The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Magic School Bus’ reboot looks different

Who stole show’s visual soul?

- By Michael Cavna

How has Netflix’s otherwise promising new “Magic School Bus” reboot so badly whiffed on a single crucial step?

The trailer for “The Magic School Bus Rides Again” has arrived in advance of its Sept. 29 debut on Netflix, and there are reasons to be optimistic. Lily Tomlin returns to her Daytime Emmy-winning role as Ms. Frizzle (now elevated to Professor Frizzle). Lin-Manuel Miranda brings amiable warmth to the theme song, dialing down the vocal crackle of Little Richard’s original track. And Kate McKinnon — so good as a voice performer in the current film “Leap!” — inherits the bus-driving role as Ms. Frizzle’s kid sister, Fiona Felicity.

With so much authentic talent involved, then, it’s a pity that the show’s guiding forces decided to alter one key component of the original: visual soul.

The ’90s cartoon series was a Canadian-American production from Scholastic, based on the hit book series, that sought to make a STEM education more entertaini­ng. And as one of PBS’s first animated shows, “The Magic School Bus” boasted a warm, expressive visual style that felt reassuring­ly handcrafte­d. Beyond the extreme squash and stretch of that wild bus, the affecting core of the show was how the engaging dialogue emerged from faces we could relate to — with a retro aesthetic that nodded to such classics as “Charlotte’s Web.”

Two decades later, however, that warmth has been painted over like an urban mural lost to a gleaming new condo developmen­t.

The reboot has saddled its talent with the plastic facial expression­s of a children’s Barbie or Bratz ad. It’s as if the artists have embalmed the soul of the show beneath the most plastic of pixels.

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