BEFORE: My fourth day this week at the Tribeca Festival was also very star-studded, starting with a new comedy titled "Never Change!" featuring a bunch of current comedy all-stars, with Joe Pera and Susan Sarandon in the audience. Then came a documentary about the Burning Man festival, with a bunch of the fashionable elite in attendance - I'm not naming names, mostly because I didn't know them. This was followed by a documentary about cable TV legend Robin Byrd, and the theatre was packed, with stars like Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker, also Andy Cohen. Finally a live reading/performance from Laurie Anderson, avant-garde music legend. Whew, I'm exhausted and I need a few days off just to recover. Tomorrow I think I'll go to the movies, but you know, just for fun. Not for work stuff.
Sandra Oh carries over from "Good Fortune".
THE PLOT: A girl blasts off in a homemade rocket ship in hopes of meeting a mythical moon goddess.
AFTER: Yeah, this film is not really my bag, either - but in a different way from how "47 Ronin" is not really my bag. This is a children's movie made for children, and as an adult there's not really much for me to grab on to. Like I know that there's just NO WAY that a girl's homemade rocket would make it to the moon. She might have been a genius at rocketry, but the technical part would have involved math that, if done correctly, would have proven that she didn't have enough power to overcome gravity, that her rocket was too heavy, plus what was she using for fuel, exactly? The idea to use magnetic levitation to go fast enough was a good one, perhaps, but not even the mag-lev trains go fast enough to slip the bonds of earth - do you think if the maglev rail systems were pointing UP then those trains would be able to break orbit? I don't think so...You can't just make a rocket go really fast down a rail system and then suddenly point it UP and get it into orbit, that's just not how things work. I think.
Just because Fei Fei didn't get the memo that says a homemade rocket wouldn't have enough lift OR thrust to get into orbit, let alone the moon, that doesn't mean that her belief is enough to MAKE it work, at some point the reality of physics would settle in and take over. Having her new little stepbrother tag along only added more weight and made it more un-possible. But then, we're not meant to believe she flew her rocket to the moon, because at some point the moon goddess grabs the rocket in a beam and takes it the rest of the way there, which of course only takes a few minutes of screen time and NITPICK POINT, it took the Artemis astronauts six DAYS to get to the moon, not six minutes. But I realize this film is a fantasy film, in more ways than one.
People have been making movies about going to the moon almost as long as they've been making movies. The French short "A Trip to the Moon" by George Mélies came out in 1902! And there were several others, from Fritz Lang's "Woman in the Moon" to 1964's "First Men in the Moon", and then once we actually DID land people on the moon, there was no stopping all the sci-fi films that used that historical event as a jumping-off point. But this one might be the first to work in Chinese myths and legends with a trip to the moon. PLUS, it's a musical, AND also I'm counting this as a Father's Day movie, because the whole reason for Fei Fei's trip to the moon is that she misses her dead mother and she's having trouble dealing with the fact that her father is dating another woman, they're probably going to get married and then she'll have to deal with a step-mother AND a step-brother.
The situation of the father here is mirrored in the legend of the Chinese moon goddess Chang'e, who took an immortality potion which caused her to become a goddess and ascend to the moon, leaving her lover Houyi on the earth. She's still waiting for him there, despite the fact that he's earthbound and not a god, so therefore quite dead. There are a number of narrative problems with the legend of Chang'e, like you'll notice that each member of Fei Fei's extended family tells her story a little bit differently, or focuses on a different aspect or meaning. Chang'e only has her Jade Rabbit for company on the moon, supposedly, but when Fei Fei gets there, the moon seems quite populated with Luminarians, and Chang'e performs for them in concert, like a K-Pop stadium star. (NOTE: This film is not from the same studio that made "K-Pop Demon Hunters", and it shares no cast members with that film except for Ken Jeung. The only reason I'm not watching that film next, with Ken Jeung carrying over, is that I don't want to.)
