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Pixar’s wildly entertaining return plus other new movies to watch this week

Jake Wilson and Sandra Hall
Updated ,first published
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What’s new in cinemas this week

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Hello and welcome to this week’s film review wrap – the big movies landing in cinemas this week.

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(From left) Scenes from Hoppers, I Swear, They Will Kill You and The Magic Faraway Tree.Art by Matt Willis

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Hoppers ★★★★

By Sandra Hall

(PG) 104 minutes

Pixar animations frequently achieve a magical mix of the commonsensical and the completely manic. The studio’s latest film, Hoppers, is typical. It’s pitching a serious environmental message, but this doesn’t mean that it’s delivering a sermon. Far from it. Its serious side is so well camouflaged by the happy absurdities flitting around on its surface that it could be selling snake oil and you wouldn’t mind.

Hoppers: A magical mix of the commonsensical and the completely manic.Disney

There are a few snakes to be glimpsed amid its large and varied cast of animal species, but the stars of the show are the members of a beaver colony, together with their human champion, Mabel. We first meet Mabel as an animal-loving little girl intent on releasing the animals penned up in her school’s science laboratory. And we return to her later as an adult obsessed with saving a forest pond that has been home to beavers for decades.

Her enemy is the local mayor, Jerry Generazzo, a strutting politician with John Hamm’s voice and Gavin Newsom hair, who’s planning to destroy the beavers’ habitat by running a new freeway across it. Little does he know the trouble that awaits him.

They Will Kill You ★★½

By Jake Wilson

(MA) 95 minutes

The Russian director Kirill Sokolov has seen a lot of movies, as I can vouch having seen a fair number of the same movies myself. Set in a version of New York City simulated in Cape Town, his horror-action-comedy extravaganza They Will Kill You is a ghoulish theme park ride that takes a series of sharp left turns, carrying us into different fantastic yet familiar worlds.

It begins as a crime thriller: Asia Reaves (Zazie Beetz), the indomitable heroine, is introduced on the run with her younger sister Maria (Myha’la) one dark and rainy night. The police are on their trail, and Asia winds up shooting their abusive father.

(From left) David Viviers, Tom Felton, Patricia Arquette, Willie Ludik, and Gabe Gabriel in They Will Kill You.AP

But all this is prologue, the narrative then jumping forward a decade to Asia’s release from prison. As we learn subsequently, on the inside she’s acquired mad combat skills, though her prowess with a range of weapons isn’t entirely accounted for in one brief flashback.

I Swear ★★½

By Jake Wilson

(MA) 120 minutes

Recent years have seen a push for “authentic” casting in TV and movies. But so far there appear to have been relatively few complaints about the casting of neurotypical Robert Aramayo as the lead of Kirk Jones’ sometimes touching, mostly conventional biopic I Swear, which chronicles the life of John Davidson, a well-known Scottish campaigner for people with Tourette Syndrome.

Robert Aramayo as John Davidson and Maxine Peake as Dottie.

No doubt, it helps that the film was made with the full co-operation of Davidson, previously the subject of several TV documentaries, starting with John’s Not Mad, shown on the BBC in 1988 when he was in his mid-teens.

I’m in no position to judge the accuracy of Aramayo’s depiction of the symptoms of Tourette’s (or, for that matter, his Scottish accent – he was born and raised in East Yorkshire). What I can say is that he and newcomer Scott Ellis Watson, who plays the young Davidson, have worked hard between them to make the John of the film a fully-fledged character rather than defining him by his tics.

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The Magic Faraway Tree ★★★½

By Sandra Hall

(G) 104 minutes

I doubt that Enid Blyton ever visualised a future in which children scorned books in favour of games and stories which played out on portable screens. But that’s what’s happening in the new film of Blyton’s The Magic Faraway Tree.

The Magic Faraway TreeElysian Film Group

When Polly Thompson (Claire Foy) resigns from her job as an electronics engineer, she and her husband, Tim (Andrew Garfield), a stay-at-home dad, decide to leave the city behind and take their three children, Beth (Delilah Bennett-Cardy), Fran (Billie Gadsdon) and Joe (Phoenix Laroche) to live in the country. This is bad enough but Beth and Joe are distraught to learn that there will be no Wi-Fi. Fran takes the news more phlegmatically, but she rarely expresses any opinion, preferring not to speak at all.

Blyton updates have become common over the years. Denigrated by the literary establishment for their pedestrian prose and lapses into political incorrectness, her books have been subjected to frequent tweaks and tinkerings. Outdated exclamations of the “jolly japes” variety have been expunged along with inadvertent double entendres and intimations of violence no matter how mild. In Faraway Tree, the fearsome schoolmistress, (Rebecca Ferguson) explains that she was known as Dame Slap before she came to the attention of the school inspector. Now corporal punishment is out and Slap has become Snap.

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