The first musical number of Emilia P é rez hits like a tonal tsunami. Up to that point, which is really just a few minutes in, the movie bears the (somewhat problematic) aesthetics and hallmarks of a gritty Mexican drama, possibly revolving around a corrupt legal system. When Zoe Saldaña and all the meandering townspeople around her break into bombastic song and dance, the movie sets clear its wholly different stylistic intentions. A combining of the dramatic realism of a crime movie with the hyper stylization of an operatic musical. Director Jacques Audiard initially wrote the story as a libretto, before adapting it to a movie. And for retaining all of the requisite grand emotions, melodrama and action, not to mention the somewhat epic scope and context, Emilia P é rez is one of the most authentically opera-like movies I’ve ever seen. It also happens to be a movie that wears its audacity on its sleeve, sometimes to a fault -with a most unique and intriguing premise. Based loosely on a
As a kid, I wasn’t so affected by the typical ‘traumatic’ death scenes of animated children’s movies. Mufasa’s death in The Lion King really did nothing for me. Same with Bambi’s mom even -it took until I was older to really appreciate the raw tragedy of that. But the one that did get me, much less popular than those, was the death of Littlefoot’s mother in The Land Before Time , and I still think it is perhaps the most effective death scene of this kind in a movie for kids. Both Simba and Bambi lose their parents entirely all of a sudden, but Littlefoot has to be there as his mother is dying, to take in her final sentiments to him, and it is heartbreaking, especially with the emotionally potent detail in the animation -the gloominess, the perfectly sad features. It honestly still gets me a little bit. I’m just old enough to be part of the generation where the Don Bluth movie most significant to my childhood was The Land Before Time . My family owned the movie on VHS, and some of my