ELIO Review
Elio is the latest Pixar movie to hit theaters, and it’s an original story, and that has become a problem for Disney and Pixar when it comes to box office draw. Last year’s sequel to Inside Out rapidly became one of the biggest movies of the summer, reaching more than a billion dollars in ticket sales, while Elemental, the original movie from 2023, struggled to make it close to half a billion dollars. Now the launch of Elio to lackluster ticket sales is putting the spotlight on the wrong things. I think the movie should be evaluated on its own merits, not its ticket sales.
Saying that, Elio is probably the closest to a kids’ movie than many of its counterparts, that are family movies. What I mean by this is that there are movies that are designed to entertain the kids but offer little for the parents to grasp on. They have a basic storyline, and there are no complex plots, and the growth of the characters is as straightforward as it can be. Illumination movies come to mind in this regard. The Minions and Despicable Me movies are as simple as they get, or this year’s Dogman from Dreamworks, or the Mario Bros. Movie from 2023. Basically, the only thing they add to the movie to entertain the adults is music from the 80s and 90s.
In contrast, the best Pixar movies like Inside Out, Up, and Wall-E include complex emotions, and the plots are driven by the main characters' failings. That is why those movies are so successful in entertaining kids and parents alike; it’s not a chore for a parent to accompany their kids to the best animated kids’ movies.
Elio is in the middle of this. It has a very simplistic story around Elio, and to be honest, it is very predictable. But the evolution and the growth of the main villain and its family were more entertaining and heartfelt than the rest of the movie. Maybe I am biased because I am a parent, and it made me feel the connection to Lord Grigon, portrayed by Brad Garrett, and his son, Glordon, voiced by Remy Edgerly. The rest of the cast is pretty good. The titular character is played by Yonas Kibreab, who brings a lot of energy to the character, and his aunt Olga Solis is played well by Zoe Saldana.
The picture, as any other Pixar animated movie, is beautiful. It has that Pixar technological prowess that I don’t think any other animation studio can reach. Maybe the closest I have seen in that regard is Blur Studio. In the shorts they do, especially in the Death Love +Robots series on Netflix. But those are shorts, no one can reach and maintain that visual fidelity and creative artistry for a 2-hour film like Pixar does.
In the end, I think Elio is good. I would probably put it in the lower tier of Pixar movies. It is way better than Lightyear and the Good Dinosaur, probably better than Elemental, but I don’t think it gets close to the best what Pixar can offer. I would still recommend it, and I will probably watch it again when it hits Disney Plus in 2 or 3 months.