Gillipedia Official Rating: So wholesome I can’t even make a joke in this tagline
Score: 10/10
I recently had the opportunity to do a
bit of traveling for work, and part of that ritual is watching movies on
flights. While I’m debating reviewing some of the others I watched, there was
one clear standout, Marcel the Shell with Shoes On. This movie oozes
wholesome content through a brisk runtime. For 90 minutes straight, I was grinning
from ear to ear, even possibly with a tear in my eye from time to time.
The best way to describe the first
dozen minutes or so in terms of tone is honestly a bit like the opening of Up.
There’s this montage-like quality as we’re introduced to our here, Marcel, who
is… a shell… with shoes on. He’s only one-inch tall and lives in a suburban
two-story house. His dialogue feels very stream of conscious as we’re guided
through the house and watch how Marcel gets by on a daily basis— traveling
inside a tennis ball or using a stand mixer attached to string to shake a tree
to get fruit to drop. And where does this supply of string come from? Marcel’s
answers and solutions to everything is always innocent, creative, and even a
bit clever.
There’s a couple other players to
know. Marcel isn’t the only living inanimate object. There’s an older shell
that Marcel calls Nana Connie, and a young man named Dean. It’s also worth
mentioning at this point how the film actually looks. The house is live-action
as is our human Dean, but Marcel and Nana are a mix of stop-motion and
animation. Dean rents out the house as an AirBnB until he finds a new
apartment, and upon discovery of Marcel, decides that he would make the great
subject of a documentary. And that’s the style of how the film is shot. And it’s
gorgeous. Playing with depth perception and those sun rays gleaming off a
slightly dusty service, and then incorporating our adorable stop-motion
protagonist is so thoughtfully crafted. This is an A24 film and comes fully
with the expectations of how that studio’s films should look.
Not only is the film endlessly
wholesome, it’s surprisingly funny. Marcel has some great lines, but there’s
many small moments too. My favorite example is Dean helping Marcel make a phone
call. Marcel leaps from number to number on Dean’s smart phone until it starts
ringing. We listen to the call while just to the side Nana is watching the
scene unfold. And she’s casually standing on a laptop that’s open to a word
doc, and since she’s on the “z” key, the doc slowly fills with “zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz”.
It’s not the focus of the shot, they never call it out or bring attention to
it, but it’s a fun, clever idea executed and timed so well.
If I had to stoop low enough to find
any critiques, it’s that the way the small conflict in the middle of the film
plays out is a bit pedestrian and easy to predict where the movie is headed.
Part of this involves Dean uploading a segment to YouTube and Marcel gaining
popularity. Stupidly, Dean includes the outside of the house and this brings
unwanted attention once the public figures out where the house is. Marcel feels
responsible for something that happens a bit later, but Dean never remarks about
this.
But that’s not nearly enough for me to
not recommend this film. The ending made me so happy that I genuinely was
starting to tear up. I honestly haven’t kept up too much with animated films
recently, but this is easily the best animated film of the year, and I’d also
say it’s the most wholesome film I’ve seen in the last decade. It’s an
incredible feat of filmmaking that the entire family will enjoy. I am a huge
fan of many genres including films like Hereditary that fill you with dread,
but you have to balance that out with good-feeling movies, and there’s no
better choice than this film. Tis the season to put a smile on your face, and
you’ll do just that by watching this movie. Cheers, everyone.
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