After Fei Fei and her stowaway stepbrother Chin land on the moon, thanks to Chang'e's beam of energy, two winged guardian lions appear to carry them off to Luminaria, where Chang'e is performing a song about being "Ultraluminary" and Fei Fei can't believe she's meeting the real moon goddess from the stories, so she takes a selfie with her to prove she's real. But Chang'e grabs the photo and won't give it back until Fei Fei returns with the "gift" she was supposed to bring with her, the gift that would bring Houyi back. Fei Fei has no idea what the gift is, but she sets out on a journey across the moon's surface to find it anyway, hitching a ride with the Biker Chicks. Meanwhile Chin challenges Chang'e to a game of Ping Pong in order to either get back the photo or learn the location of the gift - but when Chen wins, Chang'e gets bored so she traps Chin in a chamber. Meanwhile Fei Fei's bunny, Bungee, is making friends with Change's Jack Rabbit, if you know what I mean.
Over at the crash site with the Biker Chicks, Fei Fei meets an exiled Lunarian named Gobi, and also finds her Chang'e doll, which she thinks is the "gift" except that it isn't. So she and Gobi head back to Lunaria on the backs of giant toads (OK, start smoking the weed...NOW) and Gobi reveals that he was exiled after writing a song about moving on, which the whole movie is kind of about - only it seems Chang'e wasn't ready to move on at the time Gobi wrote the song. Fei Fei finds a broken half of a jade circle inside one of her mooncakes (NITPICK POINT #2, how the HELL did that get in there?) and realizes that it matches the half-circle that Chang'e wears around her neck, so it simply MUST be the gift that completes the circle. Once the two parts of the necklace are put together, Chang'e and Houyi are briefly reunited, but unfortunately it's only for a moment, and Houyi tells her to move on before he fades away. But Chang'e can't accept this and slips into a state of depression, plunging the moon into total darkness.
Fei Fei and Chang'e have to encourage each other to move on past their, umm, pasts and focus on the love all around them now, plus the memory of their loved ones, which they'll always have. Fei Fei and Chin are allowed to return home (umm, NITPICK POINT #3, how?) except for Bungee, who has found true love with Jade Rabbit and is probably knocked up already, you know those rabbits and as a bonus, Gobi is no longer banished from Luminaria. Once they're back on Earth, Fei Fei accepts Mrs. Zhong as her new step-mother and acknowledges that her father is a sexual being with needs of his own. JK. Another year goes by and we see them celebrating the Moon Festival again, only as a connected family now.
Overall the message is really muddled, though. Like, if Fei Fei can prove that the moon goddess is REAL, logically therefore that means that her father should NOT marry Mrs. Zhong, because her mother might come back? That doesn't make any sense, and also it's not a good way for Fei Fei to react to her father's new relationship. Plus, in a time when we have actual astronauts going to the moon again, should we be teaching kids they can fly there with a rocket they built in the backyard? Not a good idea.
Directed by John Kahrs & Glen Keane (writer of "Pocahontas" and producer of "Tangled")
Also starring Cathy Ang, Robert G. Chiu, Phillipa Soo (last seen in "Tick, Tick...BOOM!"), Ken Jeong (last seen in "My Spy: The Eternal City"), John Cho (last seen in "Get a Job"), Ruthie Ann Miles (last seen in "I Am Michael"), Margaret Cho (last seen in "Outstanding: A Comedy Revolution"), Kimiko Glenn (last heard in "Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse"), Artt Butler (last heard in "Her"), Irene Tsu (last seen in "Cleopatra"), Clem Cheung (last seen in "Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere"), Conrad Ricamora, Glen Keane, Brycen Hall, Edie Ichioka, Elizabeth Pan (last heard in "Penguins of Madagascar"), James Taku Leung (last heard in "Kung Fu Panda 4"), Josiah D. Lee (last seen in "Olympus Has Fallen"), Lucy Lin (last seen in "Scream 2"), Brittany Ishibashi (last seen in "Roman J. Israel, Esq."), Janice Kawaye, Trisha Vo, Esther K. Chae (last heard in "Soul")
RATING: 3 out of 10 useless facts about hairy crabs
