Los Angeles Times

Flawless imperfecti­on

- Daron James

The visual spirit of “Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio” is lifted by the imperfecti­ons of its stop-motion animation, or what animation supervisor Brian Leif Hansen describes as an “imperfectl­y perfect” approach. “It means to have everything look really great but it doesn’t have to be straight up and down and smooth.” The mantra gave animators a bit of free will in reimaginin­g Carlo Collodi’s classic novel with brilliant detail without feeling flawless — an impression that subliminal­ly infuses Del Toro’s twisting narrative. This rings especially true when Pinocchio is in the land of the dead and Death holds the key for his return. The world is dressed in a luminescen­t blue and purple, a stargazer’s delight where time stands still. Death was animated without facial expression­s to keep the creature motionless and neutral, a mirrored-half to the life-giving Wood Sprite. When Pinocchio chooses to save Geppetto and return to the land of the living before his time in the land of the dead is up, bright starbursts fill the frame, sending him back as a mortal. “We wanted our animators to spend more time playing into the emotion of the story,” Hansen says. “I think the film looks how it does because of that.” —

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