Pete's Dragon
David Lowery
The story: After his parents die in a car
crash, Pete (Oakes Fegley as the 11-year-old and Levi Alexander as the
five-year-old at the time of the accident) comes face to face with a dragon that
he names Elliott. Six years later, the forest they live in is being cleared and
lumberjack Gavin (Karl Urban) leads an expedition to track down Elliott.
Meanwhile, park ranger Grace Meacham’s (Bryce Dallas Howard) maternal instinct
is aroused when she comes across Pete. A remake of the 1977 musical live-action/
animated film of the same name.
The animated dragon in the 1977 film was
goofy-looking with a mop of red hair and an impressive belly. For this
live-action flick, Elliott has been completely reimagined.
While audiences
today might be more familiar with the scaly, reptilian creatures of the
fantasy
television blockbuster Game Of Thrones or the movie series adaptation of The Hobbit (2012- 2014), moviegoers get quite a different kind
of dragon in this feel-good family film.
Elliott is green and furry and behaves like an overgrown puppy, be it bolting through the forest with
abandon or chasing after his tail. Little details, such as the coat of
fur being ruffled by the wind and a prominent chipped fang, help to bring him to
life.
Thankfully, the film-makers resisted giving a speaking voice to the
dragon, who communicates through expressive grunts and growls.
What makes the
film tick is Oakes as Pete and the connection that he has
with Elliott.
While he seems to have a remarkable command of English despite being essentially raised by an animal, the little boy touchingly
mimics the dragon by howling when he is upset.
Bryce Dallas Howard, who recently faced down nastier creatures in Jurassic World (2015), provides maternal warmth, while screen legend Robert Redford plays her
father, who once encountered
Elliott, with a twinkle in his eye.
With the
trigger-happy Gavin, writer-director David Lowery (Ain’t Them Bodies Saints,
2013) seems to be taking aim at how man’s first instinct, when confronted
with the unknown, is to pick up a gun and shoot at it.
Still, it is safe for
parents to take their little ones to watch Pete’s Dragon. The bigger lessons
in this sweet and gentle film are about the family you make, the ties that
bind and the fact that you can be a good friend, regardless of your
size.
(ST)