Few movies have been as hotly anticipated this year as “Brave,” which as the first Pixar movie to revolve around a female heroine, counts as the computer-animated “Hunger Games” of the toddler, tiny and tween sets.
In fact Merida, the
flame-tressed Scottish princess at the heart of this she-ro's quest,
bears more than a little resemblance to “Hunger Games” protagonist
Katniss, right down to the bow and arrow she wields with eagle-eyed
finesse. (Merida is finely voiced by Glasgow native Kelly Macdonald.)
Declaring
early in “Brave” that she will be nobody's queen but her own, Merida is
completely on trend within a spate of revisionist fairy tales in which
princesses are expected to cast off prim passivity and access the hidden
warrior queen within: Her parents may be grooming her for imminent
betrothal, but Merida sees her wedding as nothing more than “the day I
become my mother,” an idea she derides by veritably spitting out that
last word.
After
dispatching her suitors at an archery competition (handsomely staged and
animated by director Mark Andrews and his Pixar cohorts), Merida
embarks on an adventure that pivots, not around the search for true love
but the fractured relationship with her mom — an anti-Freudian twist
that gives “Brave” a novel psychological frisson.
As
refreshing as it is to see family dynamics, rather than romance, define
the fulcrum of the story, the tale that unfolds isn't the most
sophisticated of the Pixar canon. In fact the conflicts, magic spells,
chase sequences and reconciliations feel strangely by-the-book for a
studio so well known for throwing the book out entirely.
What's
more, once those spells have done their work — resulting in Merida's
mother being turned into a huge, hulking bear — the most easily
frightened young filmgoers may find themselves terrified by the fangs,
claws, growls and vicious animal fights that ensue.
But
youngsters with a taste for adventure will no doubt overlook “Brave's”
workmanlike outlines and applaud its spirited, self-reliant heroine, who
proves to be as appealingly unruly as her tumble of Titian curls.
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