- Director: Kirk DeMicco, Faryn Pearl
- Actors : Jane Fonda, Toni Collette, Lana Condor, Will Forte
- Subtitles: : Spanish, French
- Studio : Studio Distribution Services
- ASIN : B0C8VBW65J
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 2
- MPAA rating : PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Media Format : Blu-ray
- Run time : 1 hour and 23 minutes
- Release date : September 26, 2023
About halfway through Ruby Gillman, Teenage
Kraken it occurred to me that I had recently seen another film about a teenager
discovering she has the ability to change into a large monster. Pixar’s 2022
release Turning Red has nearly the exact same premise, albeit
landlocked, and I’m not entirely surprised. Monster movies have long been considered
helpful allegories for the teenage experience of puberty, and after Twilight
sterilized the horror genre it should come as no surprise to see animated
family films adopting these narratives too. That being said, Ruby Gillman,
Teenage Kraken doesn’t do much to elevate the formula, nor does the animation
prove particularly innovative or impressive.
At the beginning
of the film, Ruby (voiced by Lana Condor) is just an ordinary high school
student, other than the fact that she must hide her sea creature origin. Ruby’s
family immigrated from the ocean and has been living on the land because of a
past her mother (Toni Collette) doesn’t like to talk about. After years of
being warned not to go into the ocean, Ruby discovers her royal lineage as a
kraken when she first enters the sea and turns into one of the giant sea
creatures while at school. This throws the entire community into chaos and
forces Ruby to come to terms with her heritage.
In hopes of
finding a solution to her problems, Ruby goes into the sea to find her
grandmother (Jane Fonda), a powerful kraken who has spent her life protecting the
world from other monstrous threats. At the very top of the list are mermaids,
who are apparently far more menacing than humanity has imagined. But when Ruby
discovers her new classmate Chelsea Van Der Zee (Annie Murphy) is a mermaid,
she decides to trust the sworn enemy of the kraken to attempt to have a normal
teenage high school experience.
Ruby Gillman
is inoffensive family entertainment, however unoriginal and forgettable much of
it may be. With so many innovative animated films being released in recent
years, DreamWorks Animation is going to have to do better than this. Along with
the story resembling better films, the animation feels overly simplistic
compared to the style championed by other studios. It isn’t even bad enough to
be memorable.
The Blu-ray
release of Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken comes with three ways to watch
the film; the high-definition disc, a DVD copy, and a code for a digital copy.
The special features include deleted scenes and a handful of lighthearted
promotional featurettes. If the special features mostly feel directed at a
younger audience, that may be because that is the target audience for a movie
like this. They still haven’t seen enough movies to know how generic this one
is.
Entertainment Value:
6.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 6/10
Historical
Significance: 3/10
Special Features: 4/10
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