Two By Two: Overboard! review – second helping of eye-frazzling Noah's ark yarn

More animated antics with the nestrians and grymps, as two of the ark’s denizens discover a desert island paradise where they aren’t made welcome

Although the first Two By Two film from 2015 was almost the cartoon equivalent of a war crime, this sequel is merely annoying for the most part, and even has fleeting moments when it’s sort of OK. That said, the script is still super-derivative and the retina-searing palette should carry a health warning.

Aboard Noah’s ark, which is somehow still stuck at sea since the last film, the assembled species are getting fractious. Dave, the only surviving adult of a race of big, fluffy, psychedelically coloured creatures called the nestrians, tries to keep the peace as head chef by serving a green slop that looks like guacamole on the turn. This, unsurprisingly, satisfies neither the carnivores nor the herbivores.

Dave and his partner Hazel, a pseudo-vulpine creature that’s the last grown grymp, also struggle to raise their two offspring, a wussy boy nestrian named Finny and a bolshie female grymp called Leah. When the two kids fall off the ark in a storm, they end up discovering a desert island populated by dozens of other nestrians. But their leader, a battle-worn matriarch named Patch, is none too keen on letting the ark residents repatriate to this paradise. A pink jellyfish who talks in a high-squeak infantile voice comes to the rescue. There’s a volcano involved as well, and blue gas that comes out of the nestrian bottoms when they fart.

The crosscutting between assorted storylines is especially hectic even by the standards of this kind of film, and younger kids may struggle to keep up, but the animation is a little smoother and more comely than that of its predecessor. Meanwhile, the numerous Irish accents in this English-language version, reflecting the film’s co-production background, makes for a pleasant break from the dubbed-in American phonetics preferred by most cartoons of this nature.

• Two by Two: Overboard! is in cinemas from 23 October.

Contributor

Leslie Felperin

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part review – even more awesome
Duplo figures from outer space threaten the world of Lego in a ceaselessly inventive, eyeball-popping, nonstop gag-storm

Peter Bradshaw

28, Jan, 2019 @3:52 PM

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
Smallfoot review – slapstick-and-snowballs yeti adventure
High in the Himalayas, a village of abominable snowmen make a surprising discovery in this frenetic family animation

Cath Clarke

11, Oct, 2018 @11:00 AM

Article image
Long Way North review – mesmerising Arctic-set ripping yarn
In this moving and deftly realised animation, a feisty Russian girl goes in search of her missing grandfather

Leslie Felperin

17, Jun, 2016 @3:47 PM

Article image
Early Man review – back-of-the-net triumph from Aardman
Nick Park’s hilarious family animation pitches the stone age against the bronze age in a prehistoric football fantasy

Peter Bradshaw

26, Jan, 2018 @12:00 PM

Article image
Spycies review – awkward, eco-anxious kids' animation
Set in a Zootropolis-style republic, the story of an odd-couple pair of secret agents quickly runs out of animal magic

Cath Clarke

12, Feb, 2020 @12:00 PM

Article image
Missing Link review – animated bigfoot caper trips up
Laika studio’s fifth lovingly crafted family movie brims with visual charm and energy but gets bogged down in an unengaging narrative

Cath Clarke

04, Apr, 2019 @12:00 PM

Article image
Spies in Disguise review – Will Smith brings pecks appeal to animated caper
A secret agent ruffles feathers in the espionage world when he is accidentally transformed into a pigeon in this entertaining family adventure

Peter Bradshaw

16, Dec, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
Birds of a Feather review – swifts and seagulls in an unfunny flap
The animated adventures of an orphaned chick growing up on a Côte d’Azur cliff face never takes flight

Cath Clarke

24, Jul, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
Harvie and the Magic Museum review – lacklustre animation
The derivative, hyperactive tale of a boy who brings a collection of dusty puppets to life is marred by gender stereotyping

Cath Clarke

15, Mar, 2019 @7:00 AM