Movie Review: Arthur And the Invisibles
Jan 13, 2007 - Joe Williams
Luc Besson is the wildly inventive French director of La Femme Nikita and The Fifth Element, but he had never made an animated film until he adapted a children's book that he wrote, Arthur and the Minimoys. Freed from the Disney and Pixar traditions, he has combined live action and computer animation into a sprightly entertainment retitled Arthur and the Invisibles.
Parents who have been dragging their kids to one talking-animal cartoon after another will find it unlike anything they've ever seen. For kids weaned on video games, the spring-loaded pacing and Smurf-style characters may seem familiar, but they lead to some enchanted places.
In Besson's color-saturated universe, even a Connecticut farmhouse can seem otherworldly. That's where a boy named Arthur (Freddie Highmore of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) lives with his grandmother (Mia Farrow) while his parents are job hunting in New York.
Arthur's imagination is fueled by stories of his globe-trotting grandfather, who left clues to a fortune in rubies. When a rent collector comes to foreclose on the property, Arthur follows the clues to a telescope that shrinks him to insect size and drops him into the underground kingdom of the pointy-eared Minimoys.




