This was
quite the enjoyable film for me. With
its young heroine, diverse cast, and live-action Miyazaki sensibilities, I knew
I was in as soon as I heard about it.
It’s bold, bizarre, and more than a little messy, but it’s also an
inventive, engaging story about the love between a girl and her superpig
(premise spoilers.)
Ten years
ago, the Mirando Corporation made an important announcement: they discovered the hitherto-unknown
superpig, a gargantuan animal that could solve world hunger. Having bred a number of superpiglets, the
Corporation placed them in the care of farmers around the world for an epic,
decade-long contest to see who could grow the biggest superpig. Fastforward, and Okja, raised by an old man
and his granddaughter Mija living in the mountains in South Korea, is declared
the winner. Mija had been under the
impression that they could buy Okja from the corporation at the contest’s end,
but Mirando has other ideas. With Okja
en route to a splashy PR event in New York, followed by the slaughterhouse,
Mija is determined to do anything to save her friend’s life and bring her home
to the mountains. Along the way, her
path intersects with that of the Animal Liberation Front, an activist group who
wants to expose the dirty dealings behind Mirando’s happy-shiny marketing
campaign.
Even
considering the fact that it’s about a superpig, this movie was weirder than I
expected. It has some fun, quirky humor
(the interplay between the principled-to-a-fault ALF members is great,) some of
the action veers into the outlandish (Mija would have to be either a superhero
or a cartoon character to survive some of the stunts she pulls,) and there’s
other stuff that’s just straight-up odd
(surprisingly, Jake Gyllenhaal takes home the prize for most bizarre acting
choices in his role as the host of an animal-themed TV show, despite Tilda
Swinton giving him a run for his money as Mirando’s CEO.) Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t,
but it’s always interesting.
I have
two big takeaways from the movie. First,
naturally, is the relationship between Mija and Okja. Mija is fearless in her determination to
bring Okja home, and I like the care the film takes to show how intelligent
Okja is, making her smart and sensitive without anthropomorphizing her. The first scenes of them roaming the mountain
together are beautiful, and the biggest moments are always between the two of
them. My second takeaway is the
ALF. The film clearly has a lot of
affection for these slightly-ridiculous activists, even as it gently pokes fun
at them. I especially love their
non-violent techniques for protecting Okja as they tangle with Mirando
security.
Other
than Swinton and Gyllenhaal, the film includes a number of other recognizable
faces. The ALF features Paul Dano,
Steven Yeun, and Lily Collins, and over at Mirando, we can find Shirley
Henderson (Moaning Myrtle!) and Giancarlo Esposito. Meanwhile Seo-Hyun Ahn as Mija is new to me,
but she makes a terrific heroine.
Warnings
Language
and violence (including graphic violence against animals.)
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