Elemental movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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Elemental movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (1)

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At its best, Pixar is unbeatable, making clever, charming, and brightly original films to touch the heart and spark the imagination. And so it’s been dispiriting to see the animation studio behind such emotive triumphs as “Toy Story,” “Ratatouille,” “Up,” and “Inside Out”—among the best films of their respective years, bar none—recently fall short of its past standard of excellence.

It’s not just that modern-day Pixar has focused on reprising its greatest hits with a parade of sequels (“Toy Story 4,” “Incredibles 2,” “Lightyear”), or that the studio’s slate of recent originals (“Soul,” “Luca,” “Turning Red”) have all, oddly enough, centered on characters transforming into animals (a revealing trope for its prevalence in films about feeling different, whose initially diverse protagonists invariably spend most of the runtime covered in fur or scales). Also absent lately at Pixar, a subsidiary of Disney since 2006, is the mastery of execution that had distinguished the studio, a brilliance for establishing high-concept premises and effortlessly navigating their particulars.

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“Elemental,” Disney and Pixar’s latest, feels emblematic of the studio’s struggle to recapture its original magic, making a mess of its world-building in service of a conventional story that fails the talent of the animators involved. Set in a world where natural elements—earth, fire, water, air—coexist in a New York-style metropolis, each representing different social classes, the film—directed by Peter Sohn, from a screenplay by John Hoberh, Kat Likkel, and Brenda Hsueh—aims high with that central metaphor but is set immediately off-balance by its unwieldiness as racial allegory, an issue compounded by haphazard pacing and writing so flatly predictable it suggests a Pixar film authored by an AI algorithm. At times bordering on the nonsensical, the film feels under-developed rather than universal, a colorful missed opportunity.

Presented as the closing-night selection of the 76th Cannes Film Festival, ahead of its stateside release in mid-June, “Elemental” envisions a densely populated urban sprawl similar to that of Disney’s anthrozoomorphic “Zootopia,” in which ideas of racial discrimination were uneasily reduced to “predator and prey” dynamics to allow for a story that focused more on dismantling personal prejudices than systemic racism. In Element City, a similarly ill-advised simplification is at work (though Sohn has explained that his Korean heritage and desire to make a film about assimilation fueled some of the creative decisions), and there’s even a similar eyebrow to raise with regard to the legitimate danger that these contrasting elements, like foxes to rabbits, pose to one another.

In “Elemental,” socially privileged water people flow back and forth through slickly designed high-rises and have no issue splashing down the city’s grand canals and monorails, which were designed for their gelatinous-blob bods, whereas fire folk are sequestered to Firetown, where their tight-knit community reflects East Asian, Middle Eastern, and European traditions—and accents run the gamut from Italian to Jamaican, Iranian, and West Indian, in a way that uncomfortably positions fire as representative as all immigrants and water as representative of the white upper-class. Earth and air, meanwhile, barely register; we see earth people who sprout daisies from their dirt-brown armpits, and cotton candy-esque cloud puffs playing “airball” in Cyclone Stadium, but the film is surprisingly non-committal in imagining the chemistry of inner-city elements interacting. Background sight gags abound, such as the “hot logs” that fire folk chow down on, but the actual ins and outs of Element City are explored only superficially, such as the revelation that all these elements take advantage of the same public transit. Replete with computer-generated inhabitants and generic modernist structures, its milieu feels more like concept art, to be further detailed at some point in the animation process, than a fully thought-through, lived-in environment.

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“Elemental” centers on hot-tempered Ember Lumen (Leah Lewis, of “The Half of It”), a second-generation immigrant who works as an assistant in her father’s bodega shop. Fire people who emigrated from Fireland, from whence they brought spicy food and rigid cultural traditions of honor and lineage, Ember and her father Útrí dár ì Bùrdì (Ronnie del Carmen)—though he and his wife Fâsh ì Síddèr (Shila Ommi) had their names Anglicized to Bernie and Cinder at the “Elemental” equivalent of Ellis Island—have a close relationship as he readies her to take over the family business. Ember, though, is questioning whether or not she truly wants to inherit the store, as her beloved “ashfa” says he expects, or whether her gifts—such as the ability to heat a hot-air balloon and mold glass with her hands—might lead her in another direction.

