TIFF Review: ‘Wolfwalkers’

Published by
Share
Courtesy of TIFF

Tomm Moore, director of THE SECRET OF KELLS (co-produced with Nora Twomey whose THE BREADWINNER premiered at Toronto International Film Festival in 2017), returns to the festival circuit with WOLFWALKERS.   Co-directed with Ross Stewart (art director on KELLS) and written by Will Collins, the traditionally-animated feature tells the story of Robyn Goodfellow (Honor Kneafsey) and her father Bill (Sean Bean), a hunter in the service of the Lord Protector Cromwell (Simon McBurney).

Situated on the edge of a forest, the town of Kilkenny, Ireland, poses a threat to an enchanted pack of wolves led by mother and daughter, Moll (Maria Doyle Kennedy) and Mebh (Eva Whittaker), a pair of “wolf wakers”.  Though wolves by night and humans by day, I hesitate to refer to these enchanted beings as “werewolves”.  For all intents and purposes they’re not anthropomorphized canines.  They belong to a pack whose life-force intertwines with theirs.  While on the surface the story bears considerable resemblance to Disney’s BRAVE, the latter places emphasis on humans as the status quo.  Here, humans are the intruders.

Robyn’s father fears for her safety.  Children aren’t permitted beyond the wall.  We’re told the wolves are dangerous, though—our instincts tell us—not nearly as much as Cromwell.  As it turns out, Mebh and her pack mates are mischievous, funny, good-natured, and fiercely protective of their habitat.  When an arrow downs Robyn’s falcon, Merlin, Mebh uses her powers to save him.  Unlike so many recycled Disney plots, the protagonist’s transformation here is accidental, but also a gift rather than a curse.  WOLFWALKERS teaches strong lessons about the irrationality of fear, the virtue of cooperation, and the value of coexistence.

Though some of the plot relies on misunderstandings or miscommunications, what’s refreshing is the kinship that quickly forms between the two young girls.  Children are fairly resilient and adaptive to new situations, naturally it follows these two aren’t bogged down by misunderstandings (not for long, anyway) as are father and daughter.  Mebh calls her new friend, “Townie,” as she teaches her the way of the pack.

Like SECRET OF KELLS, the watercolor visuals of WOLFWALKERS accentuates the two worlds: The Lord Protector uses fire and cannons to try to tame the wolves.  In contrast to the swaddling embrace and flowing lines of the forest, the incendiary, urban palette bursts with angular, harsh lines, and rough textures.

Reading between the jagged lines, there’s a subtle commentary on religious fanaticism—monotheism (fire rules all) vs. pantheism (harmony with ecology), or intensive agriculture vs. tribalism.  To the wolves, the human world is smelly, putrid, foretelling of our legacy of trapping ourselves in a never-ending cycle of overconsumption which necessitates perpetual territorial expansion. Apropos, the moral of the story comes down to one exchange:

“I’m afraid,” says Bill. “Afraid that I won’t always be here to protect you. That one day you’ll end up in a cage.”

Robyn replies, “But I already am in a cage.”

Earlier in the picture, the flat animation technique employed to crowd the frame in two ways: civilization is patriarchal, cluttered by humans and tools of destruction; nature is matriarchal, teeming with plant and animal life.  With the repetitious, clockwork motion of a factory, servants galore prepare a feast for the Lord Protector.  Our mind draws the connection between the stirring ladles and swinging hatchets that take down the forest to support the runaway growth of 17th century England during the Protectorate, just before the formation of the Commonwealth of England.  Though it’s never explicitly stated, the movie serves as a kind of allegory to the Cromwells’ brutality toward the Irish.  From the wolves’ vantage point, the city—with its squared perimeter wall—resembles a cage.  Following the Irish Rebellion and Eleven Years War, England had enslaved the Irish.  This period, from 1649 to 1653, is known as the Cromwellian Conquest of Ireland.

This review is from the 45th Toronto International Film Festival. Wolfwalkers will be released in the US by GKIDS at a later date.

Rubin Safaya

Rubin Safaya is a member of the Dallas-Ft. Worth Film Critics Association and an annual guest speaker on international cinema at Richland College’s Multicultural Center. Mr. Safaya is also a listed Tomatometer Critic at Rotten Tomatoes.

Recent Posts

‘Shōgun,’ ‘Ripley,’ ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Earn Casting Society (CSA) Artios Awards Television Nominations

Netflix Leads with 17 Nominations, HBO/MAX with 6 Nominations in Television Categories  Two New Categories Added… Read More

November 1, 2024

Trailer Watch: ‘Unstoppable,’ ‘Paddington in Peru,’ ‘Cruel Intentions,’ ‘Squid Game 2’ and More

This week's trailer round-up gives everything from festival Oscar hopefuls starring Jennifer Lopez, our favorite… Read More

November 1, 2024

‘Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl’ Review: There’s No Place Like Gnome | AFI FEST

For 35 years, an inventor and his trusty, loyal canine have delighted audiences from their… Read More

October 31, 2024

Interview: Kingsley Ben-Adir and Lashana Lynch on Their Work Together in ‘Bob Marley: One Love’ [VIDEO]

In his short 36 years, Bob Marley brought reggae and Jamaican culture to the world,… Read More

October 31, 2024

SFFILM to Screen Mike Leigh’s ‘Hard Truths’ with Marianne Jean-Baptiste in Person

Today, SFFILM announced a special early screening of Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths starring Academy Award-nominated… Read More

October 31, 2024

This website uses cookies.