Five stars. Rated G, and suitable for all ages
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 11.6.15
It’s truly amazing.
Philippe Petit’s 1974 wire-walk
between the World Trade Center’s Twin Towers notwithstanding, The Peanuts
Movie is the best balancing act I’ve ever seen: an unerringly precise blend of
Charles M. Schulz’s gentle, four-panel elegance with the high-spirited vitality
of 21st century computer animation.
Lucy, far right, is disgusted when, after Charlie Brown's reputation takes a sudden upswing, most of their classmates decide to imitate his "recipe for success." |
It’s impossible to imagine the
discussions, conferences, impassioned arguments and frustrated hair-pulling
that must have taken place behind the scenes — Schulz’s family and artistic
guardians on one side, Blue Sky Studios and 20th Century Fox on the other — in
order to deliver this miracle baby. One false step at any of scores of moments
in the finished film, and the result would have failed to satisfy either camp.
But miracle it is, with the
lion’s share of credit going to director Steve Martino, scripters Craig Schulz,
Bryan Schulz and Cornelius Uliano, and vice president of 20th Century Fox
Animation Ralph Millero. They, in turn, are quick to acknowledge the massive
Blue Sky team that embraced the challenge of wholly inhabiting Charles Schulz’s
Peanuts “atmosphere,” in order to faithfully adapt it for the sensibilities of
modern moviegoers.
This film will live forever. Most
immediately, though, it will create a whole new generation of fans.
Full disclosure demands an
acknowledgment that I’m far from impartial, as a perusal of my publishing CV
will reveal. If anything, though, that makes me hyper-critical, because I count
myself among those devoted to preserving Charles Schulz’s role in the creation
that has grown far, far larger than the humble newspaper medium that gave it
birth.
I take second place to nobody,
for example, when it comes to the fan-frenzy that erupted during television’s
original run of Star Trek, and the excitement with which I greeted the
initial news of the show’s first big-screen adaptation. But that didn’t stop me
from ripping into the result — 1979’s Star Trek: The Motion(less) Picture —
and branding it a leaden, overwrought stiff. (To this day, I’ve never gotten
more hate mail for a single review.)
My razors thus were sharpened, my
thesaurus of vitriolic adjectives at the ready, as “The Peanuts Movie” came
ever closer to release.
The sword remains sheathed,
thesaurus tossed aside.
What’s not to love?
As Craig Schulz has explained,
while recounting this film’s eight-year journey from rough outline to finished
cinematic jewel, he never wavered from his insistence that its heart and soul
would rely on story, story, story. A narrative that would focus on the virtues
that imbue good ol’ Charlie Brown. A tender moral that hearkens back to
Hollywood’s Golden Age, when directors such as Frank Capra could make
inspirational films without them being branded as “corny.”
Yes, we live today in a more
cynical era — a more troubled time — which simply amplifies our need for the
world as Charles Schulz saw it, and which has been retained here
unapologetically, while getting a shiny new polish.
But not so burnished that the
resulting glow obscures the essential elements that longtime fans have
cherished, in many cases, for their entire lives. So while this is perhaps the
most visually gorgeous CGI film yet made — with a lush, painterly quality that
often evokes the hand-drawn splendor of a Studio Ghibli Miyazaki epic — The
Peanuts Movie repeatedly acknowledges, sometimes almost subliminally, the nimble
artistic line work that became Charles Schulz’s signature.
The film thus opens with the
rendering of a newspaper strip panel of a winter scene, the pen-and-ink snow
smoothly morphing into 3D CGI flakes, thus “drawing us into” the neighborhood
inhabited by Charlie Brown and his friends. In a deliberate nod to TV’s A
Charlie Brown Christmas, with the Vince Guaraldi Trio’s soft bossa nova
backdrop, we meet the gang as they skate on a frozen pond.
They’re all here, even long-ago
newspaper strip regulars such as Violet and the original Patty, both of whom
were phased out in the late 1960s. Pig-Pen’s dust cloud never has looked more
fully dimensioned (or dirtier); Snoopy’s antics never have been livelier.
Mild sight gags and snatches of
dialog are lifted directly from classic Peanuts strips; Craig Schulz includes
bits of his father’s droll wit whenever possible.
The plot smoothly eases into two
parallel events in Charlie Brown’s life: his desire to shed the blockhead
image, in the eyes of his friends — to do something successful — and the degree
to which this goal is influenced by a moving van that pulls up to the house
directly across the street from his own. One of the new neighbors: a certain
Little Red-Haired Girl who, with appropriate cinematic coyness, isn’t glimpsed
sufficiently to reveal her face.
