Time travel gets a magical spin in Ugo Bienvenu’s animated adventure — produced by Natalie Portman (whose voice is also featured) — a charming paean to friendship between two children from different eras and a warning about our failure to preserve our environment.

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Centrepiece

Arco

Ugo Bienvenu

The concept of time travel gets a unique, magical spin in Ugo Bienvenu’s visually rich animated adventure Arco, produced by Natalie Portman (whose voice is also featured). The film’s premise is that rainbows are actually time travellers from our future. Here, time travel isn’t simply an adventure — it’s employed to uncover lost truths about our planet and how human beings have endangered our environment.

That doesn’t mean it isn’t exciting, though, especially for Arco, a 10-year-old boy who can’t wait to travel through time, despite the fact that travel is restricted to those 12 and up. Arco pays for his impatience immediately when he is stranded in the year 2075, and must be rescued by Iris, a girl his own age. As the bond between them deepens, Arco finds out more about Iris’ era — where humans must live in domes that protect them from the extreme weather and rely very heavily on androids. But despite the precautions Iris’ people have taken, climate events can still present a danger, with one looming on the horizon — and Arco still needs very particular conditions to attempt a return home.

Bienvenu’s use of striking visuals and wistful storytelling will no doubt remind some of Hayao Miyazaki. And like Miyazaki’s works, Bienvenu’s film will speak to all ages — but Arco is also infused with its own engaging and intense optimism, found particularly in its young protagonists, whose future is still very much up in the air.

ROBYN CITIZEN

Screenings

Thu Sep 04

Scotiabank 13

P & I
Sun Sep 07

Scotiabank 2

Regular
Fri Sep 12

Royal Alexandra Theatre

Regular