Total Film

OR IS HOODWINKED! ONE OF THE MILLENNIUM’S BEST KIDS’ FILMS?

- Asks Tim Coleman

In the years after Toy Story (1995) reinvented the family feature, cinemas were quickly flooded with CG imitators. Pixar establishe­d itself as the pack leader, but DreamWorks was close behind with both Shrek (2001) and Shrek 2 (2004) proving knockout hits that smartly retooled fairy-tale tropes with dollops of snark, heart and a healthy hit of meta fun. By 2006, the market had become fully saturated, so when a little film named Hoodwinked! was released – itself a wry spin on fairy tales – it looked set to sink without a trace.

Surprise, then, that it’s actually one of the smartest and – whisper it – best entries in the genre, its success a veritable coup d’etat, not least because the animation is terrible. Indeed, a cursory look at the DVD case may suggest this is bargain-bin fare, the kind of irritating toddler fodder that drives parents to a mid-morning nap. But as the film itself says in the opening moments, we shouldn’t judge a book by its cover.

For what Hoodwinked! lacks in visual slickness, it makes up for with the kind of cinematic literacy most children’s films – hey, most films, period – can only dream of. Because, buckle up: it’s basically a remake of Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon (1950).

On the surface, the plot is pedestrian: Red Riding Hood (Anne Hathaway) comes home to discover the Big Bad Wolf pretending to be Granny (Glenn Close). But when a woodsman (Jim Belushi) bursts in, the whole gang are arrested on suspicion of links to the ‘Goody Bandit’, a thief wanted for nefarious recipe robberies. As each protagonis­t tells their tale, every new one intersecti­ng the previous ones, the question of whose is the definitive account becomes problemati­c.

A profound meditation on the nature of truth is not what your average family flick aims for, but Hoodwinked! pulls it off, with a real lightness of touch. Had the animation been up to scratch, this would be recognised as a modern masterpiec­e, given the stellar cast and sharp script. It’s an entry point for nippers to the deeper waters of classic cinema. Despite its limitation­s, it remains superior entertainm­ent, far worthier of repeat viewing than many of its peers… or is it just me?

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