6. If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Song Sung Blue, Weapons, The Voice of Hind Rajab
This year's remaining Animated Feature nominees are:
1 nomination
- Animated Feature
Cast: Margot Ringard, Oldra Oscar Tresanini, Nathanaël Perrot, Alma Jodorowsky, Swann Arlaud, Vincent Macaigne, Louis Garrel, William Lebghil, Sophie Mas, Frédérique Cantrel, Oxmo Puccino
This is wonderful. There's nothing like it this year, and it's imaginative and narratively innovative in a way that I wasn't expecting at all. This is—finally—a movie about kids that is not about the anxieties of parenting. Instead it's about friendship and the need to explore, and the desire to be allowed to make decisions for oneself as a young person. The film exists in two very different futures from our own, but they don't feel very far away at all, and this makes Arco also feel richly related to our own time despite being set in the distant future. What's more, Arco also continues a really powerful conversation about artificial intelligence, the humanity of robots, labor, and education. This just has a great deal going for it. Everyone else thinks so too because this film has won the "Best Animated Feature" award from nearly every critic group. I don't think it will win the Oscar, but it's a worthy contender for it, and it might surprise on Oscar night after all. Unfortunately, I had to see this in the theatre with the American cast—I know why they do this: it's really hard for kids to read subtitles, and this is definitely a movie for kids—but I really wanted to see it in the theatre. If you're watching at home, I recommend listening to the French cast.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Animated Feature
My rating: #16 out of 95
1 nomination
Cast: Yonas Kibreab, Remy Edgerly, Zoe Saldaña, Brad Garrett, Brandon Moon, Jameela Jamil, Young Dylan, Jake T. Getman, Matthias Schweighöfer, Ana de la Reguera, Atsuko Okatsuka, Shirley Henderson, Naomi Watanabe, Brendan Hunt, Anissa Borrego, Shelby Young, Bob Peterson, Kate Mulgrew, Tamara Tunie
I shared some of my thoughts on this movie here already. Elio is an absolute delight, and it's very funny. The two kids at the center of this movie, little Elio and little Glordon (a very sweet alien who just doesn't want to grow up and be mean and uncaring and violent), are truly adorable and I loved them both. I don't think a lot of people went to see this movie for some reason, but everyone is missing out. This is very fun and I laughed out loud numerous times. The animated features this year are pretty good, with only one that's middle of the road. I think this category is finally getting to a respectable place.
Will win: N/A
Could win: Animated Feature
My rating: #23 out of 95
1 nomination
Cast: Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Ke Huy Quan, Fortune Feimster, Andy Samberg, David Strathairn, Idris Elba, Shakira, Patrick Warburton, Quinta Brunson, Danny Trejo, Nate Torrence, Bonnie Hunt, Don Lake, Michelle Gomez, David Fane, Joe Anoa'i, Phil Brooks, Stephanie Beatriz, Wilmer Valderrama, Jean Reno, Alan Tudyk, Macaulay Culkin, Brenda Song, John Leguizamo
This was unobjectionable and unremarkable. It even got a few laughs out of me! As it turns out, the people of Zootopia need to learn all of the same lessons in film 2 that they really ought to have learned in film 1. As with the first film, this Zootopia has a solid mystery to it, and it moves quickly with lots of fun action. It's way more sentimental than it needs to be. But I guess the makers of Zootopia believe that sentimentality is how one fights racism. In any case, this is mostly fine.
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #67 out of 95
(Little Amélie or the Character of Rain)
1 nomination
Cast: Loïse Charpentier, Victoria Grobois, Yumi Fujimori, Cathy Cerda, Marc Arnaud, Laëtitia Coryn, Haylee Issembourg, Isaac Schoumsky
I read somewhere that critics have understood this movie to be about nostalgia, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. What Amélie et la Métaphysique des Tubes tries to do is give us the narcissism and wonder of a child. It’s a beautiful film drawn in gorgeous 2D animation in pastel hues with the character almost of pastels themselves. In no way is this about adults or looking back. Instead what we get is the perspective of the child herself. What I appreciated so much about Amélie is that it’s about the narcissism and entitlement with which we are born—and the realization that we must inevitably come to: that the world doesn’t exist for us alone. This realization, of course, comes with a feeling of loss, and by the end of the film what we have come to is a way to process that loss. It’s quite a beautiful little piece..
Will win: N/A
Could win: N/A
My rating: #35 out of 95
More Oscar posts:
4. F1, Blue Moon, It Was Just an Accident6. If I Had Legs I'd Kick You, Song Sung Blue, Weapons, The Voice of Hind Rajab
8. Animated Short Films
9. Jurassic World: Rebirth, The Lost Bus, Kokuho, The Smashing Machine
10. The Ugly Stepsister, Diane Warren: Relentless, Viva Verdi!



















