I found it adequately funny (but not laugh out loud funny). A typical gag is something about "eyes inside your head" or "everybody hide in your shell" (slugs of course don't have shells). Comic relief is provided by a tag team of a snail and a slug. (In fact this movie is often relegated to "kids film" or "family film", which makes me feel a little silly for enjoying it.) The ending is positive but not saccharine - there's resolution. There are not a lot of the ironic jokes that have been prominent in many recent animations. The typical joke is mostly visual, developing slowly over many seconds - no one-liners here. It proceeds organically, eventually incorporating pretty much everything that happened earlier (even things that appeared to be already completed or even unrelated). It's a seamless melding of realities (such as a brusque taxi driver) with fantasy (tiny beings riding hummingbirds?). There isn't any notable music nor abstract visual patterns nor references to fairy tales either, other things frequently associated with animations. and not because adults will see a different film as they understand the more salacious meaning of double entendres - there aren't any. From my aged (about 60) perspective, it seems suitable and enjoyable for all ages (although it's rated PG). etc.- are also deployed virtuosic-ally in the places the storyline calls for them. All the animation effects technology has already conquered -fur, musculature, waves, droplets, rain, crowds, flying, moving cameras, etc. And we see the slight shifts in color that signal the beginning of more decay or more growth. We see growth meristems probing for the best direction and expanding little by little. We see the whole process of burls developing on live trees in just a few seconds over and over. Vegetation unfurls and extends as we watch, and it all seems perfectly realistic and believable. The plants are real ones we're familiar with (not imagined ones) scenes are incredibly detailed (not one fern but tens of them, not one blossom but hundreds) biological growth and decay is of individual plants seen up close (not a very long shot across a whole valley) and all the vibrant yet subtle colors appear in nature (not a fantasy world). (I watched it in 2D, and don't know what 3D is like.) But visually it outstrips all of those. It brought to mind i) nature scenes on Pandora in "Avatar", ii) lush vegetation jungle scenes from "Up!", iii) the whole valley turning green at the end of "Princess Mononoke", and iv) the infinitely graded colors in "Oz the Great and Powerful". This is without a doubt the most fantastic visual animation I've ever seen.
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