Animation feature film “Arco”, which was nominated for Best Animation Film Oscar in last month, is often quite engaging for its lovely cell animation style to remember. Although it is rather thin in terms of story and characters, this notable flaw is mostly compensated by a number of strong visual moments in the film, and its short running time (89 minutes) will quickly pass as you enjoy its vivid mood and gorgeous details.
The opening part of the film is set in a world of distant future where people dwell on high towers due to some massive global climate disruption which happened many years ago. It is 2932, and time travel is not only possible but also quite accessible, but Arco (voiced by Oscar Tresanini), a 10-year-old boy living with his parents and older sister, is very frustrated because he is still not allowed to do time travel due to the strict age limit on time travel.
In the end, Arco decides to do something very risky. When his parents and older sister are sleeping inside their little residence, he steals his older sister’s cape for time travel, and then he boldly attempts to fly up in the sky for his time travel. While he manages to fly in the end, he soon finds himself in a perilous situation way over his head, and that is how he tumbles into a certain time point in the past.
Meanwhile, we also get to know Iris (voiced by Margot Ringard Oldra), a young girl living in some suburban neighborhood during that time point. It is 2075, and Iris’ daily life is filled with a lot of futuristic details including robots and holograms, and we also observe how her world is riddled with the devastating catastrophes caused by the ongoing global climate disruption.
Because her parents are often absent due to their busy work, Iris cannot help but feel lonely at her home even though she is often assisted by a robot whose main job is taking care of her infant younger brother. When she sneaks out of her school on one day, she spots something falling from the sky, and that is how she comes upon the unconscious body of Arco. Instinctively sensing that he needs some help, she takes him to her house, and Arco is certainly quite perplexed when he regains his consciousness later.
Nevertheless, it does not take much time for Arco and Iris to befriend each other. Without any doubt, she accepts and then believes him when he tells her where he is actually from, and she sincerely wants to help him as much as possible. He happened to lose a little precious object crucial for his time travel, but there may be some other option to activate his cape, and we later get an amusing scene where Iris sets up a possible condition for Arco’s time travel outside her family house.
In the meantime, the plot thickens a bit via several supporting characters in the story. That robot in Iris’ house suddenly has a serious malfunction as trying to process the existence of Arco, and that leads to some unwelcome attention from the outside world. In case of a neighborhood boy clearly interested in getting closer to Iris, he soon comes to notice Arco in her house, but he does not suspect much when she introduces Arco as a cousin to him later.
And there are also three dudes who are quite serious about tracking down Arco but often look as goofy as the Three Stooges. The story always loses its focus whenever it depicts another silly moment from these bumbling guys, so there is not much tension in the story when they seem to be going after Arco and Iris later in the story.
During the last act, the screenplay by director Ugo Bienvenu and his co-writer/co-producer Félix de Givry stumbles a bit and then loses some of its narrative momentum, but the film continues to hold our attention as doling out nice visual moments as before. Often reminiscent of those classic animation films of Hayao Miyazaki, the cell animation style of the film is pleasant and wonderful to watch on the whole, and you will often savor small and big details vividly presented on the screen.
I must point out that the main characters in the film are more or less than plot elements to roll, but the story sometimes provides genuine emotional moments along the story. While the developing friendship between Iris and Arco is illustrated with unadorned sweetness, there is an unexpectedly moving moment when Iris’ robot does much more than what it is programmed to do later in the story, and you will also be touched by the little poignancy shown from its predictable but effective ending.
In conclusion, “Arco” is worthwhile to watch mainly for its wonderful animation style and mood, and Bienvenu, who previously made several short animations films before making a feature film debut here, demonstrates that he is another new promising animation filmmaker to watch. According to the IMDB trivia, he really tried hard along with de Givry for financing this little personal project of theirs before eventually getting fully financed thanks to their co-producer Natalie Portman, and now he certainly becomes more prominent than before thanks to his recent Oscar nomination. In my humble opinion, it will be interesting to see what he will do next after this commendable career breakthrough, and I will surely have some expectation on that.













































