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Elemental (2023 film)

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Elemental
Fire element Ember Lumen and water element Wade Ripple are sitting on a bench at the park surrounded by other anthropomorphized elements. "Elemental" is written on the bottom with the theatrical release date "Only In Theaters June 16" in the middle and the billing block credits and MPA rating on the bottom.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPeter Sohn
Screenplay by
  • John Hoberg
  • Kat Likkel
  • Brenda Hsueh
Story by
  • Peter Sohn
  • John Hoberg
  • Kat Likkel
  • Brenda Hsueh
Produced byDenise Ream
Starring
Cinematography
  • David Bianchi
  • Jean-Claude Kalache
Edited byStephen Schaffer
Music byThomas Newman
Production
companies
Distributed byWalt Disney Studios
Motion Pictures
Release dates
  • May 27, 2023 (2023-05-27) (Cannes)
  • June 16, 2023 (2023-06-16) (United States)
Running time
109 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$200 million[2]
Box office$195.9 million[3][4]

Elemental (subtitled Forces of Nature in some countries) is a 2023 American computer-animated romantic comedy-drama film produced by Walt Disney Pictures and Pixar Animation Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. Directed by Peter Sohn and produced by Denise Ream, it was written by Sohn, John Hoberg, Kat Likkel, and Brenda Hsueh,[a] with Pete Docter serving as executive producer. The overall 27th feature film produced by the studio, the film features the voices of Leah Lewis, Mamoudou Athie, Ronnie del Carmen, Shila Ommi, Wendi McLendon-Covey, and Catherine O'Hara. Set in a world inhabited by anthropomorphic elements of nature, the story follows fire element Ember Lumen (Lewis) and water element Wade Ripple (Athie), who meet and fall in love after Wade is summoned by a plumbing accident at a convenience store owned by Ember's father, Bernie (Del Carmen).

Following the release of The Good Dinosaur (2015), Sohn began working on the project. He pitched the concept to Pixar to develop Elemental based on the idea of whether fire and water could ever connect or not. Elemental draws inspiration from Sohn's youth, growing up as the son of immigrants in New York City during the 1970s, highlighting the city's distinct cultural and ethnic diversity while the story is inspired by romantic films like Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), Moonstruck (1987), and Amélie (2001). For research, the production team spent many hours watching point-of-view city tours on YouTube like Venice and Amsterdam for inspiration. The animation tools were utilized to design the visual effects and appearance of each character, particularly Ember and Wade. Production on Elemental lasted for seven years, both in the studio and at the filmmakers' homes with the story being finished remotely. Thomas Newman composed and conducted the film's original score, marking his fourth collaboration with Pixar after Finding Nemo (2003), WALL-E (2008), and Finding Dory (2016).

Elemental debuted out of competition as the closing film at the 76th Cannes Film Festival on May 27, 2023, and was released in the United States on June 16 in RealD 3D, 4DX, and Dolby Cinema formats. It received praise from critics for its animation, though its screenplay was considered underwhelming. The film has been considered a "box office bomb" by grossing an underwhelming $195 million to date against its $200 million budget.[5][6][7][8][9]

Plot

Fire elements Bernie and Cinder Lumen immigrate to Element City, where they face xenophobia from other elements and struggle to find a home. They have a daughter, Ember, and eventually establish a convenience store called the Fireplace, setting up a Blue Flame that represents their heritage and traditions and attracting many fire element patrons over time. Bernie intends to give the store to Ember when he retires, but first she must control her fiery temper. When Bernie allows Ember to run the shop on her own, she becomes overwhelmed by the customers and rushes to the basement. Her fiery outburst breaks a water pipe, flooding the basement and summoning Wade Ripple, a water element and city inspector. Wade notes the faulty plumbing and reluctantly leaves for City Hall to send the violation report to his air element employer, Gale Cumulus, who will have the Fireplace shut down. Ember pursues Wade but is too late.

