Friday 31 May 2024

Turning Red (2022)

Whether you view it as an analogy about being embarrassed by your parents, a tale about dealing with the trials and tribulations of starting to menstruate, or just accept that a young girl becomes a giant red panda when stressed, Turning Red is a cute and fun film that many should enjoy. Even if the third act skates very close to Teen Wolf.

Rosalie Chiang voices Meilin, a young girl who tries to do everything in a way that her mother (Sandra Oh) would approve of. But all of the good behaviour and good school grades don’t buy her any goodwill when she has the chance to see her favourite boyband in concert. That’s quite stressful and anger-inducing, and it’s not helped by the fact that Meilin now turns into a giant red panda when she gets too stressed. 

Directed by Domee Shi, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Julia Cho, this is a high-concept film that uses the central idea to explore a number of interesting and relatable themes. The transition period when you are a child dealing with changes in your body is the big one, of course, but there is also a look at the pressure parents can put on their children, as well as cycles of behaviour that can cause real harm to different generations. It isn’t just the relationship between parents and children that are the focus though. There is a look at the value of real friendship, the people who can accept you as you are, and there is a lesson about having difficult conversations long before problems start to snowball from something minor into something major.

Chiang is great in the lead role, just the right mix of cute end occasionally annoying, and Oh is equally good as the overbearing and worried mother. There may not be a load of familiar names scattered elsewhere throughout the cast list, but Wai Ching Ho and Orion Lee are both very good, playing family members with very different perspectives on the situation, and Ava Morse, Hyein Park, and Maitreyi Ramakrishnan are a great trio of friends for our lead to be close to. Tristan Allerick Chen is fun as an irritant known as Tyler, and the wonderful James Hong gets to have fun in a small, but crucial, supporting role.

The animation is pretty gorgeous throughout, especially when incorporating some traditional elements that support and influence the style and nature of the tale, there are a few lively songs accompanying some key moments (although they are used to soundtrack the film, which means none of the main characters actually burst into spontaneous songs), and the third act is enjoyably thoughtful and satisfying.

Although not up there with their very best, Turning Red is a real joy, not least because it has approximately 100% more red panda content than most animated features. And that alone is enough to make it worth your time.

8/10

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