Mary and Max
Starring: Eric Bana, Phillip Seymour Hoffman, Toni Collette
Details: Australia / 80mins (12A).
Mary (first voiced by Bethany Whitmore, then by Collette) is an 8-year-old girl living in a small town in Australia in the mid-'70s. Mary is a lonely girl with no friends - those who do speak to her only do so to tease her about her birthmark, that she admits, "is the colour of poo." Dipping into an American phonebook at the Post Office, Mary randomly picks out a name - Max Jerry Horovitz (Hoffman), an overweight middle-aged Asperger Syndrome sufferer living in a dingy New York apartment with only an imaginary friend to talk to. Despite the age difference, they find they have a lot in common, become pen pals and transform each other's lives.
It doesn't sound like much, but Mary And Max will break your heart if you're not careful. A sweet and cuddly outing on the surface, relying on innocence for most of the gags - "If a taxi goes backwards, does the driver owe you money?" - but underneath the sugary stuff is a bitter tale of loneliness, suicide and world that can swallow you whole. Mary's mother is a chain-smoking alcoholic and her father is a depressed factory owner and both ignore her. Where Mary has sometimes a cheery disposition (children are always hopeful that this isn't the be all and end all), Max (voiced perfectly by the raspy tones of Hoffman) has no such hope, doomed to live this life to the lonesome end. It's dotted with humour and niceties, and boasts a massive heart pounding through the centre, but there's no escaping that this is a bleak film. Yes, this is more for adults than kids.
With its grotesque (but funny) caricatures and cluttered, bent out of shape world, the animation is spot on. If the script wasn't witty - and it is, just one of the hundred cherries on this cake - there would still be the gorgeous visuals to get tucked into. The painstakingly detailed stop-motion claymation somehow looks fresher than anything a computer can create and boasts more warmth.
Mary and Max might lag slightly in the middle but debutant filmmaker Adam Elliot has enough in his back pocket to rally the movie again. Funny, sad and beautiful, this is one of the movies of the year.
Review by Gavin Burke
Your Comments
Gavin
Couldn't agree more with the above review . It's an amazing film that will lift up your heart and break it in equal measure. Fantastic animation with a great voice cast and brilliantly realized ,flawed yet lovable characters. You owe it to yourself to see this . It'll play on your mind for days after . Like all good films should .
Posted 21/10/2010 16:00:25
Tom
Fantastic movie that deserves to be seen by everyone but is given a pathetic limited release playing in only one cinema in Dublin. Easily one of the best films of the year - please see it.
Posted 25/10/2010 01:05:20
movielover
Easily the best movie of the year. I loved everything, from the little details to the changes of colours between mary and max's worlds. I even dropped a tear at the end! I do agree with Tom though, it's ridiculous that it's only being shown in the IFI.
Posted 29/10/2010 20:17:05
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