Review: 'Arco' presents two views of the future, both of them radiant and perilous, and gives children hope for what's on the other side of the apocalypse
The near future meets the far future in “Arco,” a warmly whimsical story of children, robots and a glimpse at life on the other side of the apocalypses.
The story starts in the 30th century, when humans live in floating cities in the clouds, and travel through time with the aid of rainbow-striped jumpsuits — when every trip looks like the star streaking across the screen in one of those “The More You Know” public service announcements. It’s in this timeline that Arco, a 10-year-old boy voiced in the English dub by Juliano Krue Valdi, dreams of traveling in time like his parents, maybe going back to see the dinosaurs.
His plan is to take his sister’s rainbow suit and take the trip. Something goes wrong, of course, because he’s never flown the suit by himself, and he crash-lands in the year 2075. It’s a time when houses have protective bubbles, to keep the violent storms out. It’s also a time when parents work such long hours that their kids often seem them only as holograms, while the house robots do all the parenting and other jobs.
Arco is befriended by Iris (voiced in English by Romy Fay), a girl about his age, who lives with a robot-tended baby brother. She tries to help Arco figure out a way to get back to his time, while also avoiding a trio of lunatic scientists — voiced by Will Ferrell, Andy Samberg and Flea — who want to uncover the technology that put Arco some 900 years in his own past.
There are scenes in “Arco” — a movie that’s up for an Academy Award in the animated feature category — that are beautifully luminous, as the title hero and his new friend try to bridge the time gap and the fears a child would face in a perilous situation. There also are clever touches, like casting Natalie Portman and Mark Ruffalo as the voices of Iris’s parents, then blending both actors’ voices to create the voice of Mikki, the robot who cares for Iris and her baby brother.
It’s a bit odd, though ultimately refreshing, to deal with issues of environmental collapse in a film made for children. On the other hand, Pixar did it with “Wall-E,” and the little tykes’ brains didn’t explode from confusion. “Arco” presents a world that is in the middle of the planet’s disaster and shows a glimpse of what happens after — a hopeful time where people become rainbows.
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‘Arco’
★★★
Opens Friday, January 30, in theaters. Rated PG for action/peril, mild thematic elements and a brief injury image. Running time: 88 minutes.