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Thursday, May 26, 2022

MUNE: GUARDIAN OF THE MOON

 
Publicity poster for Mune: Guardian of the Moon © Alexandre Heboyan/Benoît Philippon/On Animation Studios/Onyx Films/Kinology/Orange Studio/Paramount Pictures/GKIDS/Universal Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

My movie watch on 2 May 2022 was the thoroughly delightful French 3D/2D computer-animated fantasy film Mune: Guardian of the Moon (=Mune, le Gardien de a  Lune).

Directed by Alexandre Heboyan and Benoît Philippon (with Philippon also providing the original idea that he and Jérôme Fansten then developed into a dialogue-containing movie format), it was originally released in France in 2015 by Paramount Pictures. In 2017, it was then released in the States by GKIDS (and by Universal Pictures internationally), with an English-dubbed cast that includes Rob Lowe and Christian Slater.

Mune: Guardian of the Moon  tells the captivating story of a small planet far away in which the sun has its own guardian, and so too does the moon. On the day when the two old guardians are ceremonially replaced by two new ones, the moon side of the planet's purest creature, a kind of lunar ewe, does not choose the expected humanoid figure, Leeyoon (voiced by Slater), to be the new moon guardian but instead selects a small, inexperienced, blue rodent-like entity named Mune (Joshua J. Ballard).

Unfortunately, however, Mune's inevitable inexperience and timidity cause all manner of disasters at the beginning of his reign, much to the exasperation of Sohone (voiced by Lowe), the new super-confident sun guardian. But soon they face even worse issues when an embittered former sun guardian, Necross (Davey Grant), now inhabiting the Underworld and volcanic in form, steals the sun and plans to destroy it.

Much to their initial mutual disgust, Sohone and Mune, together with a candlewax girl named Glim (Nicole Provost) who is very knowledgeable about the ancient laws, find themselves working together to rescue the sun, defeat Necross, and fix the earlier damage caused to the moon by Mune.

The story itself thereby follows the tried and trusted path of learning to work together, respect one another's talents and differences, become friends etc. But what makes this magical movie stand out so emphatically from such all-too-familiar film fare are its highly imaginative, creative visuals (including the sun and moon being towed through the sky by a pair of gigantic creatures plodding across their respective halves of the planet), but especially the imagery of the planet's lunar half, whose fauna is truly surreal yet also exquisitely designed. I've seen reviews of this film that have likened it to a youngster's version of Avatar, and I understand why after watching it.

Equally, however, as I can personally verify, there is much to enjoy in this movie for adults too, particularly its strange luminous beauty and haunting ethereal music. Mune: Guardian of the Moon is an absolute delight – I loved it!

If you'd like to acquaint yourself with the charismatic dream-like world of Mune and Sohone, be sure to click here in order to view an official Mune: Guardian of the Moon trailer on YouTube.

To view a complete chronological listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.

 

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