Taking pity on Ember, Wade brings her to Cyclone Stadium to convince Gale to reconsider the shutdown of her father's store. When Wade mentions he was investigating recurrent floods before ending up at the Fireplace, Gale gives the duo a tight deadline to find the source. If they are able to seal the leak, then the violations will be forgiven. While searching the canals for the source of the leak, Wade surmises that Ember's temper derives from her trying to tell herself something that she is not ready to accept, but Ember denies this. They then discover a hole in a dam that allows wave runoff from ships to flood the city's plumbing, so they close the hole with sandbags. Meanwhile, Bernie deals with water leaks all over the Fireplace.

Wade and Ember spend time together in the city and learn more about each other. Later, Wade informs Ember that the sandbags did not hold, so Ember uses her glassmaking ability to create a sturdier seal for the hole in the dam. Meanwhile, Cinder suspects Ember is seeing someone and follows her. Ember visits Wade's family at a luxury apartment, where she uses her fire to fix a broken glass pitcher, impressing Brook, Wade's mother, who recommends her for a glassmaking internship. Ember also plays the crying game with Wade, in which he successfully makes her cry when he admits he has feelings for her. Gale then calls Wade and gives her approval of Ember's glass seal, thus saving the Fireplace from closure. Ember then realizes that she does not want to take over the store.

Bernie announces his intention to retire and hand the Fireplace to Ember. He tells his daughter how, when leaving his homeland, he bowed to his father but his father refused to bow back. Wade takes Ember to Garden Central Station to see Vivisteria flowers, which she was denied seeing in childhood. With the station now flooded, Gale provides Ember with an air bubble for safety while Wade pushes her underwater through the station. Afterward, Wade and Ember realize that they are able to touch without harming each other and share a romantic dance, but Ember is reminded of her duty to the Fireplace and her family's prejudice against water elements, and leaves, upsetting Wade.

As Ember is about to take over the Fireplace, Wade appears and professes his love for her, while also letting it slip that she caused the broken pipe. Ember rejects Wade, but Cinder senses genuine affection. Disappointed, Bernie decides not to retire and denies Ember the store. Soon after, the new seal on the dam breaks and the fire district floods. After saving the Blue Flame, Ember and Wade become trapped in a room in the Fireplace, causing Wade to evaporate from the enclosed heat.

When the flood recedes, a grief-stricken Ember confesses to Bernie that she does not want to run the Fireplace and expresses her love for Wade. Realizing Wade has seeped into the stone ceiling, Ember plays the crying game to get him to drip back into his normal form. Ember reciprocates Wade's affection and they kiss.

Months later, Wade and Ember, now a couple, leave Element City so Ember can study glassmaking far away and travel the world together. Before she boards the ship, Ember bows to Bernie who returns the gesture.

Voice cast

  • Leah Lewis as Ember Lumen, a tough, quick-witted fire element who loves working at her family's convenience store in Fire Town, but has trouble controlling her explosive temper. If she touched water, she would be extinguished, so she holds an umbrella to guard herself. Ember is described as "relatable and likable, not scary and terrifying".[10] Lewis was chosen due to her role in The Half of It (2020).[11]
    • Clara Lin Ding as young Ember[12]
    • Reagan To as teenage Ember[12]
  • Mamoudou Athie as Wade Ripple, a fun, sappy water element who is making his own choices and works as an inspector living in Element City. In terms of his density and movement, Wade is a lot heavier, and his body is more fluid and wavy than Ember's body is. He is described as "very emotional and cries at the drop of a hat".[10] Athie based his performance on his own ability to cry.[11]
  • Ronnie del Carmen as Bernie Lumen, Ember's father, Cinder's husband, and owner of their family's convenience store in Fire Town who plans to retire to allow his daughter to run the convenience store.[13][14] He is distrustful of water elements.[15]
  • Shila Ommi as Cinder Lumen, Ember's mother and Bernie's wife who is also distrustful of water elements.[15]
  • Wendi McLendon-Covey as Gale Cumulus, an air element with a big personality and Wade's employer.[16] Her surname is not included in the film's credits,[12] but it is mentioned by Fern Grouchwood.
  • Catherine O'Hara as Brook Ripple, Wade, Alan and Lake's widowed mother and Harold's sister who is very welcoming to Ember in a luxury apartment building.[16]
  • Mason Wertheimer as Clod, a young, street-smart earth element and the Lumens' neighbor who has a crush on Ember.[16] Wertheimer made his feature film debut following the mockumentary podcast series Past My Bedtime (2022).[17][18]
  • Ronobir Lahiri as Harold, Brook's brother and Wade and Alan's uncle.[19][12]
  • Wilma Bonet as Flarrietta, one of the customers at the Fireplace.[12][19]
  • Joe Pera as Fern Grouchwood, an overgrown earth element bureaucrat who works at City Hall.[20]
  • Matt Yang King as:
    • Alan Ripple, Wade's older brother, Lake's oldest sibling and Eddy's husband.[21][19]
    • Lutz, an avid airball player who plays for the Windbreakers at Cyclone Stadium.[12]
    • Earth Pruner[12]
  • Jeff LaPensee as Sparkler Customer[12]
  • Ben Morris as Wood Immigration Official.[12] His name pin and the subtitles of the film's promotional campaign reveal his name to be C. C. Stump.[citation needed]
  • Jonathan Adams as Flarry, one of the customers at the Fireplace.[12]
  • Alex Kapp as:
  • P.L. Brown as Doorman[12]

