Moomins on the Riviera ***
Dir: Xavier
Picard. Animation with the voices of: Russell Tovey, Tracy Ann Oberman,
Nathaniel Parker, Stephanie Winiecki. U cert, 76 min
Images flood the mind, of pallid, potbellied creatures dragging their marshmallow-soft
forms along the Croisette. But enough about my colleagues on Cannes duty; back
home, we have a brand new Moominmovie to consider. Moomins of the Riviera isn’t the first big-screen runout for Tove Jansson’s
beloved creations, and on paper, it sounds among the least immediately
compelling: this dubbed, hand-animated 2D patchwork of Janssonalia can’t really
compete with, say, 2010’s stopmotion Moomins
and the Comet Chase – still unreleased in the UK – which boasted an
apocalyptic narrative, several Skarsgårds on vocal
duty, and a theme song by Björk.
Early pootling suggests Riviera
did need more oomph – that it simply wasn’t enough, in our age of aggressive
rebooting, just to nudge these characters around their lakeside comfort zone. It
takes Snorkmaiden’s obsession with superstar Audrey Glamour to get us to the
South of France, whereupon matters liven up. Any fears that Moominland has been
tainted by modern celebrity culture – as Greendale was in last year’s Postman Pat: the Movie – should be
allayed by the film’s conception of Riviera glitz, which predates even Bonjour Tristesse: here be duelling
artists and aristocrats, and a Grand Hotel to check into under the assumed name
“de Moomin”.
What follows is composed of bits and skits, some of which likewise go
back a while. Parents will sense what’s coming when Moominmamma (voiced by
Tracy Ann Oberman) is handed a seltzer bottle in a fancy restaurant, even if
their gurgling offspring won’t. The visuals, too, return us to a more innocent,
pre-Pixar aesthetic: in place of dazzling 3D spectacle, we’re offered the
occasional static long shot that, preface-like, maps the chaos of the Moomin
parlour, with its dirty dishes filed away under the furniture, or the precise
positions of the main characters on the island they at one point wash up on.
Gradually, the simplicity yields an idiosyncratic charm. The animators have
been freed to sketch traces of personality into every passing cat, rat and
insect: family dog White Shadow initiates a job swap with his identical cousin
so as to elope. More such flourishes would have been welcome; as it is, the
film will probably hold under-fives longer than it will older siblings. For
accompanying adults, though, its mellow vibe and laissez-faire worldview should
make for a pleasurable throwback: a reminder of the literary teatime telly we
were raised on, rather than more of the eardrum-perforating, retina-scorching,
toy-hawking product we’ve been stuck with.
Moomins on the Riviera is now playing in cinemas nationwide.
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