"Kindness Always Wins"

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What You Need To Know:
SMURFS has positive moral, redemptive messages. It extols kindness, believing in yourself, not being afraid to fail, sacrifice, forgiveness, and stepping up to fight against evil. The movie includes original music by Rihanna and blends 3D animation with Claymation, anime-inspired 2D animation, CG elements, and live action. However, SMURFS is hampered by lackluster execution, making for a frustrating product and less then memorable movie. SMURFS also contains occult elements like magic spells, portals and evil wizards, plus action and comic violence. So, MOVIEGUIDE® advises caution for older pre-teen children.
Content:
More Detail:
SMURFS is an animated musical comedy about a character who feels lost about his purpose in a community where everyone has a “thing.” Despite its positive messaging, moral worldview and decent animation, SMURFS falls flat with its lackluster execution.
No Name is the only Smurf in Smurf Village who doesn’t have his own thing. He’s tried just about everything, with no result. Papa Smurf and Smurfette assure the dejected No Name that he’ll find his thing. Little does he realize, the magical book that the village is secretly hiding is watching him, and she “grants” him magical powers.
Excited to show the village his newfound powers, No Name shoots a beam in the sky, much to Papa Smurf’s horror. The beam leads the evil wizard Razamel straight to Smurf Village. Papa Smurf is kidnapped via portal, but not before he tells the Smurfs to find Ken.
The Smurfs find a record that, when played with a gramophone, turns into a portal and sucks them all (including Turtle) into the real world. They undergo scary encounter with dogs, motorcycles and a street cleaner, before being rescued by a group of street-smart Smurfs. When they claim to be looking for Ken, the leader of the Paris division, Moxie Smurf, takes them to a club where the disco ball serves as a Smurf hideout.
There, the Smurfs encounter Ken, Papa Smurf’s brother that none of them knew existed. No Name tries to create a portal that takes the group straight to Razamel’s castle, but the castle’s force field bounces them off and sends them to Australia. While there, the Smurfs visit an underground group of furballs called poots, led by Mama Poot.
When Mama Poot learns where they plan to go, she refuses to help the Smurfs save Papa Smurf due to the danger. No Name escapes, afraid of facing the evil wizards. Smurfette encourages him in song form, telling him to believe in himself. When they return to the poot base, however, it’s destroyed. Mama Poot tells them that her poots and all the other Smurfs were kidnapped by Razamel. Together, they rush to Razamel’s castle. Will No Name discover his thing and save his friends?
SMURFS is a messy, albeit colorful film. Certain aspects should still be celebrated, such as the movie’s positive messages promoting kindness and believing in yourself. That said, the movie is confusing in its execution.
The hero is told to find the power within, and it seems like his “ability” would be the loyalty and care he has for his friends that would lead him to protect them, no matter the cost. The movie’s climax opts for a magic fix, which undermines the story’s message.
SMURFS also suffers from a lack of identity itself. It isn’t sure what kind of movie it wants to be and where to market it.
For example, heartfelt moments between Smurfette and No Name are undercut by jarring tonal shifts, such as a traumatic flashback played for laughs. The humor of the movie is quite hit-or-miss as well. Razamel and Joel play well off each other, but there is an overload of “smurfisms” from the title characters.
SMURFS was clearly influenced by animated movies like SPIDERVERSE, with not only the use of a multiverse but a blend of different animation mediums. The live action set pieces have many characters sidelined as well.
The movie’s marketing doesn’t do the movie justice. As a result, when the movie actually has a heart and a good message, it’s just buried under the confusion. In addition, some of the marketing rides of pop singer Rihanna, and her more mature voice isn’t a good fit for the optimistic, friendly Smurfette.
If you want your children to have something fun to watch with a positive message about loyalty and finding that you have always had the power within, it will be an entertaining movie for them.
SMURFS has positive messages promoting kindness, believing in yourself, not being afraid to fail, and stepping up to fight against evil. The movie includes original music by Rihanna and blends 3D animation with clay animation, anime-inspired 2D animation, CG elements, and live action. Finally, SMURFS contains elements like magic spells, portals, evil wizards, and a multiverse, plus some action and comic violence. So, MOVIEGUIDE® advises caution for older children.