Sirocco and the Kingdom of the Winds movie review (2023)


The movie jumps into its simple story. Little Juliette has just turned five, and is sent with her eight-year old sister Carmen to the home of her mother’s friend Agnès, who wrote a popular series of children’s fantasy books about “The Kingdom of Winds” in which a sorcerer named Sirocco (who has one visible eye and dresses like a mid-20th century impresario) holds sway by controlling air streams. An encounter with an enchanted toy sweeps them into the storybook world, where they morph into cats (a design that tips its hat to the little boy in Maurice Sendak’s “Where the Wild Things Are“) and get into a series of adventures and misadventures sparked by an accident that angers The Mayor of a community (a big, goofy, somewhat blank-faced goblin-type) and turns the girls into public enemies. As punishment for their mistake, the Mayor hands Juliette over to the opera singer that he idolizes, Selma, and tells Carmen that she’ll have to marry the Mayor’s dumb-as-box-of-rocks son. Only the wizard Sirocco (like the Wizard of Oz before him) can help them escape this awful situation and return home.

It’s hard to describe the simplicity and perfection of the imagery in this movie in a way that captures its calming, centering effect on the viewer. Chieux and his team of hundreds of artists use a wide-and-narrow frame to create enveloping panoramas but also more abstract tableaux that are dependent on repeated shapes and solid colors. And I do mean solid. This is a movie that looks and feels substantive, like a thing that was actually drawn or painted, or made, on paper or a traditional cel, rather than being comprised of weightless ones and zeroes in a computer. There’s a little bit of shading here and there, but for the most part the movie’s color palette is so regimented that some of the compositions look as if they’re constructed from mosaic tiles, or the ovoid or circular glass pieces used in Turkish lampshades. 

There’s no standard design to the magical beings in the movie, just as there weren’t in “Fantastic Planet” or “Yellow Submarine.” It’s a polyglot, a potluck, and all the more playful for that reason. The opera singer Selma has aspects of the water-drinking bird and probably a half-dozen classic toys. There are creatures that look like they came out of a Miyazaki movie (including a spider-legged creature that could be a cousin of the soot creatures in “Spirited Away“) and landscapes that might’ve been pieced together from overlapping pieces of carefully-cut construction paper. The story is mostly “these girls want to get back home,” but there’s a buried layer of secondary inferences and meanings that might not be noticed by young children, such as the theme of transforming grief into art (the author of the Sirocco books has modeled the character of Selma on her sister, and it seems as if it’s her way of bringing her back, if you catch my meaning). It’s a subtle movie in every way, even in its bold imagining of characters and landscapes. 

You can view the original article HERE.

Two Suspects Allegedly Break Into NYC Subway Car, Steal and Crash It
Two Suspects Allegedly Break Into NYC Subway Car, Steal and Crash It
24 Best Paranormal Romance Books
24 Best Paranormal Romance Books
Diddy Prosecutors May Interview New Witnesses In Ongoing Sex Trafficking Probe
Diddy Prosecutors May Interview New Witnesses In Ongoing Sex Trafficking Probe
Paul McCartney, Pharrell Williams, and Bryce Young
Paul McCartney, Pharrell Williams, and Bryce Young
Sabrina Carpenter Is Getting Her Own Netflix Holiday Special
Sabrina Carpenter Is Getting Her Own Netflix Holiday Special
Empire Waist Trailer Tells a Plus-Size Coming-of-Age Tale
Empire Waist Trailer Tells a Plus-Size Coming-of-Age Tale
Pull the String: Larry Karaszewski Remembers “Ed Wood” at 30 | Interviews
Pull the String: Larry Karaszewski Remembers “Ed Wood” at 30 | Interviews
Why Tom Hiddleston’s Netflix Political Thriller Is Still Stuck in Limbo
Why Tom Hiddleston’s Netflix Political Thriller Is Still Stuck in Limbo
Dropkick Murphys share frenetic new single ‘Sirens’ and announce 2025 UK tour
Dropkick Murphys share frenetic new single ‘Sirens’ and announce 2025 UK tour
Jack White releases 10 shows from ‘No Name’ tour on streaming
Jack White releases 10 shows from ‘No Name’ tour on streaming
Zach Bryan’s ‘Drunk’ Taylor Swift Tweets Land Him In BIG Trouble
Zach Bryan’s ‘Drunk’ Taylor Swift Tweets Land Him In BIG Trouble
Liam Gallagher says “there could be a few new faces” in Oasis reunion tour band 
Liam Gallagher says “there could be a few new faces” in Oasis reunion tour band 
Step-by-Step Guide to Getting Your Pussy88 ID Test: A Philosophical Exploration
Step-by-Step Guide to Getting Your Pussy88 ID Test: A Philosophical Exploration
Yankees clinch 7th postseason berth in last 8 seasons
Yankees clinch 7th postseason berth in last 8 seasons
Eagles’ Sirianni defends decision to kick late field goal in MNF loss
Eagles’ Sirianni defends decision to kick late field goal in MNF loss
Cowboys’ Zimmer: ‘I’ve got to do a better job’ after blowout loss
Cowboys’ Zimmer: ‘I’ve got to do a better job’ after blowout loss
Industry’s Season 4 Renewal Proves Earning the Audience’s Trust Pays Off
Industry’s Season 4 Renewal Proves Earning the Audience’s Trust Pays Off
The Batman’s Gotham Was Inspired by ’70s Thriller The French Connection
The Batman’s Gotham Was Inspired by ’70s Thriller The French Connection
HBO’s The Penguin Is Just the Beginning of The Batman Spinoffs
HBO’s The Penguin Is Just the Beginning of The Batman Spinoffs
The Ark Season 2 Episode 10 Review: It Should Have Been You
The Ark Season 2 Episode 10 Review: It Should Have Been You
Kelly Helfman Shares All The COTERIE New York Intel You Need To Know!
Kelly Helfman Shares All The COTERIE New York Intel You Need To Know!
The Front Row Shares Their Top Fashion Month Faux Pas
The Front Row Shares Their Top Fashion Month Faux Pas
Mackage’s Major Fall Campaig, Roberto Cavalli’s Super Finale
Mackage’s Major Fall Campaig, Roberto Cavalli’s Super Finale
Beauty Made In Italy Celebrates Italian Beauty’s Achievements—And Looks To The Future!
Beauty Made In Italy Celebrates Italian Beauty’s Achievements—And Looks To The Future!