It might sound a bit oxymoronic, but
ask any wizard, witch, or Istar and they will tell you that magic needs to
follow a certain set of rules. What these rules are varies from work to work,
but the underlying principle should stay the same: perform a certain action,
expect a certain reaction. When this doesn’t happen, the illusion of a
fictional world being possible is shattered and the real force holding that
universe together can be seen behind the cracks—narrative necessity.
Disney’s Encanto lacks a “why” for most of its fantastical
narrative of events, leaving one to question the internal logic of the magic,
but it is a predictably fun animated feature from the House of Mouse despite
this lack of clear cause-and-effect.
Encanto is
the story of a more literal magical house and the spectacularly gifted Madrigal
family that lives within. When the magic of the miracle starts to fade, it
falls to the only non-superpowered family member, the quirky Mirabel (voiced by
Stephanie Beatriz of Brooklyn Nine-Nine fame) to save it. The
only problem is that the why of anything is never clearly explained
in this movie. Why was the magic fading? What actions cause the resolution of
the film to happen? Does Mirabel actually do anything to save it, or is she just
along for the ride? Maybe I’m missing something, but this movie left me
confused as to what exactly the plot was. You don’t need to explain the magic,
but maybe tell me why certain things happen.
Perhaps
the house and the magic are there to simply act as an allegory for the themes
the movie explores, such as acceptance of others as they are, being more than
the gifts you’ve been blessed with, etc. These themes were welcome and
supplement what might have been an otherwise underwhelming plot. Helping
matters are the lively soundtrack written by Lin-Manuel Miranda, the beautiful
animation, and an endearing cast of characters. It is a large cast, too, with a
great number of main characters that are nonetheless expertly juggled so
everyone has a chance to shine and maybe even evolve a bit.
Less
welcome are a couple of elements that made it feel like Disney was sometimes
going through a checklist of expectations and dutifully crossing things off.
There are a couple of quirky animal sidekicks that really only exist to sell a
plushy or two at the Disney Store, for instance, and if you could only see
the ending coming a mile away I would call you incredibly nearsighted. But
that’s okay. If some of this movie was created by a committee, it’s a committee
that clearly knows what it is doing at this point.
Despite
its flaws, Encanto is another home run by the folks at Walt
Disney Studios. Did you expect anything less?
Encanto is
now available on Disney+.
This review was first published in The Keizertimes on
January 21st, 2022. Visit at http://keizertimes.com/