Although they were credited as "additional voices", other members of Wade's family appear in the film including:

  • Innocent Onanovie Ekakitie as Marco and Polo Ripple, two of Wade's nephews.[22]
  • Krysta Gonzales as Eddy Ripple, Alan's wife and Wade and Lake's sister-in-law.
  • Ava Kai Hauser as Lake Ripple, Wade and Alan's youngest siblings and Ghibli's love interest. Elemental was noted for introducing Pixar's first non-binary character.[23]
  • Maya Aoki Tuttle as Ghibli, Lake's girlfriend.[19]

Other additional voices in the film include Dylan Buccieri, Assaf Cohen, Jessica DiCicco, Terri Douglas, Karen Huie, Arif S. Kinchen, Austin Madison, Cole Massie, Scott Menville, Alisha Mullally, Fred Tatasciore, Kari Wahlgren, and Secunda Wood.[12]

Production

Development

Peter Sohn, who previously directed the feature film The Good Dinosaur (2015) and the short film Partly Cloudy (2009), pitched the concept to Pixar to develop Elemental based on the idea of whether fire and water could ever connect or not.[24] Sohn also says the idea for the film was inspired by his experiences as the son of immigrants in New York City in the 1970s. He stated: "My parents emigrated from Korea in the early 1970s and built a bustling grocery store in the Bronx." He also stated: "We were among many families who ventured to a new land with hopes and dreams — all of us mixing into one big salad bowl of cultures, languages, and beautiful little neighborhoods. That's what led me to Elemental."[25]

In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Sohn says the film's seven-year development period with Elemental is closely tied to his relationship with his family, when the idea first started, following the release of The Good Dinosaur in 2015. It is also revealed that Ember was born in Elemental City, but grew up in a fire town, since the neighborhoods are sort of split up in different ways. He stated: "I am quite emotional about getting the characters and the story out for sure." He also stated: "This movie is about thanking your parents and understanding their sacrifices. My parents both passed away during the making of this thing. And so, it is hugely emotional, and I'm still processing a lot of it."[26]

Sohn stated at D23: The Official Disney Fan Club: "The concept of the city itself started off with Ember." He also stated: "We thought, 'What's the best city we can build to support Ember's journey of identity and belonging?' It started by thinking about a city that would be hard for fire, and so we based it off of water. The idea is that Water got to this area first, and then Earth came, so it became a delta. Then, they built a water infrastructure with water canals and elevated water channels everywhere, making it even tougher for Ember. Then, Air came in after that, and Fire was one of the last groups to come into the city." Ember and Wade have chemistry, despite the differences. When Sohn first pitched the story and started developing it, he asked himself: "What's fire?" Sohn also stated: "People can see it as a temper. People can see it as passion. As a practical thing, fire burns and sparks—but what does it mean to burn bright? There are all these ingredients to what we already perceive as fire, and that started to form Ember's personality. It's the same thing for Wade. Water can be transparent. What does that mean? He wears his emotions on his sleeve. He goes with the flow. That helped form these personalities that were already pretty opposite, and then we had to find that Venn diagram of where they overlapped. That's the hopeful magic. I hope people can buy into the sparks, the chemical reaction, that could form a relationship."[27]

