The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Leap!’ trips over its sloppy story

- By Katie Walsh Tribune News Service

The animated feature “Leap!” pirouettes onto screens this weekend, hoping to snag the attention of young audiences during the dog days of summer. This Canadian production, originally titled, “Ballerina,” finally hits U.S. theaters equipped with a Carly Rae Jepsen summer jam, “Cut to the Feeling.” But you’ll spend an hour and 27 minutes waiting for the film to cut to that tune because the ramshackle storytelli­ng leaves much to be desired in this tale of a young girl finding passion and purpose through dance.

Though the distressin­gly large lollipop heads of the characters are often disconcert­ing, some of the animation is striking, and near photoreali­stic. It just seems like all of the resources have been put into the background environmen­t instead of the characters.

There is a lot misplaced effort in “Leap!” and unfortunat­ely, very little seems to have been put into the story and screenplay, written by Laurent Zeitoun, Eric Summer and Carol Noble. It is all over the place and inconsiste­nt — perhaps retooled for too many different markets.

We’re plunged into the drama right away, as dreamers Felicie (Ellie Fanning) and Victor (Nat Wolff ) bid “bye bye” to their draconian orphanage in the French countrysid­e and hitch a ride to Paris. She wants to be a dancer, and he wants to be an inventor, not that this is well-establishe­d at all.

Within a day, Victor is working for an unnamed Gustav Eiffel, and Felicie has scammed her way into a prestigiou­s ballet school after taking the acceptance letter intended for spoiled brat Camille (Maddie Ziegler), for whose evil mother (Kate McKinnon) Felicie has been working. It’s totally justified because Camille threw Felicie’s dead mother’s music box out a window. Pursue your dreams, kids! Commit mail fraud! And identity theft! (You know your movie has a serious storytelli­ng problem when you start thinking, “that mean mom has a point…”)

The grasp of time in “Leap!” is nebulous at best. What seems like days pass in just 24 hours at some points. Then there are the truly strange anachronis­ms throughout. The contempora­ry pop soundtrack notwithsta­nding, Felicie traipses around in denim shorts, and the characters say things like “your dancing sucks” and they make “Hammer Time” jokes. And yet, we know it’s supposed to be the 19th century, because of the proliferat­ion of top hats and horse-drawn carriages, and because both the Eiffel Tower and Statue of Liberty are under constructi­on. It’s an inconsiste­ncy that’s hard to get over.

Elle Fanning does give a charming voice performanc­e and the dancing is lovely to watch (choreograp­hed by stars of the Paris Opera Ballet), but there are so many haphazard elements to “Leap!” that it never comes together.

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