“BRAVE” My rating: B (Opens wide on June 22)
100 minutes | MPAA rating: PG
The problem with being Pixar is that in the wake of releases like “The Incredibles” and “Up” the merely good movie seems a bit of a letdown.
There’s really nothing wrong with “Brave,” the animation factory’s latest feature effort. In many if not most of its details it is exemplary.
But it doesn’t offer the big emotional wallop of Pixar’s finest work, and for those of us who found, say, the photo album sequence of “Up” to be one of the most moving film experiences of recent years, it makes for pleasant but hardly overwhelming movie watching.
Disney animated films over the last 20 years have made a point of featuring spunky heroines, but this is the first Pixar effort (Pixar is an artistically independent subsidiary of the Mouse House) to do so.
Our leading lady is Merida (voiced by Kelly Macdonald), a princess in what appears to be pre-Christian Scotland.
The teenaged Merida drives her mother, Queen Elinor (Emma Thompson), to distraction with her tomboyish behavior.
(“A princess does not chortle. Or stuff her gob.”)
She has a wild mane of red hair (it’s like an explosion of orange confetti, and the animators have given every curly strand a life of its own) and likes nothing more than riding full tilt on her horse Angus, sending arrows zapping into targets along her route.
Merida’s father, King Fergus (Billy Connolly), being at heart a mead-swilling good old lad, secretly admires his daughter’s derring-do. But now that she’s come of age, Merida is prime marriage material.
In fact, finding her a husband from among the kingdom’s three other clans is a priority. For years the prospect of a royal marriage is all that has kept the peace.
Merida wants none of it, particularly when she realizes that she can outshoot, outthink and run circles around any of the proffered suitors.
Desperate for a way out, she buys a curse from a doddering old witch in the forest, only to find that it doesn’t work precisely the way she had planned.
I won’t give away the film’s big twist, except to say that I was a bit underwhelmed. At a point in the narrative when “Brave” should be building a bit of heart, it opts for gimmicky silliness.
Which is not to say that there isn’t much to enjoy here.
The animation is spectacularly beautiful, with the computer-rendered “sets” and “locales” creating a magical illusion of reality (at times it seems almost photorealistic, but with just enough painterly touches to remind you that it’s animation).
The characters are, for the most part, rich and hugely enjoyable.
I was particularly taken with Fergus, a giant fireplug of a fellow with one peg leg, the result of an encounter with a legendary bear. Now the King nurses an Ahab-ish obsession with settling his score with the beast.
Merida’s three suitors and their various clansmen are a hoot, with each family exhibiting a peculiar body type and costuming.
And Merida has three bratty younger brothers who are always getting into mischief (“Boys, don’t play with your haggis”).
The writers (there are five of them) and directors (Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman, Steve Purcell) employ some sophisticated narrative techniques, like cutting back and forth between two conversations in different parts of the castle.
And there are some delightful effects, like the magical will-o-the-wisps, pulsating balls of blue flame that haunt the woods.
Finally, one must commend the makers of “Brave” for not going the usual fairy tale route and having Merida find true love in the end. In fact, you can’t help wondering if Merida isn’t Disney/Pixar’s first gay character.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
| Robert W. Butler

I agree with this review with the exception the final comment. I don’t think anything in the text of the story indicates the Merida is a lesbian. Not that it would bother me if she were, but I don’t think that reflection is supported. A wild woman, yes. Possessing huge amazon qualities, yes. The final scene I found so touching as Merida helped her mother cast off societal expectations and find her own Wild Woman. The amazon woman archtype is not and has not been honored by society for centuries. We are waking up and we are here.