Apple Magazine

FAMILY AND ROBOTS IN ‘MITCHELLS VS THE MACHINES’

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Easily the most heartfelt movie about family life that also includes a robot apocalypse and a pug often mistaken for a loaf of bread, “The Mitchells vs. the Machines” is an antic, irreverent animated delight that somehow doesn’t sacrifice depth even as it hurtles forward at breakneck comic speed.

Director Mike Rianda’s film, produced by Phil Lord and Chris Miller, shares much of the DNA of Lord and Miller’s other cartoon adventures

(“The Lego Movie,”“Spider-Man: Into the SpiderVers­e”) in its ability to remake movie cliches with madcap irreverenc­e, youthful zeal and a contempora­riness that often eludes less freewheeli­ng films.

“The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” which debuts Friday on Netflix (after originally being set for theatrical release from Sony Pictures), manages to spin through a sincere father-daughter relationsh­ip, our technology addictions, Instagram jealousy and general feelings of inadequacy while breezing though an end-ofthe-world plot accidental­ly initiated by a reckless tech CEO. Oh, there are maniacal Furbys, too.

But for all its fast-paced zaniness, “The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” scripted by Rianda and his writing partner Jeff Rowe (also co-director), is basically a good old-fashioned family road trip movie, and the Mitchells slide in somewhere between the Griswolds and a more accidentpr­one Incredible­s. They’re neither a hopeless clan nor a perfect one (usually the only two options in family movies), but a flawed, loving family.

Rick Mitchell (Danny McBride) is a devoted but distracted dad who, when faced with more complicate­d emotional issues, happily retreats to home improvemen­t and woodworkin­g. He and wife Linda (Maya Rudolph) have a daughter heading to college, Katie (Abbi Jacobson), a younger dinosaur-crazed boy named Aaron (Michael Rianda) and a dog named Doug the Pug — a four-legged running gag. They all have their own interests but share a common smart-phone addiction. So when Rick suggests a dinner with “10 seconds of unobstruct­ed family eye contact,” it’s excruciati­ng torture for everyone.

When Katie is about to leave for college, her relationsh­ip with her father has reached a low point. Katie, an insanely creative budding filmmaker, can’t ever get him to pay attention to her creations. In a last-ditch stab at bringing them closer, Rick cancels her flight and the family drives across the country instead. Part of what’s great about “The Mitchells vs. the Machines” is that, even though it’s a big-budget computerge­nerated animation, it pulses with a handdrawn, DIY spirit. Along the way, Katie is filming and her work frequently bleeds into the movie, itself, redecorati­ng the frame and sometimes taking it over. “The Mitchells vs. the Machines” is simultaneo­usly an ode to the creative possibilit­ies at our finger tips and a warning to the greater dangers of digital dependence.

The latter is especially true once a newly launched phone turns diabolical overlord and scoops up the world’s population with little more than promises of free Wi-Fi. The Mitchells, by luck and pluck, are the only ones to go undetected, a success owed less to their intelligen­ce than their imperfecti­ons. The engulfing dystopia makes for a dramatic and metaphoric­al backdrop for the Mitchells to work through their issues. What, after all, is more apocalypti­c for a father than a daughter leaving home for college?

Rianda’s film drags some in the big finale as the Mitchells go to battle in Silicon Valley. The mom, and Rudolph, are a little wasted. But the father-daughter relationsh­ip is primary here, and it’s really wonderfull­y done. I think what “The Mitchells vs. the Machines” does so well is show how things evolve between parents and children with time.

It’s a bond that’s permanent in so many ways but a relationsh­ip forever fluctuatin­g with the pushes and pulls of growing up. The filmmakers are always cutting to old home movies and other memories of Rick and Katie in various stages through the years. In “The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” family life is a brilliant, everchangi­ng collage.

“The Mitchells vs. the Machines,” a Netflix release, is rated PG by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for action and some language. Running time: 114 minutes. Three stars out of four.

Online: www.netflix.com/title/81399614

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Defective Robots | The Mitchells vs. The Machines

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