The Denver Post

“Aladdin” goes to Shanghai, sort of

- By Natalia Winkelman

In the engaging animated feature “Wish Dragon,” a teenage boy comes into possession of a magic teapot containing a world-weary dragon who’s obliged to grant him three wishes.

The movie is geared toward children, but for anyone old enough to remember the Disney Renaissanc­e, there should be a déjà vu warning: Netflix’s newest animation effort is essentiall­y Disney’s “Aladdin” transposed to Shanghai. John Cho, who voices Long, the dragon, does his best impression of Robin Williams, who lent his voice to the fast-talking Genie in the 1992 Disney animation. But without the catchy songs and intergener­ational appeal, this movie can only wish to measure up to that classic.

When the story begins, Din (Jimmy Wong) is a genial, imaginativ­e child who soon befriends Li Na (Natasha Liu Bordizzo), a fellow troublemak­er in school. The pair is shown cavorting in a best-friend montage that screeches to a halt when Li Na’s father moves her out of their humble neighborho­od, saying, “We’re off to a better life, and we have to leave this one behind.”

Fast-forward by a decade: A chic Li Na appears on billboards around town, while Din lives in the same cramped apartment with his mother (Constance Wu), and works as a food delivery boy, all the while yearning to win back his partner in crime. If only a magical dragon could help Din bluff his way into Li Na’s moneyed circle.

Here, the movie goes full folk tale. Some moments, such as when Long’s voice turns squeaky-high as he squeezes back into his ittybitty teapot space, seem to explicitly quote “Aladdin,” not to mention the airborne date Din and Li Na have on a flying dragon.

“Wish Dragon” is a transporti­ng experience, but it’s far from a whole new world.

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