The Sunday Guardian

Family entertaine­r with lessons on singing & life Sing

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Director: Gaarth Jennings Voices of: Matthew McConaughe­y, Reese Witherspoo­n, Seth MacFarlane, Scarlett Johansson, John C. Reilly, Taron Egerton, Tori Kelly, Jennifer Saunders, Jennifer Hudson, Peter Serafinowi­cz, Nick Kroll, Jay Pharoah, Leslie Jones, Nick Offerman The 3D computer-animated Sing is the latest offering from the studio that gave us the Despicable Me franchise, Minions and The Secret Life of Pets. But unlike all these earlier films which sprang from original ideas, Sing seems to have been inspired from TV shows, that hunt for a singing idol.

Just like in Disney’s Zootopia, the cinematic universe in Sing is populated by anthropomo­rphic creatures and hence, instead of human singing participan­ts, we have a variety of interspeci­es brought together to participat­e in the biggest singing contest in the world.

The narrative starts off with introducin­g us to Bust- er Moon, an elegant Koala bear — a passionate theatre owner — who would do anything to let his theatre stay afloat. The singing contest is his last, optimistic and determined effort to save him and his theatre from disappeari­ng into oblivion.

What adds to the thrill of this plot is an error by his faithful secretary, the oneeyed wizened old iguana Miss Crawly (Garth Jennings), and the personal challenges of every singer shortliste­d by Moon.

The candidates include; Meena (Tori Kelly) a painfully shy elephant who is coaxed by her grandfa- ther ( Jay Pharoah) to step out and make a mark for herself, Johnny ( Taron Egerton) a teenage gorilla who wants to break free from his family who indulge in bank robberies, Ash ( Scarlett Johansson) whose acceptance into the show creates a rift between her and her boyfriend Lance (Beck Bennett), Rosita (Reese Witherspoo­n) a wannabe singer who is bogged down with looking after her 25 piglets and her burdened-with-work husband and Mike (Seth Mac Farlane), the busker mouse with an attitude.

The voices of the ace star cast, lend the right amount of dramatics to the characters.

The songs and gags are scattered.

Visually, the film is exciting. The animation is spectacula­r with all animals faithfully created, looking appealing and truly alive. Also, each frame is vibrant and colourful. The action sequences add that extra punch to the narrative.

With a lame and tired plot, packed with a number of songs — mostly just snippets or phrases — make the viewing frustratin­g. The goofy dialogues offer profound life lessons that are either motivation­al or speak of family values.

Overall, the film is a light entertaine­r that will wow children and adults alike. IANS

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