The Columbus Dispatch

‘Belle’ a dazzling anime version of ‘Beauty and the Beast’

- Jake Coyle

Anime master Mamoru Hosoda makes movies that, even at their most elaborate, can reach such staggering­ly emotional heights that they seem to break free of anything you’re prepared for in an animated movie – or in most kinds of movies, for that matter.

Any talented Japanese filmmaker working in fantastica­l animation inevitably draws comparison­s to the great Hayao Miyazaki. But the more appropriat­e touchstone for Hosoda may be Yasujir Ozu. As dazzling as Hosoda’s films may be visually or conceptual­ly, they’re rooted in simple and profound human stories.

His last film, the Oscar-nominated “Mirai,” is one of the best movies made in recent years about family. It centered

on a 4-year-old boy who, dealing with the arrival of a new baby sister and confrontin­g new feelings of jealousy, is visited by his sister as a middle-schooler. Other time-traveling encounters follow, and a new understand­ing and empathy grows in the boy.

Hosoda's latest, “Belle,” which opened in theaters Wednesday, is more complicate­dly sketched. It's an ultramoder­n take on “Beauty and the Beast” that transfers the fairy tale to a digital metaverse realm called “U.” There, in a dizzying digital expanse that will satisfy any “Matrix” fan who felt let down by the virtual worlds of “The Matrix Resurrecti­ons,” its 5 billion users can adapt any persona they like.

The 17-year-old Suzu (voiced by Kaho Nakamura in the subtitled version I saw; an English dub is also playing) reluctantl­y joins U as an avatar named Belle, a more exotic beauty than the modest and shy Suzu. In the U, Belle's songs find massive stardom that's much unlike Suzu's own life, where one of her only friends is Hiroka (Lilas Ikuta), a computer whiz who helps craft Belle. In

U, Belle finds herself drawn to the metaverse's notorious villain called the Dragon (or the Beast) who's hunted by a police-like force that wants peace and free-flowing commerce in U.

You might be thinking that an anime “Beauty and the Beast” turned into internet parable sounds a tad overelabor­ate – and about the furthest thing from sage simplicity of Ozu. It's indeed a lot that Hosodo is processing here, and “Beauty and the Beast” doesn't always seem a useful form for all the ideas floating around. “Belle” bends and cracks under its grand ambitions at times.

But the heart of Hosodo's sincere film never falters. Taking place in both modern-day Japan and the virtual U, its foot

in reality is firmly planted. Our first vision of Suzu is as a young girl watching her mother, in an act of brave selflessne­ss, lose her life saving a child from a flood. Loss and grief have consumed Hosodo's childhood; her virtual transforma­tion into Belle is a chance to free herself from some of her everyday struggles. Music had been part of her bond with her mother. That tragic backdrop – how we treat strangers – is also part of the lessons of U, where anonymity breeds good and ill. On the whole, this is a surprising­ly positive view of the capacity of the internet for connection and liberation. But what's most striking is how Hosodo marries both realities despite their vast difference­s. Each world shimmers. Clouds are rendered as mesmerizin­g as anything in U.

The movie ultimately resides, intimately, with Suzu. Even with all that's going on, “Belle” is deeply attuned to its protagonis­t's hurts, memories and dreams. Every moment flits between her past and present, reality and virtual reality. These worlds ultimately merge in a scene of astounding catharsis – a song sung not by Belle, but Suzu – and it's one of the most intensely beautiful moments you're likely to see, anywhere.

 ?? GKIDS ?? A scene from the animated Japanese film, “Belle,” an ultra-modern take on “Beauty and the Beast.”
GKIDS A scene from the animated Japanese film, “Belle,” an ultra-modern take on “Beauty and the Beast.”

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