Watched: 03/13/2025
Format: Disney+
Viewing; First
Directors: Dean DeBlois and Chris Sanders
No, I'd never seen Lilo & Stitch (2002). It came out about three weeks after I moved to Phoenix back in 2002, and I guess we didn't get around to it at the time, or in the ensuing 23 years.
The movie is kind of the last gasp of Disney's 2D efforts as the annual summer release schedule was apparently taxing the creative teams and leading to less and less enthusiasm for each year's release. And looking at the Disney Animation Studios output of 2D movies in the 00's, you can see this is the second-to-last film of the 2D movies anyone really talks about - the final being The Princess and the Frog.
Spoiler - I liked this movie a lot! The animation is fun and really well executed, but the story about being a terror goblin who doesn't even know what a family is and then learns that he wants one? I found it shockingly effective and moving.
When you want to know what sticks with people, its never the 3D or some animation sequence, it's how they felt, and I'll remember this one for a while. That said - *how* they get you to feel any specific way is tied to those technical achievements, direction, art and story writing, and it's surprising to see a movie about a less-than-perfect family unit containing a kid who is acting out in the wake of the loss of her parents and her older, barely-an-adult sister, who is trying to keep it together. Add in an alien-prison-escapee-genetically-created-space-WMD and it's a ride.
But, yeah, Disney is at its best when it taps into those core universal emotions, that kids and adults can tap into, but when they come in at an oblique angle. Do I spend time thinking I do not know who I am and if I have a family? No. But all of us can sympathize if not empathize with not feeling like we know how to fit in like Lilo, or that no one told us the basics, like Stitch - and reach for a place to belong.
Voice talent on this thing is interesting, with Tia Carrere, David Ogden Stiers, KITH alumnus Kevin McDonald, Ving Rhames, Zoe Caldwell and a young Daveigh Chase as Lilo.
The character animation is top flight, much as Princess and the Frog will make you a little sad that so much of what 2D did so well was really hitting on all cylinders just as Disney pivoted to 3D. From both the first space sequences and the introduction to our out-of-the-way Hawaiian town, you can tell Disney's animators were leaning in hard. There's a lot of motion-capture that makes the action fluid but still fun in a way I think we're kind of forgetting, as well as layered work that's just fantastic.
And the story is kind of daring in having both a little kid who maybe isn't a precious angel and her far worse alien pal - and you genuinely can buy that they help each other be better. That's some solid writing. We're a pretty far cry from Belle being an oddball for being nice and reading books as Lilo smacks around her classmate. And, yet, I pull for Lilo - and holy cow, does it land as I look at my own niece and nephew puzzling through their younger years.
Anyhoo, I finally caught up on this one, and will certainly watch the live action remake. It looks really fun.
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