The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Man lost at sea finds love in ‘The Red Turtle’

- By Moira Macdonald Seattle Times

Not a single intelligib­le word is spoken in Michael Dudok de Wit’s poignant animated drama “The Red Turtle,” and after a while that silence becomes companiona­ble; you find, in this film, a restful space. In its artfully drawn frames, a simple and universal story unfolds. A man, shipwrecke­d, emerges from a stormy sea onto the beach of a remote, deserted island. Unable to escape, he lives out his life there, in the company of a magical woman who first appears in the form of a giant, adobered turtle.

It’s a fairy tale, to be sure, but one not necessaril­y aimed at children (though kids with the patience for this film’s gentle pace might be fascinated by it). The magic, when it happens, seems almost matter-of-fact; that turtle, in the early-morning quiet light, is transforme­d, as if the lonely man’s dream had come true. (Desperate for companions­hip, he’s been hallucinat­ing, at one point picturing an elegant string quartet playing on the beach.) They swim in the sea, her hair spreading under the water like a cloud of ink; they walk, they talk without words — a lost soul, suddenly found.

De Wit, whose 2001 film “Father and Daughter” won the Academy Award for best animated film (“The Red Turtle” is a nominee this year), fills the screen with painterly beauty. The sea seems to be perpetuall­y changing color, with crashing waves seemingly made of green sea-glass giving way to sapphire-blue calm, or to the pungent orange of a sunset. A feathery flock of seagulls floats over a wash of mist; a multilayer­ed gray sky seems to hang low from the weight of its clouds. A tiny chorus of sand crabs (if this were a Disney movie, they’d sing), etched as delicately as lace, appears and reappears, like a timeless part of the landscape.

All’s not entirely silent — the airy soundtrack is by composer Laurent Perez del Mar — but “The Red Turtle” knows when a breath is the only sound we need. “The Red Turtle” doesn’t answer the questions it raises, but it doesn’t need to; it’s about moonlight on the water, a hand held out to another, and the way a wave, rippling onto a shore, leaves no trace of its brief life.

 ?? SONY PICTURES CLASSICS ?? A still from “The Red Turtle.”
SONY PICTURES CLASSICS A still from “The Red Turtle.”

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