Cue Charlie Brown’s even more
frantic determination to achieve personal greatness, as his heart goes
thumpity-thump: efforts that propel him into dance lessons, working up an act
for a school talent show, and even academic expertise. Lucy jeers such resolve;
Linus quietly encourages it; Sally bounces off the walls; Peppermint Patty
flirts shamelessly when not falling asleep in class.
Snoopy’s active imagination,
meanwhile, has been provoked by a runaway model WWI German Fokker (the fugitive
model itself becoming an ongoing sight gag as the film progresses). We’re thus
hurled into a parallel storyline wherein Snoopy, as the WWI Flying Ace — ably
assisted by a ground crew consisting of Woodstock and his itty-bitty birdie
buddies — takes to the skies in order to hunt down the infamous Red Baron.
The stakes here become even more
dire with the arrival of Fifi, a pink-ribboned pooch flying her own Allied
plane, whose flirtatious gaze entrances the world-famous beagle. (Fifi is
“voiced” by surprise guest star Kristin Chenoweth, although you’d be
hard-pressed to identify her.)
We thus get two movies for the
price of one, as Martino cross-cuts between these contrasting dramas. The tone,
pacing and even the very look of each “half” is distinct.
Charlie Brown’s travails unfold
in the relaxed fashion of old-style moviemaking, with leisurely edits, slow
double-takes, and suspenseful pauses; never has a doorbell — as just one
example — waited so long to be rung. These “real world” scenes, in Charlie
Brown’s neighborhood and at school, are styled with muted background colors, in
order to help the more vibrant characters “pop” in each scene.
Snoopy’s flights of fancy, in perceptible
contrast, push the deeper spectrum of the color palette, which in turn grants
greater contrast to the primarily white Snoopy and Fifi. As Snoopy’s various
skirmishes with the Red Baron roar across Western European skies, cityscapes
beneath take on a pastel — and heightened-reality — quality.
The film’s pacing also shifts
during Snoopy’s aerial exploits, adopting the rat-a-tat editing more
characteristic of modern animated films (or vintage Warner Bros. cartoons, with
their frenzied action sequences).
And if the strafing,
barrel-rolling airplanes seem to move with impressive authenticity —
particularly in this film’s excellent use of 3D — that’s no accident; Craig
Schulz is a longtime pilot and vintage plane aficionado. In a further
indication of attention to detail, supervising sound editor/mixer Randy Thom
and his crew traveled to Santa Rosa’s Pacific Coast Air Museum, to record
Schulz doing several runway passes in his biplane, just to get truly authentic
sound effects.
Note, though, that despite all of
Snoopy’s furious action atop his Sopwith Camel, we never see the lower portion
of the doghouse ... because, of course, it never really leaves the ground. How
could it, since all the combat occurs only in Snoopy’s imagination? (Or is that
actually true? Charles Schulz always was adept at messing with our existential
minds.)
The Peanuts Movie is laden with
clever, crafty little touches like that, not to mention a wealth of “Easter
eggs” that will be appreciated by longtime fans. As just one example, Charles
Schulz’s linework often pops up when a given character’s eyes, nose and mouth display
surprise or agitation. But it’s blink-and-you’ll-miss-it fleeting; I only
became certain after glimpsing it several times.
These touches are vital in terms
of the film’s overall look — I also love the “plush quality” of Snoopy’s fur — which
in turn serves the core storyline that pushes Charlie Brown to ever increasing
degrees of angst, as he faces an escalating series of moral choices between
what he’d like to do ... and what he should do. Everything builds to a potent,
aw-shucks climax on par with the best poignant finales in all of Peanuts
history.
(I’ve always been particularly
fond of the closing scenes in Charlie Brown’s All-Stars and 1969’s first
big-screen Peanuts movie, A Boy Named Charlie Brown.)
Rest assured, though; the
scripting trio also includes plenty of hilarious sight gags, snarky retorts and
just-plain-fun stuff, often at the expense of Charlie Brown’s dignity, and
frequently as a result of Snoopy’s mischievous interference. Extended sequences
of merriment play out against infectious, toe-tapping pop tunes by Meghan
Trainor and Flo Rida; the bulk of the orchestral underscore — most memorably
the WWI Flying Ace’s aerial exploits — comes from film composer Christophe
Beck.
And yes, as already noted,
Martino also choreographs numerous scenes to Guaraldi’s most iconic Peanuts
themes.
When the final scene freezes,
with Charlie Brown and his friends in a joyous cluster, and the dazzling 3D
artwork morphs back to Charles M. Schulz’s pen-and-ink illustration ... well,
that’s a powerful moment. And it gets even more powerful, when Schulz’s
familiar signature writes itself in the lower right corner. Don’t be surprised
if you burst into tears.
Oh, and do hang around until the
very end of the closing credits. You’ll be rewarded with one more droll sight
gag.
1 comment:
It was perfect!
Post a Comment