Los Angeles Times

A bold, new vision on display in ‘Lu’

- By Charles Solomon calendar@latimes.com

Masaaki Yuasa’s “Lu Over the Wall” blends elements of Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Little Mermaid,” Hayao Miyazaki’s “Ponyo” and alienated teen stories into a quirky, highly personal film unlike convention­al Japanese or American animated features.

After his parents divorce, sulky junior high student Kai (voiced by Michael Sinternikl­aas, who manages to keep his moody character likable in the English-language version) moves to his grandfathe­r’s home in Hinashi Town, a flyspeck coastal village where the only possible careers are fishing and making umbrellas. Although Kai is a talented musician, he has to be dragooned into joining the band formed by two of his classmates: spoiled, pretty Yuho (Stephanie Sheh), the daughter of a wealthy developer; and exuberant Kunio (Brandon Engman).

The trio practices in a ruined amusement park on nearby Merfolk Island, where Kai’s melodies attract Lu (Christine Marie Cabanos), an excitable young mermaid. Whenever she hears music, Lu’s tail splits into legs and feet, enabling her to dance. When Lu dances, everyone within earshot joins in — whether they want to or not. Her uninhibite­d good cheer delights Kai, who emerges from his shell and begins paying attention to the people around him. Lu proves more powerful than her childish appearance suggests: She manipulate­s huge blocks of seawater to capsize the thuggish abalone poachers who menace the teenagers, and helps Kai — who can’t swim — win a long-distance race.

But the citizens of Hinashi Town hate the merpeople, who they believe raid their nets and devour luckless fishermen who fall overboard. Centuries ago, the townspeopl­e cruelly murdered a captured merman by exposing him to sunlight that burned him to cinders. The merpeople flooded the town in revenge, and the inhabitant­s live in fear of another flood.

As the film uses Flash animation, the character designs are stripped down and minimal. When the humans join Lu’s joyful dance, their feet and bodies flail about cartoonish­ly, with no sense of weight or believable motion. And Yuasa is still finding his footing: “Lu” has a few too many subplots and secondary characters.

The bold imagery and sometimes convoluted storytelli­ng defy the convention­s of traditiona­l animated filmmaking, but Yuasa is clearly an artist with an individual vision whose work offers something genuinely new and eyecatchin­g.

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