Unable to control her emotions, which can take her from red-hot into a more ominous purple shade, Ember one day ruptures a pipe in her father’s shop, at which point city inspector Wade (Mamoudou Athie) gushes in. Wade’s been investigating the city’s dilapidated canal system, searching for the source of a leak that keeps flooding Ember’s basem*nt but imperils all of Firetown. Determined to keep her father’s business from going under, Ember pursues and then quickly joins forces with Wade. As romance sparks between the two, they make for a particularly odd couple given one of the film’s less-than-convincing rules: that “elements don’t mix,” for reasons both practical and parochial, in Element City. Ember might extinguish Wade, while he could douse her flame, but their inevitably steamy romance is moreso forbidden because her father would never approve, setting up “Elemental” as an interracial love story, the kind Pixar hasn’t yet told with human characters.

From there, the film works like a checklist of Pixar storytelling clichés, its two opposites at first getting on one another’s last nerve but gradually forming a close bond, before separating over what amounts to a basic misunderstanding, which is resolved in climactic fashion as the two rescue one another from a looming threat and rekindle their love. Still, as the plot’s frantically paced chain reaction of events keeps Ember and Wade together, their relationship becomes the film’s slight but endearing center, a welcome respite from the mixed metaphors and misshapen conceptual mechanics that often threaten to break the story’s inner reality. (Why, for example, is what will happen if Ember and Wade touch such a mystery to them both, in a city whose ceramic and terracotta glass structures point to other elements interacting?)

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Lewis voices Ember with a playful warmth that nicely complements the bubbling affability that Athie brings to Wade, while the animation of both their bodies—hers flickering then suddenly ablaze with emotion, heat wafting upward; his fluid and transparent, prone to collapsing into a puddle on the ground—is always exciting to look at, emphasizing malleability and dabbling in abstraction.

But even the film’s promising use of color, form, and movement feels hemmed in by the unimaginative storytelling. Only a few standout sequences—a visit to an underwater garden of Vivisteria flowers, a detour into hand-drawn animation that tells a love story in minimal, swirling lines—separate “Elemental” from any other Pixar film in which the characters are phosphorescent little blobs traveling through realistically animated cityscapes, and as rapidly as the film progresses it never goes anywhere unexpected.

There’s similarly nothing in “Elemental” to recall the wondrous aesthetic imagination of modern Pixar classics like “Finding Nemo” and “Wall-E,” with the exception of a rich score by composer Thomas Newman that takes its cues from a potpourri of global musical traditions and presents a more fully formed vision of cross-cultural exchange than the film’s muddled depiction of immigrant communities. Perhaps fittingly for a film that would have more accurately been titled “When Fire Met Water…,” “Elemental” is combustible enough from minute to minute, but it evaporates from memory the second you leave the theater.

This review was filed from the 2023 Cannes Film Festival. "Elemental" is now playing in theaters.

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Film Credits

Elemental movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (9)

Elemental (2023)

Rated PGfor some peril, thematic elements and brief language.

102 minutes

Cast

Leah Lewisas Ember Lumen (voice)

Mamoudou Athieas Wade Ripple (voice)

Ronnie del Carmenas Bernie Lumen (voice)

Shila Ommias Cinder Lumen (voice)

Wendi McLendon-Coveyas Gale (voice)

Catherine O'Haraas Brook Ripple (voice)

Mason Wertheimeras Clod (voice)

Ronobir Lahirias Harold (voice)

Wilma Bonetas Flarrietta (voice)

Joe Peraas Fern (voice)

Matthew Yang Kingas Alan / Lutz / Earth Pruner (voice)

Clara Lin Dingas Little Kid Ember (voice)

Reagan Toas Big Kid Ember (voice)

Director

  • Peter Sohn

Writer (story)

  • Peter Sohn
  • John Hoberg
  • Kat Likkel
  • Brenda Hsueh

Writer

  • John Hoberg
  • Kat Likkel
  • Brenda Hsueh

Cinematographer

  • David Juan Bianchi
  • Jean-Claude Kalache

Editor

  • Stephen Schaffer

Composer

  • Thomas Newman

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Elemental movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

Elemental movie review & film summary (2023) | Roger Ebert? ›

Presented as the closing-night selection of the 76th Cannes Film Festival, ahead of its stateside release in mid-June, “Elemental” envisions a densely populated urban sprawl similar to that of Disney's anthrozoomorphic “Zootopia,” in which ideas of racial discrimination were uneasily reduced to “predator and prey” ...

What is the summary of Elemental Movie? ›

What is the message of the movie Elemental? ›

Like many Pixar movies, Elemental is far deeper than it's simple surface story may imply. It's not just a romantic tale between star-crossed lovers, but a treatise on immigration, integration, and other themes of inclusion.

