzier, and bigger) with lots of other animals at Whittick’s Witty Bitty Farm and Petting Zoo in rural North Dakota, where owner Walter (voice of Rob Tinkler), a washed-up minor league baseball player who inherited the family business, is struggling to pay the bills.

Elliot is OK with entertaini­ng

youthful human visitors, but his ambition, fueled with encouragem­ent by his feisty goat pal Hazel (voice of Samantha Bee) is to head to the North Pole for the annual reindeer tryouts — more important than ever this year, as veteran reindeer Blitzen intends to retire and open a juice bar in Florida.

Walter is already planning on taking smart-mouth DJ (voice of Christophe­r Jacot), a full-size muscular athlete of a reindeer, to the tryouts, so Elliot and Hazel scheme to smuggle themselves along for the ride and figure out how to enter the competitio­n once they arrive.

Which they do, along with experienci­ng stadium-style adventures, highs and lows, and cleverly figuring out how to function in a cutthroat environmen­t along the way.

By sneaking around and paying attention, they realize that Santa, disgusted with the elitist ways of the obnoxious superstar reindeer (their shenanigan­s caused Christmas to arrive seven hours late last

year), has constructe­d a stable of mechanical sleighs that don’t require pampering, reinforcin­g, or personaliz­ed attention to operate on Christmas Eve. Does this mean the traditions of Christmas Eve are in peril?

The film doesn’t look like an elegant Pixar product; the computer animation has a synthetic, bouncy, color-blasted and cartoony feel. (Pixar has been getting closer and closer to realism over the years.) Not all the other characters are convincing; an odd miniature horse named Peanut Butter

(voice of Jeff Dunham) struts around in Braveheart makeup and barks orders in a Scottish accent, and a huge draft horse named Clyde (also voiced by Dunham), who serves as DJ’s coach, scowls and grumps more than necessary.

Then there’s Lemondrop (voice of Martin Short), an evil, power-wielding elf who controls the tryouts, complete with a secret weapon to make his favorites more likely to come out on top. Unbeknowns­t to him, his antics are being closely observed

by journalist Corkie (voice of Morena Baccarin), who doesn’t like what she sees and isn’t afraid of being accused of spreading fake news.

Was Blitzen forced to retire? Is there a cheating conspiracy going on? Does all this sound familiar to fans of profession­al sports?

The ending won’t be a surprise, but don’t expect an overdose of schmaltz. Elliot has the heart of an athlete, the focus of a competitor, and the empathy of a true friend. That’s what makes his movie a contender.

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