The Oklahoman

How Pixar’s ‘Coco’ tries to be a cultural exchange

- BY MICHAEL CAVNA The Washington Post

Gael Garcia Bernal, who voices a leading character in “Coco,” is impressed with how the Pixar film even seeks to build cultural bridges with those who might speak against Mexicans and MexicanAme­ricans.

In “Coco,” the path to and from the afterlife involves a border checkpoint, and those trying to cross illegally — including Hector (voiced by Garcia Bernal) — are quickly scooped up by “immigratio­n” guards. The moment is played for laughs, but the Day of the Dead scene is especially resonant because of the real-world political climate, including promises to build a border wall to keep out illegal immigrants from Mexico.

Bernal, who is from Jalisco, Mexico, is fascinated with this storytelli­ng approach, especially as “deeply conflicted” politics play out.

“In the time that we’re living in, with the social and political discussion­s that are going it in the United States — and with the United States vs. the rest of the world — it’s really interestin­g to see how people like (co-director) Adrian Molina and other American (Latinos) are engaging and making themselves heard,” the Golden Globe-winning Bernal (“Mozart in the Jungle”) says recently during a trip to Washington, D.C.

“They manifest who they are in an impressive, culturally potent way,” he continues, even while “engaging in a discussion with an irrational mythology that is criminaliz­ing them” in the United States.

(Worth noting: In “Coco,” Hector — following his attempts to cross the hereafter’s border illegally — becomes a redemptive character.)

Certain themes can appeal to everyone, says Bernal — including “Coco’s” emphasis on being close to generation­s of family, however one chooses to define it. “It is the founding portion of society,” he says, “and family is the place where experiment­ation and openness and curiosity are fostered.”

Sitting for an interview being held just north of the White House recently, Molina, a California­n of Mexican descent, points to the power of narrative for building bonds across animosity and bigotry.

“That’s why making this film is so rewarding, because I am able to express the things about what I value and what I think is important about the idea of family and the idea of remembranc­e,” he says of “Coco,” which is Pixar’s first film to feature multiple leading characters of color. “A lot of that comes from my culture, and I think it’s good to be able to share that, so that other people can recognize it and relate to how common it is . ... This feels like a great example of that cultural exchange for hopefully a better world.”

 ?? STUDIOS] [IMAGE PROVIDED BY WALT DISNEY PICTURES-PIXAR ANIMATION ?? Hector (voiced by Gael Garcia Bernal), left, helps guide Miguel (Anthony Gonzalez) through the Land of the Dead, in Disney/ Pixar’s “Coco.”
STUDIOS] [IMAGE PROVIDED BY WALT DISNEY PICTURES-PIXAR ANIMATION Hector (voiced by Gael Garcia Bernal), left, helps guide Miguel (Anthony Gonzalez) through the Land of the Dead, in Disney/ Pixar’s “Coco.”

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