Over the Moon review – Netflix family animation is more Disney than Disney

The voices of Cathy Ang, John Cho and Sandra Oh star in this K-poppy, trippy fantasy about a girl who builds a rocket and flies to the moon

Watch your back, Disney; here comes Netflix in Hollywood studio mode, flexing its ambition with an animated family fantasy adventure about a sunny, 13-year-old girl called Fei Fei who flies to the moon in a homemade rocket. It’s a film for the globalised 21st century (and presumably Netflix’s global audience): a Chinese story directed by an American – the veteran Disney animator Glen Keane – and voiced in British by actors of (mostly) east Asian heritage.

Cathy Ang is Fei Fei, who is horrified when her dad (John Cho) brings home a new girlfriend (Sandra Oh) four years after her mum’s death. Fei Fei is a true believer in the mythical goddess Chang’e, who is said to languish on the moon, pining for her mortal lover. Our heroine reasons that if she can prove Chang’e and eternal love really do exist, her dad will have to chuck his girlfriend and devote himself to the memory of her mumThus, as a science whiz, she builds a spaceship. It’s a contrived plot but Keane’s character design is beautifully expressive, adding real emotional force – Fei Fei’s face scrunched in anguish when she realises her dad plans to remarry is very touching.

Watch the trailer for Over the Moon

Things get headspinningly trippy when she makes it to the moon, where the goddess Chang’e turns out to be real and spends her time belting out disco-pop bangers in the style of Katy Perry to a stadium audience of glowing, bubblegum-coloured blobs. In space, they might not be able to hear you scream, but they won’t be able to miss Chang’e electro-driven anthem Ultraluminary. For a while, I was absorbed in this dazzling K-poppy lunar universe with its biker chickens and floating frogs. It’s all very spectacular – but nothing much happens in the second half, and back on Earth, the movie’s message about loss and the power of letting go feels oversweetened, more Disney than Disney.

• Over the Moon is in cinemas from 16 October and on Netflix from 23 October.

Contributor

Cath Clarke

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Every Studio Ghibli film – ranked!
In a bonus edition, we rank all the animated films – from Spirited Away to Ponyo – by the revered Japanese studio, most of which will be available on Netflix from February

Miriam Balanescu

28, Jan, 2020 @2:12 PM

Article image
Ne Zha review – scary demon-child animation
China’s highest-grossing film this year thunders to a bloody climax in a spirited but not-very-child-friendly way

Cath Clarke

05, Sep, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
Valley of the Lanterns review – lacklustre fairytale animation
The story of an old woman’s New Year’s Eve lanterns, which may possess magical powers, has as much appeal as a screensaver

Peter Bradshaw

01, Apr, 2020 @4:00 PM

Article image
StarDog and TurboCat review – laboured time-travel animation
A canine astronaut crashes back to Earth 50 years into the future in this relentless, sentimental adventure for younger kids

Cath Clarke

05, Dec, 2019 @3:00 PM

Article image
The most exciting movies of 2020 – family films
Mulan fights her way out of controversy, Pixar jams with a jazz Coco and Keanu Reeves stars opposite SpongeBob Squarepants in next year’s most promising kids’ flicks

Guardian film

25, Dec, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
Rock Dog 2: Rock Around the Park review – hectic sequel with an all-over-the-place plot
This follow-up to the 2016 flop makes a scattershot attempt at fusing celebrity satire with a riotous musical plot

Phil Hoad

31, Dec, 2021 @10:00 AM

Article image
Disney+ is killing the blockbuster movie with its identikit mega-hits
It may be much-loved, but the streaming service’s winning formula has insidiously changed films into formulaic franchise fare

David Alexander

15, Sep, 2021 @7:00 AM

Article image
Dreambuilders review – blandly bright family animation
A young girl discovers she can infiltrate her snippy stepsister’s dreams in this unengaging adventure for kids

Mike McCahill

15, Jul, 2020 @1:00 PM

Article image
Monster Island review – forgettable family animation
This ploddingly mediocre knockoff about a boy with a monstrous genetic secret is visually uninspired and not much to listen to

Peter Bradshaw

20, Jul, 2017 @10:00 AM

Article image
Boonie Bears: Back to Earth review – Chinese animated blockbuster is messy but fun
Pixar beware: Huida Lin’s film is an entertaining hodgepodge of styles and ideas that could one day turn the animation tide east

Phil Hoad

23, May, 2022 @12:00 PM