On May 16, 2022, Pixar announced a new film titled Elemental, with the anthropomorphic classical elements of fire, water, air, and earth as its central theme, with Sohn directing and Denise Ream producing.[28] Sohn and Ream reunite after having previously worked together on The Good Dinosaur.[28] On September 9, 2022, during the D23 Expo, Sohn, Ream, and Pete Docter presented a first look at the film. "Our story is based on the classic elements — fire, water, land, and air. Some elements mix with each other, and some don't," Sohn stated. "What if these elements were alive?" Shortly after the unfinished animation footage, a clip was screened, showing Ember and Wade on a date, walking through a park where Wade runs across water, sliding, and creates a rainbow.[29]

Production of the film was completed on March 24, 2023, after the final frame was approved, and seven years were spent on it, both in the studio and at the filmmakers' homes. According to story artist Jason Katz, the team finished their story while working remotely from home. Similarly, Sohn had tears in his eyes when completing.[30]

The film is dedicated to Ralph Eggleston, Thomas Gonzales, Amber Martorelli, and J. Garrett Sheldrew, all of whom died in 2022, respectively.[12]

Writing

Turning Red (2022) creative consultant Brenda Hsueh was hired to write the screenplay.[31] Ultimately, John Hoberg and Kat Likkel and Hsueh received "screenplay by" credit, while Sohn, Hoberg and Likkel, and Hsueh received "story by" credit.[12]

Sohn cited romantic films like Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), Moonstruck (1987), You've Got Mail (1998), Amélie (2001), My Big Fat Greek Wedding (2002), and The Big Sick (2017) as particular influences when he enjoyed leaning into the rom-com as a storytelling genre. Sohn used to doodle the periodic table in high school as an early form of expression with the movie's genesis, saying: "There was this funny drawing that I remember discovering about like a fire and a water character, and that triggering a whole lot of different ideas, and I just couldn't stop drawing these new, little things."[32]

For the language of the fire elements, David J. Peterson, who has constructed languages for Game of Thrones and Dune (2021), co-created "Firish" based on fire sounds that are part of Ember's family.[33]

At one point, Hoberg and Likkel suggested that the ending of the film depict Wade and Ember having had a baby made of steam, a concept they fought for, but ultimately did not include in early cuts of the film. This was to ensure a more solid ending for the two leads and so that audiences would have something to look forward to in a potential future installment.[34]

Casting

On September 9, 2022, during the D23 Expo, Leah Lewis and Mamoudou Athie were revealed to have been cast in the leading voice roles of Ember and Wade, respectively.[35] When the full-length trailer was released on March 28, 2023, more cast members, including Ronnie del Carmen, Shila Ommi, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Catherine O'Hara, Mason Wertheimer, and Joe Pera, were announced.[36]

When designing Ember and Wade, Sohn knew that he wanted the characters voices to reflect their elements: for Ember, a smoky voice, and Wade, a cooler one. Lewis was picked because of her role in The Half of It (2020). Sohn spoke on her performance in the 2020 feature, saying that "she could be hot-tempered, but still very appealing", and stated: "She had a vulnerability in her voice that also she could straddle with being so sincere and authentic." With Athie, it was his role in the 2019 miniseries Oh Jerome, No and his ability to cry that won over the director. Sohn described a cry he made at a point in the series as "sincere, but hilarious", and added, "Mamoudou has such a compassionate soul that when he was crying, you just went with him in it."[11]

On May 30, 2023, MotoGP rider Francesco Bagnaia was announced to be voicing a character named Pecco, after his nickname. This is the second time a motorsports figure had voiced a character in Pixar's films after Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz Jr. in international dubs of Lightyear (2022).[37]

