Empire Australasia - 04.2020

(WallPaper) #1

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AN ACQUIRED TASTE


KOKO-DI KOKO-DA
SWEDISH DIRECTOR JOHANNES NYHOLM ON HIS
SERIOUSLY STRANGE FAIRY-TALE FANTASY

IT COMES FROM A NURSERY RHYME
The fi lm shares its title with a popular
French lullaby. “I sang it a lot as a kid,”
says director Johannes Nyholm. “It’s
funny but also a bit scary. [The rhyme]
is about a dead rooster which is still alive
in a way, living in a limbo land between
death and life.”

IT’S BASED ON A NIGHTMARE The
fi lm depicts a grieving couple trapped in
a hellish loop, repeatedly assaulted by
a giggling Dutchman in a white suit.
The Groundhog Day-esque structure
borrows, Nyholm says, from his dreams.
“I mean, it’s the way my nightmares
work, at least,” he says. “You get stuck
in a situation, you try to escape, then
end up in the same spot again.”

IT HAS SOME OCCASIONAL SHADOW
PUPPETRY Between the horrors we also
witness the story in shadow-play form —
which, Nyholm explains, helped soften the
fi lm’s sharp edges. “The fi lm was extremely
cruel without it,” he says. “I felt it has to
have some light at the end of the tunnel.
This shadow play makes it bearable.”

IT’S NOT REALLY A HORROR To o
surreal to be defi ned by one genre,
Nyholm calls it “more of a relationship
drama. I mean, you could call it horror,
but it’s defi nitely not the traditional horror
movie. It’s really a sinister fairy tale.”
JOHN NUGENT

KOKO-DI KOKO-DA WILL BE IN CINEMAS
AT A LATER DATE

ON 28 JANUARY, the Walt Disney Company
announced an updated version of deer-comes-
of-age classic Bambi. What we know so far is this:
produced by, among others, the Weitz brothers
(About A Boy), the reimagining is being penned
by screenwriters Geneva Robertson-Dworet
(Tomb Raider, Captain Marvel) and Lindsey
Beer (Chaos Walking) as a photo-real version of
the 1942 classic — a companion piece to similar
remakes of The Jungle Book and The Lion King.
There’s no word whether this is heading to the
big screen or Disney+, but Bambi poses perhaps
the biggest stretch yet in the Mouse House’s series
of live-action versions of its back-catalogue.

The adorable deer is the latest
Disney property to get a CGI
tune-up. Will it traumatise a
new generation all over again?

No. / 17

Is the world


ready for a


live-action


Bambi?


like a prosaic Attenborough documentary of
animals rubbing their noses together if writ
real. Sure, you can write these scenes out, but
what are you left with?
And then, of course, there is the murder of
Bambi’s mother at the hands of a hunter. It’s
a sequence so powerful (remember the key
moment is off screen) that Paul McCartney
cites it as inspiring his passion for animal
rights. In December 2018, David Berry Jr,
a Missouri poacher, was ordered to watch it
once a month as part of a yearlong sentence for
planning to illegally kill hundreds of deer.
If that’s the eff ect of the scene in stylised
animation, what would it be on a generation of
kids watching photo-real animals on an IMAX
screen? It’d be like the intensity of 1917 , Uncut
Gems and Takeshi Miike all in one hit. You’d
need a life raft to escape the tears. IAN FREER

are manifold. While the
mated versions ofThe Jungle BookandThe
Lion Kingboth clocked in at 78 and 88 minutes
respectively, the cartoon Bambi barely scrapes
70 minutes, meaning the fi lmmakers will have
their work cut out bolstering what is already
an episodic if ridiculously charming narrative.
Furthermore, unlike the set pieces of, say, The
Lion King — the presentation of Simba, the
stampede, ‘Hakuna Matata’ — Bambi’s big scenes
are even further entrenched in animation for
their power to delight and disarm. A rain storm
that “drip-drip drops little April showers” might
be feasible, but the sight of besties Bambi (deer)
and Thumper (rabbit) comedically fl ailing about
on ice in ‘live action’ would alert the RSPCA. And
then there’s the moment Bambi, Thumper and
Flower (skunk) get ‘twitterpated’ (or fall in love)
— a moment of pure animation that would be

REMAKE BELIEVE
THREE OTHER LIVE-ACTION REMAKES
COMING FROM DISNEY

THE LITTLE MERMAID
The 1989 classic is getting a live-action
update with Halle Bailey in the title role.

SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS
Disney’s fi rst-ever animated feature
is getting a new spin from director
Marc Webb.

PINOCCHIO
Director Robert Zemeckis is behind an
updated take on the puppet-turned-real-boy.

t The challenges are ma if
animated

PREVIEW

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