Oscar nominee ‘My Life as a Zucchini’ follows orphan’s adventures
Published 1:30 am Friday, March 10, 2017
The winners of the Best Animated Feature Oscar tend to be the big hits of the year: “Inside Out” and “Frozen” received Academy gold in recent years, for instance.
Since the category was added in 2001, only “Spirited Away,” by the legendary filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki, and “Wallace &Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit” interrupted the series of top-grossing multiplex smashes. What’s interesting about the category is that every year one or two outliers get nominated, just because the slots have to get filled up.
So usually a couple of teeny-tiny films get much, much more attention than they might otherwise have, thanks to the million-watt glare of the Oscar spotlight.
This year’s Oscar went to “Zootopia,” a breezy and lightweight Disney outing that had some hilarious moments and the expected ration of schoolhouse lessons about tolerance. One did not really expect the small fry to win, so it was reward enough that the New Agey parable “The Red Turtle” and the Swiss stop-motion film “My Life as a Zucchini” got their moment in the computer-generated sun.
Both were created in a very different world from the well-tuned Disney factory. “My Life as a Zucchini” is a Swiss-made micro-story that has some of the feel of a low-key children’s book, but with a certain European directness.
This is evident at the beginning of the film, when we meet a boy named Icare, whose mom calls him Zucchini. She does this not because it’s cute, but because she’s mean.
After we get a glimpse of Zucchini’s lonely life, he accidentally kills his mother while she is in one of her beer-fuelled rages — the film’s first startling moment (which happens mostly offscreen).
Zucchini, as he insists on being called, is placed in an orphans’ home with a half-dozen other kids. Various mild adventures ensue: He makes peace with the house bully, the kids go on a winter vacation, and a new girl arrives to brighten Zucchini’s world.
At 70 minutes, there is very little in the way of plot, but screenwriter Celine Sciamma (director of the inventive “Girlhood”) makes each little touch count for something. As for the animation itself, Swiss director Claude Barras goes for an exaggerated stop-motion style: The characters have huge heads, a myriad of hair colors, and gigantic round eyes.
The slightly creepy design owes something to the old Rankin/Bass stop-motion classics like “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” but the mood is closer to the gentle melancholy of “Peanuts,” with which “Zucchini” shares a wistful air and pumpkin-sized craniums.
There’s a dance scene where the orphans — now a unified band of allies — bop along to a Swiss pop song in funny little claymation jerks. It might be the best animated dance since the communal frug in “A Charlie Brown Christmas.”
The distance between this movie and something like “Zootopia” is vast. “My Life as a Zucchini” has lively passages, but it clearly feels no need to pump up its story with set-pieces.
It is unlikely Disney or Pixar will ever again make an animated movie that doesn’t have titanic chase scenes and a spectacular climax, because those have become ingrained in the recipe for box-office success for animated features.
There’s room for both kinds of movies, of course, although the sameness of the formula brings up questions about whether audiences are being trained to appreciate only one kind of movie (over the weekend, Twitter was abuzz with stories about audiences vocally displeased with Marvel’s terrific “Logan,” an old-fashioned movie that chooses not to destroy a city in its final reel).
The quiet “My Life as a Zucchini” is out of step with the hugeness of so much animation, but the nominations for it and “Red Turtle” (they edged out “Finding Dory” and “The Secret Life of Pets,” both of which finished in the top 10 of the 2016 U.S. box-office) suggest that Oscar voters, at least, might be ready for something different.
Technical note: The film will be released locally in an English-dubbed print. I saw the original version, but the casting of good English-speaking actors like Nick Offerman and Amy Sedaris bodes well for the alternate take.
“My Life as a Zucchini” (3 stars)
This Oscar nominee in the Best Animated Feature category looks at an orphan boy who finds companionship in a group home. The movie’s in a very low-key “Peanuts” mode, a pleasant alternative to bigger cartoon pictures.
Rating: PG-13, for subject matter
Showing: SIFF Film Center
