Cartoon flick not just Puff
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Dennis Piszkiewicz
I really did not want to see “The Powerpuff Girls Movie,” but my
son Andy did and I owed him one.
If you have young children and cable television, you already know
that this film is based on the Cartoon Network’s animated series of
the same name. It features three pre-school girls with the powers of
superheroes. I doubted that the producers could stretch the half-hour
television program to a full-length feature or get their low-budget
animation to look anything other than cheap on the big screen.
Surprise. This movie is better -- much better -- than I expected. The
story begins when Professor Utonium decides to create three little
girls by using the well-known formula of sugar and spice and
everything nice, but he accidentally adds a splash of “Chemical X” to
the mix.
The Professor gets his three little girls, but unexpectedly they
have superpowers.
What makes “The Powerpuff Girls Movie” a delight, though, is the
artwork. The first scenes are sketched in a 1950s style and colored
in bland pastels. The characters, the Professor and the Powerpuff
Girls, are rendered in simple straight and curved lines. About a
third of the way into the movie, as the plot begins to thicken, the
lines of backgrounds and characters become more complex, the colors
become darker and bolder. When I noticed the change, I thought, “This
is interesting.” Deeper into the story, I watched the images become
wonderfully bizarre, and I thought, “Wow! What were they thinking?”
Then when I saw the heroines sitting on an asteroid in a skyscape
that reminded me of scenes from Stanley Kubrick’s sci-fi classic
“2001: A Space Odyssey,” I began wondering, “What were they smoking?”
My son Andy thought it was great, and I think the best parts were
lost on the kids. Take your children to see it, and leave at home
your notions of what a kids’ movie should be like.
A final note: “The Powerpuff Girls Movie comes with a bonus. The
feature is preceded by a cartoon short titled “Chicken Scratch,”
starring Dexter of Cartoon Network’s “Dexter’s Laboratory” series.
Dexter has the misfortune of waking one morning with chicken pox and
he must decide whether to scratch or not to scratch.
This short has lots of laughs and, like the feature, marvelously
imaginative artwork.
* DENNIS PISZKIEWICZ is a Laguna Beach resident.
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