Los Angeles Times

Grief, trauma weigh down ‘Wonder Park’

- By Katie Walsh Walsh is Tribune News Service film critic.

Perhaps it’s a post-“Inside Out” phenomenon that animated films aimed at children need to tackle complex emotions or psychology, translatin­g it into terms kids can understand. This is the case with “Wonder Park,” a film that is part “Roller Coaster Tycoon,” part lesson on grappling with the fear of losing a parent. It’s a complicate­d dynamic where both story lines seem deeply at odds with each other. The wonders of Wonder Park are dampened by the pall of grief that the protagonis­t is experienci­ng, while the wacky amusement park antics prevent the story from going especially deep.

André Nemec, Josh Appelbaum and Robert Gordon collaborat­ed on the screenplay, but no director is credited after animator Dylan Brown was fired by Paramount for inappropri­ate conduct during production. At the surface, the film seems like a fantastica­l — or as the characters might say, “splendifer­ous!” — romp through a magical amusement park operated by talking animals, but the story itself is deeply rooted in grave family issues.

Wonder Park has been dreamed up by June (voiced by Brianna Denski) and her mother (Jennifer Garner), who whisper their designs for the theme park into the ear of a stuffed chimp, Peanut. In June’s imaginatio­n, Peanut (Norbert Leo Butz) uses his magical marker to craft the outlandish new attraction­s, like a carousel made of flying fish. But all the wonder goes out of Wonder Park when June’s mother has to leave home to be treated for an illness. June stops playing with her friends or dreaming up new designs for her park, instead developing an obsessivec­ompulsive obsession with keeping her father (Matthew Broderick) healthy.

So where does the world of Wonder Park connect with this more serious story? After June bails out of the bus ride to math camp, she wanders into the woods, enters a portal and finds herself at the amusement park of her dreams. The film doesn’t present this as a dream, fantasy or hallucinat­ion. It’s the world June and her mom created in their minds, and now June has to save it … which means she’s saving herself, because she is, of course, the wonder in Wonder Park.

The second and third acts of this admittedly brief film involve June teaming with the gang of animals that runs Wonder Park, a warthog (Mila Kunis), bear (Ken Hudson Campbell), porcupine (John Oliver) and pair of beavers (Kenan Thompson and Ken Jeong), to save the park from “the darkness” that has enveloped the creatively blocked Peanut. It’s also turned all the cute little plushies into a cheerful, murderous zombie horde. Getting the gears turning on Wonder Park is just the challenge June needs to use her brains and bravery, learning along the way that she only needs belief in herself to be creative.

There are some colorful and imaginativ­e set pieces, and the voice performanc­es from Oliver and Garner are especially excellent, but the tone of ‘Wonder Park” is odd as the gravity of June’s reallife issues invade the world of Wonder Park. Imbuing a story like this with issues of grief and trauma can be a good lesson for kids, but it just makes the whole affair that much less splendifer­ous and that much more solemn.

 ?? Paramount Animation ?? YOUNG JUNE (voiced by Brianna Denski) fantasizes about her ideal theme park when she isn’t dealing with heavy family issues involving fear of losing a parent.
Paramount Animation YOUNG JUNE (voiced by Brianna Denski) fantasizes about her ideal theme park when she isn’t dealing with heavy family issues involving fear of losing a parent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States