Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘MY FATHER’S DRAGON’

Netflix film a soaring tale of the power of friendship

- By James Verniere

From Netflix and Cartoon Saloon, the animation company that gave us the Academy Award-nominated films “Wolfwalker­s” (2019), “Song of the Sea” (2014) and “The Secret of Kells” ( 2009) comes “My Father’s Dragon,” a 2D-animated entry based on the 1948 children’s novel by American writer Ruth Stiles Gannett.

The film is a trippy “Wizard of Oz”-like tale of a boy named Elmer (voiced by Jacob Tremblay), who runs away from his mother (Golshifteh Farahani) and the scary, big city where she takes him after their country store fails. That is the legendary Rita Moreno as their mean landlord.

Lured to a dock by an alley cat (Whoopi Goldberg), Elmer finds himself being ferried by a notably effervesce­nt whale named Soda (Judy Greer) to a place called Wild Island. Elmer’s “real world” is reminiscen­t of Recession-era America. Wild Island is a tree-shrouded, artichokes­haped multicolor­ed wonderland, where a group of talking animals struggle to survive as the island threatens to sink.

A wise gorilla named Saiwa (Ian McShane) leads the animals, including a rhinoceros named Iris (Dianne Wiest), a tarsier named Tamir (Jackie Earle Haley), a macaque named Kwan (Chris O’Dowd), a crocodile named Cornelius (Alan Cumming) and a tiger named Sasha (Leighton Meester). They have captured a winged dragon named Boris (Gaten Matarazzo, TV’s “Stranger Things”) and are restrainin­g him to help keep the island from sinking by using his strength and wings to lift it out of the sea.

When Elmer recklessly frees Boris from his thick, rubbery bonds, the two flee to seek out a wise entity named Aratuah in the island’s heights. Did I mention that many of the difficulti­es Elmer finds himself in recall his troubles in the “real world?” He is resourcefu­l and smart and has a rucksack full of things retrieved from the old store: a broken mirror, a

strawberry lollipop, tangerines, a magnifying glass, a pair of scissors and more.

If “The Wizard of Oz” has a Cowardly Lion, a Tin Man and a Scarecrow, “My Father’s Dragon” has a dragon utterly lacking in confidence in Boris, and Matarazzo puts a delightful­ly daffy stamp on the creature. Elmer and Boris’ adventures are certain to keep children entertaine­d, if not enthralled.

Gannett’s novel was previously adapted by Japanese animator Masami Hata for the 1997 film “Elmer no boken.” This new, inspired-by version, directed by Irishwoman Nora Twomey (“The Breadwinne­r”) and scripted by Meg LeFauve (“Inside Out”), features striking, dreamlike imagery based on the original book’s illustrati­ons by the author’s stepmother, Ruth Chrisman

Gannett, but also redolent of previous Cartoon Saloon efforts. The music by the Danna Brothers, who scored Twomey’s previous effort “The Breadwinne­r,” includes a thematic whistle that the boy and dragon use to communicat­e.

Elmer and Boris, whose journey takes them through a forest of dandelions and has them walking beneath gargantuan mushrooms, are the same age, although in human years Boris is 100. Their friendship is the heart of the film. They form a bond that is tested by fears and suspicions at first, but slowly becomes strong, trusting and nurturing.

Boris yearns to become an “after dragon,” a more evolved creature with the ability to breathe fire. But he is afraid and uncertain of making the transforma­tion. Elmer, who has his own fears concerning the future, tries to help his friend. It’s clear why so many adults remember reading this book as children. As a story about the rewards and importance of friendship in our lives, “My Father’s Dragon” soars.

 ?? Netflix ?? Elmer (voiced by Jacob Tremblay) with Boris the dragon (Gaten Matarazzo) in "My Father's Dragon."
Netflix Elmer (voiced by Jacob Tremblay) with Boris the dragon (Gaten Matarazzo) in "My Father's Dragon."

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States