Big Hero 6 - Movie Review

  • 29 January 2015

Rating: 3 out of 5

Fans of bright, flashy things will love this colourful, kinetic animated adventure, although anyone seeking originality or involving characters should probably look elsewhere. This is the first Disney animation based on a Marvel comic book, although they have essentially only retained the title and a vague semi-Asian setting. The result is a film that feels like something you've already seen before, with the usual Disney plot formula, characters and action beats, plus lots of sentimentality. At least it's witty and fast-paced enough to keep us entertained.

The futuristic setting is San Fransokyo, a slightly more Japanese version of San Francisco in which 15-year-old computer-geek orphan Hiro (voiced by Ryan Potter) lives with his Aunt Cass (Maya Rudolph). Both are shaken when Hiro's brother Tadashi dies in an explosion Hiro thinks he might have caused. Then he meets Tadashi's health-care robot invention Baymax (Scott Adsit), a cuddly inflatable creature who just wants to take care of Hiro. He goes along with Hiro's plan to turn him into a fighting machine that helps find the masked man who stole Hiro's microbot invention and actually caused the explosion. Baymax also helps Hiro assemble the Big Hero 6 team, adding Tadashi's nerd-inventor pals: goofy Fred (T.J. Miller), rebellious Go Go (Jamie Chung), nice-guy Wasabi (Damon Wayans Jr.) and girly Honey Lemon (Genesis Rodriguez). Together they set out to stop the villain before he enacts his nefarious plan.

All of this is animated with bright colours and a snappy sense of the technology. There are several exhilarating set-pieces along the way as the young heroes work out their special powers by inventing all sorts of gadgets. But nothing about the script meaningfully deepens these characters. Each person on-screen is essentially one personality trait, while potentially colourful side roles (including Aunt Cass) are left badly undefined. What holds the interest is the superb interaction between Hiro and Baymax, mainly because of the obvious affection between them. And also because Baymax has all of the film's funniest lines.

He also has the best physicality. With his marshmallowy body and wide-set eyes he's the film's most original touch. By contrast, the villain and his weapons are rather trite, because the filmmakers simplistically decided to make him dull and black in a sea of garish colour and gorgeously detailed cityscapes. Yes, the film is enjoyable enough, and young kids and undemanding audience members might even love it. But everyone else should demand more from Disney than these blanded-down plotlines and characters, which betray more interest in launching a line of toys than telling a meaningful story.

Big Hero 6 Trailer

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Image caption Big Hero 6

Facts and Figures

Year: 2014

Genre: Animation

Run time: 102 mins

In Theaters: Friday 7th November 2014

Box Office USA: $217.5M

Box Office Worldwide: $224.1M

Budget: $165M

Distributed by: Walt Disney Pictures

Production compaines: Marvel Studios, Walt Disney Animation Studios, Walt Disney Pictures

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 89%
Fresh: 152 Rotten: 19

IMDB: 8.2 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Don Hall, Chris Williams

Producer: Roy Conli

Screenwriter: Robert L. Baird, Daniel Gerson, Jordan Roberts

Starring: Ryan Potter as Hiro Hamada (voice), Génesis Rodríguez as Honey Lemon (voice), Jamie Chung as GoGo Tomago (voice), Damon Wayans Jr. as Wasabi (voice), Alan Tudyk as Alistair Krei (voice), James Cromwell as Professor Robert Callaghan (voice), Maya Rudolph as Aunt Cass (voice), Daniel Henney as Tadashi Hamada (voice), Scott Adsit as Baymax (voice), Charlie Adler as Yokai (voice), Marcella Lentz-Pope as Additional Voices (voice), Mike Powers as (voice), T.J. Miller as Fred (voice)

Also starring: TJ Miller, Genesis Rodriguez, Roy Conli, Jordan Roberts