Inspiration

According to Variety, at the Disney Content Showcase in Singapore on November 30, 2022, Sohn says that some of the inspiration came from his real-life family and marriage. He showed a picture of him as a child with his parents, saying, "Maybe it's because when I was a kid, I really didn't appreciate or understand what it meant to be an immigrant, to come to the U.S., and all the hard work that they did to give my brother and me our lives. That was one big nugget that was just sitting with me. On the other side, I married someone that wasn't Korean, and there was a lot of culture clash with that in my world. And that brought to me to this idea of finding opposites. And the question of what if fire fell in love with water came. As an animator, what could be a fun world to play with… so the fire and water is one thing. But then tying that to culture clash, was part of that metaphor. And then in that world, all of a sudden this idea of sacrifice, and understanding what our parents had given started to make the soup of what this film is." He also talks about culture clash and diversity, "It has been the struggle of my life for sure understanding my place and what have I assimilated or my identity being a bifurcated identity. It's always been there, I assume that it'll be always a part of some amount of storytelling – having that kind of that diversity. Will it be a major thing? I don't know. But it's been a part of my life. And I love trying to reflect what the teams that we've worked with their lives and our lives into the work that we do."[38]

Sohn also showed footage from the film at the Disney Content Showcase and stated that "The film is about our differences that bring us together, but it is a love story. Hopefully, the audiences will get a deeper understanding of the loss in their lives between the partners, the friends or family."[39] Sohn stated that the portrayal of Element City was inspired by many earlier live-action films, such as Roman Holiday.[40] When addressed about similarities, Sohn denied that Elemental is inspired by Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005–2008), despite their shared concept of personifying classical elements. Sohn stated: "No, it wasn't a touchstone, but I love the show. I saw it with my kids and it's great, but we're so different from it. There's no martial arts in our world. There's not anything like that. It's this city story with the romance, and this family drama. But I do appreciate the connection that people are making just 'cause they love that and hopefully they can love this, too." Sohn also stated:

Growing up, I always saw my parents a certain way, but then when I hit my 20s and got a real job versus working at my family shop, I saw them as people. That shift from parents to people affected me a great deal. All the stories they told me of their journey here I took for granted until I was like, 'Oh my God, they did this without speaking the language. They did this with no money. My dad was a hotdog cart guy and he made all this. I could never do that.' My empathy grew for them.[41]

Animation and design

Element City was modeled after New York City as a series of immigrant neighborhoods composed of organic materials that would complement each element. An example would be Fire Town, which was constructed with ceramic, metal, and brick. Production designer Don Shank says "design ideas inspired new technology, which inspired new design."[32] Sohn noted that he "went into more detail about how the design and tech process went for designing Ember and Wade." He believed personifying elements was a difficult challenge, although he declared that air was not nearly as difficult to portray as fire and water, having already personified clouds in Partly Cloudy. The character Wade is incredibly complex, with the biggest challenge being his transparency through creating visual effects. In order to make him transparent enough, the animators needed to find some middle ground for how to create the character.[42]

The set designers at the studio looked to cities like Venice and Amsterdam for inspiration. The water canals and the buildings that surround cities have immense detail and thought put into them. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in which most of the production took place, the production team of the film was unable to travel to these cities for research, so they spent many hours watching point-of-view city tours on YouTube to get inspiration for Element City.[42] To feel less like an alien version of real-world cities, production designer Don Shank and his team brainstormed the evolution of elemental beings and their civilization.[43]

Over 151,000 cores were used for Elemental in three large rooms on the Pixar campus, making it a massive amount of computing power compared to previous Pixar feature films, due to Pixar having to upgrade and buy more computers for this film; for example, Toy Story (1995) had 294 cores, Monsters, Inc. (2001) had 672 cores, and Finding Nemo (2003) had 923 cores.[30]

Music

On February 7, 2023, Thomas Newman was confirmed to compose and conduct the original score for Elemental. It marks Newman's fourth collaboration with the studio following Finding Nemo (2003), WALL-E (2008), and Finding Dory (2016), as well as his first Pixar film not to be directed by Andrew Stanton.[44] Lauv performed the original song called "Steal the Show" that played during Ember and Wade's first date as well as the end credits, which was released as a single on June 2, 2023, two weeks before the film's theatrical release.[45]

