First off: An
admission. I held the real ParaNorman the day after watching Laika Animation kid
comedy/ horror “ParaNorman,” the studio’s stop-motion follow up to 2009’s “Coraline.”
I was and remain in awe. This tale of a loner boy (voiced by Kodi Smit-McPhee
of “The Road”) who can see and talk to the spirits of the dead –- including his
own late grandma -- is not as grand, terrifying, or eyeballs-out amazing as the
earlier film, but directors Sam Bell and Chris Butler had no room to go up. Oh,
well. Naturally, Norman’s powers do not sit well with family or teachers, and
when the boy starts seeing tell-tale signs of doom for his witch-obsessed town,
every small trace of luck he has vanishes. Next up: Hero time. This creepy cool
film bucks rules and isn’t afraid to go edgy as Norman once refers to the “F”
bomb without saying it. The attention to detail astounds: Bony fingers peel wood,
and the boy’s zombie slippers are a sight to behold. Only the ending sinks with
too many story pauses and a complete lack of the grandmom who previously said
she’d always protect Norman. Story hiccup? No idea. A marvelous watch. A-
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
ParaNorman (2012)
Labels:
2012,
animation,
children,
Chris Butler,
ghosts,
haunted,
Kodi Smit-McPhee,
Laika,
ParaNorman,
Sam Bell,
stop-motion,
zombies
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