赛派号

微距拍照手机排行 How Oscar contender 'Arco' imagines not one climate apocalypse but two

The most impressive part of French animated sci-fi epic “Arco,” which took the top prize at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival, is its imaginative world-building. In fact, first-time director Ugo Bienvenu conjures not one but two apocalyptic climate futures for his 2D time-trel odyssey, produced by actor Natalie Portman and distributed by Neon in an English-language version. (The voice cast also boasts the star power of Portman, Will Ferrell, America Ferrera, Flea, Mark Ruffalo and Andy Samberg.)

The first future we encounter in the film, where titular youngster Arco (Juliano Valdi) comes from, takes place around the year 3000. Humanity, which has gained the capability of time trel, lives among the clouds, collecting extinct flora from the past to populate lush, green gardens on elevated platforms while Earth undergoes a healing process below.

When Arco steals his older sister’s magical rainbow cloak to return in time to see dinosaurs, he messes up and instead lands back in 2075. Here he encounters the environmentally raged world of youngster Iris (Romy Fay), where suburbia is protected from extreme natural disasters by bubble shields, and robots, hover scooters and holograms are mainstays. Arco and Iris become fast friends and go on an adventure to get Arco back home.

Advertisement

For Bienvenu, best known for his graphic novels, shorts and music videos, the goal was to present a future filled with hope. “A lot of people he asked me to adapt one of my comics,” he said in October at the Animation Is Film Festival in Hollywood. “But I’m fed up with adaptations. I wanted to show my kids a movie that will print itself strongly in the unconscious. And science fiction depicts a world that is ending most of the time. And I thought: If we’re living in a bad science fiction movie now, let’s create science fiction that would create a better world.”

Bienvenu, who principally worked out of his Remembers studio in Paris, infused the animation with a global visual style that comes from living in Paris, L.A., Mexico, Guatemala, Chad and China. The vivid colors and shape language defined each world in complementary ways, revealing the influences of Hayao Miyazaki’s “Princess Mononoke” and the anime series “Dragon Ball Z.”

A young boy looks out on homes above the clouds in a flooded future world. “Arco.” (Neon)

Yet his first two drawings provided the framework: the rainbow boy Arco and the elevated platform with gardens and clouds. Together they symbolized a simpler, more imaginative world. “I don’t want to lie to kids,” Bienvenu continued. “I think fiction is made to prepare us for what we’re going to go through in our lives. It’s made to train our emotional muscle, and it impacted the way we imagined these two [futures].”

The nightmarish world of Iris was conceived as the present by the director: relatable but technologically advanced. “We’re already in it,” Bienvenu explained. “I embodied AI in Mikki [voiced by Portman and Ruffalo], the nanny bot. He’s not a crude form of AI. He has intelligence, he’s programmed to make Iris’ life better, to give her what she needs: companionship, protection, a playmate. And, to me, holograms are just like Zooms today. And they are living in these little bubbles that protect them. But they are just Band-Aids. We aren’t treating the real problem and that’s people aren’t interacting.”

Although Bienvenu hates AI, Mikki is his forite character. “The audience’s problem is to get out of the movie with their own questions about the world, and if they want to live in this type of world or another,” he said. “So Mikki, which is AI, for me, is great because he can raise kids well.”

Advertisement

There’s a stirring moment when Mikki frantically draws his memories of Iris and Arco on the wall of a ce for posterity. But it is more than an artistic expression. “What makes a human is experience,” Bienvenu emphasized, “and I wanted to say machines are in a world of experience.”

By contrast, Bienvenu conceived of Arco’s elevated platform world as a transcendent Eden. It was biblical and multicultural. “My goal was not to speak to a specific community,” he added. “I wanted to speak to everybody. So I thought about this garden in the sky. I needed a strong image like a logo, because if you define too much of utopias, they stop being utopias. And, thinking like a child, I came up with a cross. It’s simple and visually impacting, it sticks in your head and is easily drawable by a child.”

Although time trel becomes the catalyst for introducing Arco to Iris, and the elevated platform drawing eventually ties both worlds together, Bienvenu actually dislikes the genre. “I didn’t want to do a time-trel movie because it brings so much paradox,” he offered. “It’s too complicated. And if you try to solve it logically, it’s just crap. It was just a concept, and I had to treat it like ‘Peter Pan’ coming from the world of imagination to Iris. Arco embodied imagination. Hing ideas is living imagination. And that is what I want to tell my kids. What ses me in my life is hing ideas.”

More to Read Elio (voice of Yonas Kibreab), left, and Glordon (voice of Remy Edgerly) in Disney and Pixar’s “Elio.” Review Dazed and amused, ‘Elio’ is Pixar on a spaced-out psychedelic trip June 18, 2025 A director and his cinematographer confer on a shot. What scares Ari Aster these days? His answer is dividing Cannes, so we sat down with him May 18, 2025 Brightbill (Kit Connor) and Roz (Lupita N’yongo)  Wild Robot. (Universal Pictures / DreamWorks Animation) A guided tour of the visual world of ‘The Wild Robot’ Feb. 12, 2025

版权声明:本文内容由互联网用户自发贡献,该文观点仅代表作者本人。本站仅提供信息存储空间服务,不拥有所有权,不承担相关法律责任。如发现本站有涉嫌抄袭侵权/违法违规的内容, 请发送邮件至lsinopec@gmail.com举报,一经查实,本站将立刻删除。

上一篇 没有了

下一篇没有了