Movie Preview: Pixar's Turning Red
Coming to Disney Plus on March 11, Turning Red is the feature
debut of Domee Shi, director of the Oscar-Winning short Bao. Shi
is the first woman to solo direct a film for Pixar. Brenda Chapman
was credited as the co-director of Brave, but she left the project and
Mark Andrews took over. That film was released in 2012, so it's taken a
whole decade until Pixar let another woman direct a film, which is pretty
shocking. Shi is also the only the second person of colour to direct a Pixar
film (after
The Good Dinosaur's Pete Sohn) and the only woman of colour. Given that, Disney's decision to shift the
film to a streaming release isn't a great look, now that cinema attendance is
starting to recover, if not quite to pre-pandemic levels (Spider-Man
aside). And that
Lightyear,
currently still seems set for a theatrical release this summer.
Shi drew on her own experience growing up in a Canadian-Chinese family in Bao, and has done it again to make Turning Red a very personal film. It
centres on 13-year-old Meilin Lee who has to deal with the usual
challenges of adolescence (such as first crushes, school work and a very
overprotective mum) as well as discovering that she has inherited the family
curse which makes her turn into a giant red panda when she gets too emotional
or overexcited. We're going to assume that the second part isn't based on
Shi's real-life experience.
The story takes place in Shi's own childhood hometown of Toronto, Canada (the
city's iconic CN Tower is visible in a number of the trailers),
somewhere around 2002-2003. The time setting allows for all sorts of
period-accurate details that will give millennial viewers in particular lots
of easter eggs and visual references to enjoy. It also explains the ingenious
use of The Backstreet Boys in the trailers.
Turning Red has its own fictional noughties-style boy band in
4*Town. The film will feature three original songs performed by them,
written by Billie Eilish and FINNEAS. Pixar has brought on
Emmy, Grammy and Oscar-winning (two-thirds of the way to an
EGOT) Swedish composer Ludwig Göransson on to write the
score. Göransson is best known for his work on Black Panther and
The Mandalorian.
Mei is voiced by young actress Rosalie Chiang, in her first major role.
She's a relative newcomer to acting, with only three credits prior to landing
the lead here. The iconic Sandra Oh appears as Mei's mother
Ming and Orion Lee plays her father, Jin. Mei's gang of
gal pals are played by Ava Morse as Miriam,
Maitreyi Ramakrishnan as Priya, and Hyein Park as
Abby. British singer Anne Marie will appear as Mei's classmate
Lauren, a "Red Panda super-fan", The cast also includes respected Asian
actors James Hong and Wai Ching Ho.
It's no coincidence that the Red Panda problem sets in at this age, as it's
pretty clearly an allegory for adolescence." We’re basically using the red
panda as an adorable metaphor for the very unadorable phenomenon of puberty,"
says Shi. That alone makes its pretty fresh territory for Pixar, and for
Hollywood feature animation generally, which still are dominated by stories
from the male perspective for the most part. Turning Red is also the first
film at Pixar to be both written and directed by women- Shi wrote the
screenplay alongside Julia Cho.
Mei is quite different from your typical Pixar lead character. She's nerdy,
goofy, weird and just confidently, comfortably herself. "When I was her age,
I was Mei," says Chii. " I was writing Harry Potter fan-fiction,
passionately drawing fan art. I had a secret sketchbook that my parents did
not know about. Now that I’m grown, I know so many amazing women who all had
nerdy
beginnings. I just wanted to show that with Mei."
Mei's loyal group of friends is a deliberate attempt to avoid the
"mean girl" trope we see so often. "Domee really wanted to do something
different," Cho says. "Mei’s friends don’t judge
each other or put each other down. When you really look at a lot of
friendships-mine,
my daughter’s or Domee’s within Pixar-they're nurturing and supportive. I love
emphasizing that component of female friendships because for too long the
narrative
has been that we’re competitive, hierarchical and we tear each other down. The
truth is
different. And that became a really important part of the movie. "
Turning Red will be streaming on Disney Plus everywhere the platform is
available from Wednesday, March 11, with a cinema release planned in
countries where it hasn't arrived yet (except Russia). It will also screen for
a one-week engagement at Hollywood's prestigious
El Capitan Theatre from the day of release. A making-of documentary
called Embrace The Panda: Making Turning Red will also release on March
11.
Disney and Pixar’s “Turning Red” introduces Mei Lee (voice of Rosalie Chiang), a confident, dorky 13-year-old torn between staying her mother’s dutiful daughter and the chaos of adolescence. Her protective, if not slightly overbearing mother, Ming (voice of Sandra Oh), is never far from her daughter—an unfortunate reality for the teenager. And as if changes to her interests, relationships and body weren’t enough, whenever she gets too excited (which is practically ALWAYS), she “poofs” into a giant red panda! Directed by Academy Award® winner Domee Shi (Pixar short “Bao”) and produced by Lindsey Collins “Turning Red launches exclusively on Disney+ on March
11, 2022.
Turning Red Teaser
Turning Red Trailer
Clips
Featurettes
Music Video
Gallery: Posters and Promotions
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