Albuquerque Journal

‘A MONSTER CALLS’

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computer-generated imagery and more traditiona­l animation for a result that’s both modern and timeless. “A Monster Calls,” which considers children’s feelings as real and multifacet­ed as anyone else’s, deserves a place in the canon of artistic exploratio­ns of grief.

Newcomer Lewis MacDougall brings heartbreak­ing earnestnes­s to Conor, whom the monster describes as “too old to be a kid, too young to be a man.” Liam Neeson is the monster, lending his regal brogue to the computer-generated character, an ancient yew tree that becomes personifie­d. Felicity Jones and Sigourney Weaver give heartfelt performanc­es as Conor’s sick mother and distant grandmothe­r, but the story centers on the relationsh­ip between the boy and his monster.

“I have come to get you, Conor O’Malley!” the monster bellows into Conor’s bedroom window late one night. The giant creature says he has come to tell him three stories, and Conor should tell him a fourth.

“Who cares about stupid stories from a stupid tree that’s a dream?” the boy defiantly replies. He hardly

has time for a monster, even one he may have somehow summoned. Conor is already dealing with plenty of trouble in his life: He’s bullied daily at school, and his mother is so sick she gets weaker every day.

But the tree monster promises that “stories are wild creatures.” Though he looks scary (and little kids will likely find him pretty frightenin­g at first), he seems kind. The monster always comes around after midnight, sharing fables about an evil queen, a heartless healer and an invisible man who demands to be seen.

Bayona expresses the magic of the monster’s stories through imaginativ­e animation. When the monster starts spinning a yarn, the film shifts away from the muted, melancholy greens and browns of Conor’s everyday life into a paperlike palette of stark watercolor­s and animated cutouts. This distinguis­hes fantasy from reality, and for Conor, the monster is real.

But it can’t save the boy from his sadness.

The monster gives Conor an outlet for his feelings, which the boy uses to take down bullies and wreak destructio­n in his grandmothe­r’s house. The adults around him reflect an unspoken understand­ing of Conor’s plight when they refuse to punish him. “What would be the point?” they ask. His mother is dying. Isn’t that punishment enough for anyone?

We all experience loss and desperatel­y wish for some salve to ease the pain. Kids feel it as much as grown-ups. When Conor is faced with life-changing grief, his aid comes in the form of a wise tree monster.

We should all be so lucky to have a kindly giant make it safe for us to explore life’s darkest parts.

 ?? COURTESY OF FOCUS FEATURES/QUIM VIVES ?? Felicity Jones and Lewis MacDougall appear in a scene from “A Monster Calls.”
COURTESY OF FOCUS FEATURES/QUIM VIVES Felicity Jones and Lewis MacDougall appear in a scene from “A Monster Calls.”

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