Release

Elemental debuted out of competition as the closing film at the 76th Cannes Film Festival on May 27, 2023,[46][47] followed by a worldwide premiere on June 10, 2023, at Tribeca Festival.[48] In Australia, it premiered on June 12, 2023, at the Sydney Film Festival.[49] The film was theatrically released by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures in the United States on June 16, 2023,[35][50] in RealD 3D,[51] 4DX,[52] and Dolby Cinema formats.[53] It was accompanied in theaters by the Dug Days short film Carl's Date, marking the first Pixar film to be preceded by a Pixar-produced theatrical short film since Bao (2018), which was theatrically released with Incredibles 2 (2018).[54] On February 16, 2023, following the commercial failures of Lightyear and Walt Disney Animation Studios' Strange World (both 2022), Disney reportedly considered extending the theatrical windows for both Elemental and Walt Disney Animation Studios' Wish in hopes of bringing families back to theaters.[55][56]

The first thirty minutes of footage of the film were shown during an early press event at the studio on March 28, 2023. It was positively received by critics for its worldbuilding, animation, and characters.[24] The first twenty minutes of footage of the film were previewed in 3D at CinemaCon on April 26, 2023. It was positively received by critics, who appreciated its tackling themes of racism and xenophobia head-on of the movie.[57]

Marketing

Following the project announcement, the first look concept art of the film was released on May 16, 2022.[58] Nicole Clark for Polygon said fans are "pointing out the similarities to the Fireboy and Watergirl series of games, six in total, developed by Oslo Albet."[59] Following the voice cast announcement, a first look image and an exclusive teaser poster were released on September 9, 2022, during the 2022 D23 Expo Presentation.[35] The teaser trailer was released on November 17, 2022, set to Bakar's "Hell N Back". It depicts an original scene where a vast subway train approaches on a waterway with Ember being entered at Element City and then meets Wade. Similar to most of Pixar's teaser trailers, the scene was not present in the final film.[60] Jeremy Mathai of /Film commented positively of the footage, saying it "looks wonderfully rendered and irresistibly charming".[61] An official full-length trailer was released on March 28, 2023, set to Astral's "High Five".[36][62] Charles Pulliam-Moore of The Verge commented positively, saying that "the movie's visuals are as imaginative as they are delightful", while noting that its "tough to say whether Elemental's take on beats from Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967) will land with audiences, especially considering how some of its characters seem prone to destroying one another simply because of how their physical forms interact."[63]

The film was also promoted on the season 21 finale of the ABC singing competition, American Idol, where the main characters, Ember and Wade, are seeing cheering in the audience after Iam Tongi was crowned the winner. A sneak peek was shown immediately after the conclusion of the show.[64][65]

A series of books based on the film was published in May 2023, including novelizations, short stories, a sticker album, a behind-the-scenes book, and coloring books, while the graphic novel is scheduled to be published on August 29, 2023.[66] A line of action figures and toy packs by Mattel were gifted, while visiting the studios for the film's press day. It was available for the following month.[67]

Reception

Box office

As of July 5, 2023, Elemental has grossed $97.5 million in the United States and Canada, and $98.4 million in other territories, for a worldwide gross of $195.9 million.[3][4] Due to its expensive production cost and marketing budget, it was deemed by some analysts to be a box office bomb.[5][6][7][8][9]

In the United States and Canada, Elemental was released alongside The Flash and The Blackening, and was originally projected to gross $35–40 million from 4,035 theaters in its opening weekend.[68][69] The film made $11.8 million on its first day (including $2.4 million from Thursday night previews), lowering estimates to $30 million.[70][2] The film went on to debut to $29.5 million, finishing in second and marking the second lowest three-day opening weekend for a Pixar film, behind only the $29.1 million ($56 million with inflation) opening of Toy Story in 1995, which sold significantly more tickets.[71] Deadline Hollywood and TheWrap cited the reasons being the film's marketing, audiences getting used to waiting for Pixar films to be released on Disney+ instead of in theaters as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and competition from Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.[72][73][74][75] In its second weekend the film made $18.4 million, finishing in second. While the 38% drop was noted as a good sign of future legs, TheWrap noted "it would take endurance of historical proportions for Elemental to make the comeback to profitability."[76][77]

