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Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Moana (Film Review)

Moana is, naturally, going to be compared to Frozen.  They’re both Disney animated musicals, they’re both CGI, and they’re both critically acclaimed.  Frozen was a monster of a musical, however: making over a billion dollars, ranking as the highest grossing animated film of all time, and being the first Disney animated musical to receive a theatrical sequel (not counting the DisneyToon sequels…).  Such magnitude puts a ton of pressure on Moana, and while the film has paled in comparison regarding box office profits, I regard it as the superior animated musical: musical being the key term.

The story begins with a tale about Maui (Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson), a shapeshifting demigod who stole the mystical stone-shaped heart of the goddess Te Fiti, causing darkness to spread.  Turns out the tale is actually true, and now darkness threatens to destroy the island Motunui—home to a small Polynesian civilization and our film's protagonist Moana (Auli'i Cravalho), daughter and heir to the island’s chief.  Moana discovers she has been chosen by the ocean to find Maui and return the heart of Te Fiti, setting out on a journey full of danger and songs.

Moana’s true strength lies in its soundtrack.  Frozen’s musical claim-to-fame is Let it Go; I’ve listened to the song about a thousand times, and I’ll probably listen to it a thousand more by the decade’s end.  It’s a really great song, yet when you get right down to it, Let it Go is miles above Frozen's remaining numbers.  The film's only other song I enjoy listening to is Love is an Open Door—aside from that, I hardly remember, nor listen to, the remaining tunes: being either forgettable (cough, the troll song, cough) and/or not very catchy.  Moana beats Frozen, not in a single overthrowing number (Let it Go remains the king of CGI musical songs), but with its sizable quantity of six, high-quality songs: all unique and memorable.

The last time a Disney film had this many excellent songs was back in the 90s during the Disney Renaissance.  My personal favorite of the group is the incredibly catchy Your Welcome, sung unexpectedly well by Dwayne Johnson himself (I did not know The Rock could sing so well).  There’s a great opening number (Where You Are), the obligatory—yet nonetheless effective—protagonist’s soliloquy about wanting more (How Far I’ll Go), a lively tune about Moana’s ancestors (We Know the Way), a deliciously fun villain song (Shiny), and a chill-inducing epic climax to Moana’s character development (I Am Moana).  The songs are all terrific, and I’m without doubt that Moana has the best animated musical soundtrack made since the Renaissance.

Aside from the songs, the film’s handling of its protagonist Moana is another one of its strengths.  The film enjoys twisting previous Disney heroine tropes, such as Moana’s father expecting her to become their village’s next head chief—a complete reversal to the subservient positions past Disney fathers expected their daughters to take.  He, alongside Moana’s mom, even spend the entire opening number training Moana to become a good and wise leader (the film giving ample time to showcase that such training paid off).  Comparing Moana's character (directors Ron Clements and John Musker's latest heroine) to The Little Mermaid's Ariel (the directors's earliest heroine) reveals some notable similarities in liveliness and free-spirited nature, along with some stark differences in ambitions and capability.  The writers made certain to make Moana an empowering female figure—she's physically agile, quick-witted, determined, independent, etc.—and while such agenda can feel somewhat forceful at times (usually at the expense of Maui, the film's male lead, appearing buffoonish), Moana has enough blunders across her journey to mostly balance it out.  SPOILERS BEGIN: The ending even diverts from the norm, with Moana and her people embracing their voyager heritage and setting off on journey-like adventures to new islands (as opposed to the story ending with its heroine in a castle and/or back home). SPOILERS END

Moana unfortunately does come with its share of weaknesses, the most blatant being its hit-or-miss comedy.  At times the comedy is witty and/or satirical to previous Disney films (the latter shared with Zootopia)—such as Maui poking fun at Moana’s princess standing—yet on other instances will fall flat and/or be cringe-worthy (particularly with its one liners).  There’s a lack of innovation when it comes to plot direction: taking a lot of concepts from previous Disney films and not utilizing them in any new or refreshing manner.  An additional scene focused on Moana's dad (in-between his daughter's departure and return home) and his change of heart over her mission would have also been a better use of time, and character development, than the unnecessary dream sequence given.  Moana overcomes these faults, however, with likable characters, a delightfully fun midway villain (who gets a humorous after-credits scene), the handling of its protagonist, and a fantastic soundtrack.  Moana is a welcomed addition to the Disney animated library, and a superior musical to its icy blockbuster precursor.