MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI film review

French animated MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI is a complete charmer

– By Cate Marquis –

One of this year’s Oscar nominees for Best Animated Feature, the French/Swiss MY LIFE AS A ZUCCHINI (Ma Vie en Courgette) is a complete charmer. The stop-motion children’s film focuses on a lonely boy nicknamed Zucchini (Courgette, in French) who is sent to a group home after his mother’s accidental death. Life had not been good with his hard-drinking mom after his father left them, but the boy clings to his only mementos of them and his childhood: a kite that depicts his little-remembered dad as a superhero, one of his mom’s empty beer cans, and the strange nickname his mother gave him.

Zucchini expects the worst when the kindly policeman who has befriended him, Raymond, takes him to the rural orphanage. At first it seems as if he will get just that – not from the staff, who are consistently warm and understanding, but from one of the kids, Simon. A bully who bosses around the other kids, Simon taunts the new boy, calling him Potato. Simon knows everyone’s sad story and tries to pry Zucchini’s story from him as well. The ethnically-diverse kids are not all orphans but all have experienced some kind of trauma or loss.

The premise sounds grim but the film quickly turns into a warm and funny tale of bonding between unlikely friends, as kids have a way of adapting and finding fun in unexpected places. The film is based on a book, “Autobiography of a Courgette” by Gille Paris. The animation is beautifully done, using wide-eyed puppets whose appearance is both comically surreal and very expressive, and it is supplemented by nice voice acting by the cast, young and adult alike.

READ THE FULL REVIEW AT WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS:
http://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2017/03/life-zucchini-review