8/10
History and time travel with Dreamworks and with irreverent effect
7 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Mr Peabody and Sherman may not be among Dreamworks' best(The Prince of Egypt, How to Train Your Dragon and Shrek) or the best animated film of the year so far(between The Lego Movie and How to Train Your Dragon 2), but in my opinion it was a very good film with plenty going for it. The third act does get convoluted and too hectic, there are a few anachronisms that are quite jarring(especially with the Leonardo DaVinci referred to in a previous review) and some of the historical references might go over children's heads(for example they are unlikely to have heard of Robespierre), but actually Mr Peabody and Sherman doesn't have much that wrong with it.

The animation is great; the colours are beautifully textured and rich, the backgrounds are smooth and detailed in alternative to blocky(the landscapes are beautifully rendered) and while the "over-sized heads" may take some getting used to the character designs are likable and don't move in a robotic way at all. Danny Elfman's music is energetic and rousing, while it's not one of his best works(ie. Edward Scissorhands) it is one of his better recent efforts. There's always room as well for Jimi Hendrix, John Lennon and George Gershwin. The script is very witty and smart with some very inspired puns that both children and adults will love. Especially funny were the plagues and Oedipus jokes. The story is cleverly structured and fast-moving, it is a tad predictable in places and as said the third act gets convoluted but on the most part it does a great(and fresh) job with the time travel idea(after seeing the mediocre at best Free Birds waste it).

And I for one loved the historical references, there's a lot of them(for example George Washington, Ancient Egypt, the French Revolution with Marie Antoinette and Robespierre, the Trojan War with Agamemnon and the Italian Renaissance with Mona Lisa and Leonardo DaVinci) and they are sent up remarkably cleverly. Sure the referenced characters are caricatures- but to be honest that wasn't unexpected, Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure is one of the best examples of time travelling in films and the referenced characters were caricatures in that too- and some might find them stereotypical but they were really fun to spot and delightful in their own right. The references may go over the heads of some but actually it is a good way of getting acquainted with the characters and eras and may inspire to learn more about it. By all means though you still learn a good deal here, Marie Antoinette and George Washington were interesting.

Underneath all the irreverence though Mr Peabody and Sherman also has a lot of heart, the whole adoptive father/son bonding, the story of how Sherman came to be adopted and the ending were very heartfelt. The titular characters are very endearing and the film does wonderfully in making their somewhat unlikely relationship believable, one of its strengths. Didn't mind Penny personally, she was bratty to begin with but she grows on you. The voice cast are first-rate, particularly Ty Burrell who is brilliantly funny yet with the ability to bring emotional depth to the character, and if Max Charles continues to act he has a promising future ahead of him. Of the rest of the cast the standouts were Allison Janney who is deliciously wicked, Stanley Tucci who brings warm eccentric colour to Leonardo DaVinci and especially Patrick Warburton who is a hoot as Agamemnon. To conclude, a very good animated film. 8/10 Bethany Cox
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