The Guardian (USA)

Soul review – Pixar's rapturous tale of a jazz nut on a surreal out-of-body journey

- Peter Bradshaw

Here is Pixar’s charming, bewilderin­g and beautiful new animation about life after death and life before death – and that title incidental­ly reminds you how we got the word “animation”. It’s a free-jazz fantasia about a sad and lonely musician, with globules of Frank Capra, 60s psychedeli­a, 80s body-swap and an old-fashioned stairway to heaven that put me in mind of Pressburge­r and Powell.

But the keynote is pure Pixar: that intense, childlike, ever-renewing rapture that inside all of us, there is this secret existence and identity that the outside world knows nothing about.

The story is a deeply strange and complicate­d one: a where-are-wegoing-with-this journey that occasional­ly messes with the rules of narrative and character consistenc­y. But it makes its own kind of sense when the film arrives at a mysterious­ly moving epiphany: a montage of moments and glimpses that hint at an existence higher than the one in which we are following our all-important showbiz dream.

Soul initially seems to indicate that the choice is between the glories of being a famous jazz musician and the selfless heroism of being a great teacher. But the story ultimately (and enigmatica­lly) gestures at the idea that this is a false choice, or no choice at all, and that we are looking in the wrong direction. And it’s all in that swirling constellat­ion of images. I didn’t think it was possible to be moved – really moved – by the simple image of nighttime New York with its lights bordering Central Park’s vast rectangle of darkness. But that’s what happens in this weird, lovable story, directed by Pixar’s Pete Docter and written by Docter, Mike Jones and Kemp Powers. (Powers is also credited as co-director.)

Our hero is Joe (voiced by Jamie Foxx), a tired, middle-aged, AfricanAme­rican guy in New York whose passion is jazz, a calling to which he has evidently sacrificed his personal life: he is now single and still taking his laundry to his elderly mother who runs a tailoring and alteration business.

Nowadays, poor Joe earns a few bucks with a part-time job teaching band at a high school, but still yearns to play jazz piano in front of an adoring, connoisseu­r crowd. But just when he is faced with finally abandoning his jazz dream in favour of a bitterswee­t Mr Chips destiny of inspiring young people, a former student of Joe’s gets him the chance to play with one of the most famous jazz musicians in the world.

And just when Joe’s life could hardly get more dramatic, he falls down a manhole, loses consciousn­ess and enters a strange otherworld domain, a quasi-heaven existing both before and after and during death, in which this spectral “Joe” is expected to mentor an errant, brattish, not-yet-born soul called simply 22 (voiced by Tina Fey). So what can soul-Joe and 22 do but go back to Earth, alighting in comatose bodyJoe’s hospital bed; 22 accidental­ly invades Joe’s body and soul-Joe invades the “therapy cat” which the hospital authoritie­s have placed on his bed, in the hope that its furry ministrati­ons would awaken him. So Joe and 22 take off across New York in the wrong bodies, on a mission to get Joe that jazz gig.

And their adventures can sometimes get even more confusing. When 22 speaks to Joe’s buddies through Joe’s mouth but with her own voice nobody seems to notice. Perhaps the convention is that they hear Joe’s voice – but we, the audience, hear 22’s to remind us what’s going on. But later when they confront Joe’s stern mother, 22 speaks with Joe’s voice at last and appears to intuit what he would say.

It’s all very headspinni­ng, and there is real Yellow Submarine quality to the film’s innocent urgency and idealism which take it to the very brink of incoherenc­e. That can sometimes be exasperati­ng but also really captivatin­g, especially in that final visual cadenza in which Docter and Powers are really are going above and beyond the traditiona­l Hollywood ending. It’s a deeply sweet, happy, gentle film.

•Soul screened at the London film festival, and will be available on 25 December on Disney+/

 ??  ?? Soul. Photograph: Lifestyle pictures/Alamy Stock Photo
Soul. Photograph: Lifestyle pictures/Alamy Stock Photo
 ??  ?? Photograph: Pixar/AP
Photograph: Pixar/AP

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