Critical response

Following its premiere at the Cannes, early social media reactions to the film were reportedly generally positive,[78] but reviews from film critics were "underwhelming" and ranked it "among the studio's worst releases to date".[79] Docter was surprised by the negative reviews, and believed that critics' tendency to compare the film not only to other works but also to their own past successes led to "pretty nasty" reviews that overshadowed the film's merits.[80]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 76% of 206 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.5/10. The website's consensus reads: "Elemental may not satisfy as fully as the greatest Pixar pictures, but it remains a solid story told with dazzling visual flair."[81] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 58 out of 100, based on 42 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[82] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, while PostTrak reported 85% of filmgoers gave it a positive score, with 68% saying they would definitely recommend it.[74]

Ben Croll of TheWrap wrote, "With story beats and character turns that strain well beyond familiarity, Elemental matches formal adventure with storytelling timidity. Here is a new spin on the old formula, livened up by advances in technology and delivered with real artistry."[83] Dirk Libbey of CinemaBlend gave it 4 stars out of 5 and wrote in his review, "People falling in love in animated films is certainly nothing new; it happens all the time. However, [we've] never seen a major animation studio like Pixar produce such a purely romantic film as Elemental. And yes, you will cry."[84] Siddhant Adlakha of IndieWire gave the film a B, and wrote in his review, "Despite its confused and overstuffed worldbuilding, Elemental has enough charming moments to get by, even if its meaning lies less in its ill-conceived immigrant saga, and more in the personal drama that lives a few layers beneath it."[85]

Jordan Mintzer from The Hollywood Reporter stated, "[It] may be the first work from Pixar to feel like it was generated entirely by AI".[86] Eileen Jones from Jacobin called the film "so boring and unmemorable that it seems like a new low for the famed animation company."[87] Screen Daily's Tim Grierson noted that the film "contains hints of the studio's wit and poignancy while lacking the inspired execution that once seemed so effortless."[88] Dan Kois from Slate praised the visuals of Element City, but criticized the screenplay, the chemistry between its two main characters, and handling of different elemental groups within the film, comparing the conflict between Ember and her family unfavorably to Turning Red (2022). He stated that Pixar, known for its trademark humor, earned plot twists, and attention to detail, needed to overhaul its formula to regain its former success.[89] David Fear of Rolling Stone criticized the film's heavy-handed message, writing, "The fact that Elemental can’t seem to get past its own elevator-pitch premise or avoid tripping over its teachable lessons, much less wring laughs and sobs from an opposites-attract love story, is a bit of a shock. It’s so busy trying to pen an op-ed that it forgets to give it a narrative structure and make it emotionally resonate. That's just elementary."[90]

Notes

  1. ^ Hoberg, Likkel, and Hsueh were all credited as "Screenplay by" and "Story by".

References

  1. ^ "Elemental (2023) (PG)". British Board of Film Classification. Retrieved June 13, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b Fuster, Jeremy (June 17, 2023). "'The Flash' Opens Below 'Black Adam' While 'Elemental' Bombs at Box Office". TheWrap. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Elemental (2023)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Elemental (2023)". The Numbers. Nash Information Services, LLC. Retrieved July 6, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Disney, Despite ‘Indy’ & ‘Elemental’ Misfires, Leading 2023 Global Box Office With $3.4B Deadline Hollywood, July 6, 2023
  6. ^ a b Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny raids the box office of doom with $60M opening weekend Entertainment Weekly, July 2, 2023
  7. ^ a b Box Office: ‘Spider-Verse’ Returns to No. 1 as ‘The Flash’ Collapses by 73% and Jennifer Lawrence’s ‘No Hard Feelings’ Opens to $15 Million Variety, June 25, 2023
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