Why is Elemental rated bad? ›

Why this film gets a 13+ rating is it features a same sex couple in a pivitol scene as well as a non-binary character. I don't believe children under 13 need to be exposed to this. Additionally, the film has too many almost swear words moments and mean language. This is very typical of modern Disney movies nowadays.

What is the story behind the movie Elemental? ›

Director Peter Sohn drew from his own life experiences to create the emotionally resonant and stunning Pixar movie, Elemental. Sohn's immigration story and observations of diversity in New York City inspired the portrayal of different elements living in Element City and Ember's family's desire for a better life.

What is the summary story elements? ›

There are five key elements to every story: plot, setting, characters, point of view, and conflict. Whether your students realize it or not, they naturally include all these elements when they're telling a story to their families or their best fr.

What is the main theme of Elemental? ›

Elemental is the story of Ember and Wade, two different elements, who form an unlikely friendship in order to save Ember's father's shop. Despite not reaching the heights of some other Pixar movies, Elemental is still fun family viewing and includes important messages about cultural inclusion and acceptance.

What is the moral of Elemental? ›

The storyline is a tale of inclusion and love despite differences. The concept of different elements can be seen as a metaphor for racial differences and one of the strong themes in the film is how we can love and welcome all people. The film has positive messages about managing and expressing emotions.

What happens at the end of Elemental? ›

After saving the Blue Flame, Ember and Wade become trapped in a room in the Fireplace, causing Wade to evaporate from the enclosed heat. After the flood recedes, a grief-stricken Ember confesses to Bernie that she does not want to run the Fireplace and expresses her love for Wade.

Why are people criticizing Elemental? ›

Elemental is an obnoxiously overt allegory without charm and, ironically, little chemistry. Its rehashed and meandering plot is only outdone by its lack of Imagination, sloth-like pacing, and general incompetence by all those involved in its creation. We can't wait for the live-action remake! 1 person reacted to this.

Why don't people like Elemental? ›

Elemental has several obvious glaring problems. For one thing, the attempt to make the elements' differences an overt metaphor for race/culture is shallow and misplaced at best most of the time. The story's themes and plot itself are about as worn-out and tired as the art of the story itself.

Why did the Elemental movie flop? ›

Worse still for the consistently experimental and technologically innovative animation studio, the reviews for Elemental were decidedly middling to unkind: “dull-witted and syrupy” (Deadline); “the story beats are overly familiar” (Los Angeles Times); “The movie looks good … but its undercooked concept is a problem” ( ...

Is there any hom*osexuality in Elemental? ›

Elemental has two LGBTQ+ characters, but they are very, very minor characters. When Ember and Wade start to fall in love, Wade invites her to meet his family, which is quite an experience given that their apartment is flowing with water everywhere.

What is the point of Elemental? ›

"Elemental" is a love story about cultural sharing, the quest for equitable treatment, and how marginalized people often put pressure on themselves to appease their parents so their sacrifices don't feel like they were for nothing ...

What is the movie Elemental about summary in 100 words? ›

Summaries. Follows Ember and Wade, in a city where fire-, water-, earth- and air-residents live together. The film journeys alongside an unlikely pair, Ember and Wade, in a city where fire-, water-, land- and air-residents live together.

What is the climax of the movie Elemental? ›

The final main sequence in Elemental's ending revolves around Wade and Ember reuniting to save each other and Firetown. After their glass barrier holding back overflow water breaks, a giant flood comes for Firetown, which causes great damage and risks extinguishing any Fire people who do not get to safety.

What will the movie Elemental be about? ›

Plot. Fire elements Bernie and Cinder Lumen immigrate to Element City where they face xenophobia from other classical elements. After the birth of their daughter Ember, they set up their Blue Flame which represents their traditions and start their own convenience store called the Fireplace.

What is the plot of the elementals? ›

The Elementals concerns two Alabama families bound by marriage, the Savages and the McCrays. Following the death of matriarch Marian Savage, the families retreat to their summer getaway, Beldame, a remote almost-island on the Alabama panhandle where three Victorian houses rise along the beach.

What is the summary of Elemental by Tim James? ›

In Elemental he tells the story of the periodic table from its ancient Greek roots, when you could count the number of elements humans were aware of on one hand, to the modern alchemists of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, who have used nuclear chemistry and physics to generate new elements and complete the ...

What is the ending of Elementals? ›

The death of a major character might make some question if Elemental is suitable for kids, but the movie's ending brings Wade back to life to ensure that it does not end on such a bleak note. Wade comes back to life after evaporating when Ember realizes that his leftover moisture is still capable of crying.

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