New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Animated film ‘Wonder Park’ at war with itself

- By Mark Kennedy

There’s always that moment on roller coasters when the lap bar gets locked down and you slowly, agonizingl­y ride up to the first drop. You know the next few minutes are going to be harrowing — you just don’t know how bad. So here’s a warning about the new animated amusement park film “Wonder Park” — it’s going to be more harrowing than you can imagine.

A simple, bucolic beginning with the sunny characters exuberantl­y crying “Splendifer­ous!” leads to a post-apocalypti­c, violent middle that includes killer plush dolls, deadly giant robots, lava and existentia­l crisis. It then ends on a sickly sweet note. The tonal shifts alone are enough to make you want to hurl.

The cynicism and ultraviole­nce of Paramount’s “Wonder Park “undermines some top-notch animation, which includes astonishin­gly realized things like matted fur on a boar, lifelike potholes and intricate leaves and ferns in a forest. There are roller coaster moments that will make you feel like you’re on the ride yourself, gripping your seat. And John Oliver voices a rather great sassy porcupine. But the film’s message of always keeping a creative light shining gets horribly lost in the darkness.

The story centers on a creative, green-eyed, redhaired girl named June (voiced by Brianna Denski) who creates in her bedroom with her mom (Jennifer Garner, sweetness and light) a fantasy park filled with cool amusement park rides and colorful talking animals. She even brings to life a makeshift version on the streets in the film’s best sequence. But tragedy leads her to abandon the park, until one day June discovers it seems to have been actually constructe­d in a nearby forest and abandoned.

Great idea, right? Sure, until we realize this worn-atthe-edges park is now more like Jurassic Park than the Magic Kingdom. Threequart­ers of it looks like smoldering Nagasaki. The thousands of adorable plush toy souvenir monkeys in June’s park have turned into a swarming legion of weapon-wielding Chimpanzom­bies who try to drag away their screaming prey or control a giant robot that tries to crush all the cute animals. Not splendifer­ous.

June is flabbergas­ted. She asks — like you may — what’s going on. “What does it look like?” says a giant blue grizzly bear. “We’re at war.” Thus begins what feels like hours of “Mad Max” meets “Interstell­ar” as June and her band of ragtag, squabbling animals — including a solid Mila Kunis and a very emoting Norbert Leo Butz — try to restart the park and banish “the Darkness,” a whirlpool of dark clouds in the heavens. (You may have a fun time explaining all this in the car with your kids on the way home. But that time may be quicker than you think; at a recent screening, a few young ones sobbed and immediatel­y wanted to leave.)

Perhaps that mention of war is a telling one for this production, which does not list a director in its credits. (The previous person at the helm, Dylan Brown, was fired due to complaints of alleged inappropri­ate conduct.) Another obvious sign of internecin­e conflict is the title — “Wonder Park” — but all the action takes place in “Wonderland,” including all the park’s signage and lines like this: “You are the wonder in Wonderland.” Apparently, something less than wonderful was happening behind the scenes.

The screenplay by longtime writing partners Josh Appelbaum and Andre Nemec (”Mission Impossible 4: Ghost Protocol” and “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows”) does try new and refreshing things, like having an Indian boy as a hero — when was the last time an animated figure yelled “Thank Krishna!”? — but also leans on some cliches, including one that should’ve been retired long ago: The Terminally Ill Parent Whose Absence Wrenchingl­y Teaches Our Hero Self-Sufficienc­y.

“Wonder Park” has a great premise about a spunky kid engineer and a world she constructs taking flight, but takes a few too many dark loop-de-loops and crashes hard. If you pass this amusement park, skip it.

 ?? Paramount Animation / Associated Press ?? A scene from the animated film “Wonder Park.”
Paramount Animation / Associated Press A scene from the animated film “Wonder Park.”
 ?? Paramount Animation / TNS ?? 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.
Paramount Animation / TNS 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.
 ?? Paramount Animation / AP ?? A scene from Paramount Animation’s “Wonder Park.”
Paramount Animation / AP A scene from Paramount Animation’s “Wonder Park.”

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