Snoopy and Charlie Brown: The Peanuts Movie

This loving adaptation of an iconic comic strip stays true to its source – for better and for worse.
Sarah Ward
Published on January 04, 2016
Updated on January 04, 2016

Overview

Do you sometimes lack confidence, or luck? Do you feel like you try more than you succeed? Do you seesaw between hoping things will go well and avoiding anything that could turn out badly? Of course you do — and so does Charlie Brown. For 65 years, the main character in Charles M. Schulz's Peanuts comic strip has captured the routine struggles of everyday life, acting as everyone's cartoon surrogate through life's eternal ups and downs.

His troubles often involve kicking a football and flying a kite, but they're the kind of average antics anyone can relate to. That's one of the reasons why Peanuts has remained a comic strip favourite — and why a new big-screen outing has been eagerly anticipated. The makers of Snoopy and Charlie Brown: The Peanuts Movie know this, and they've acted accordingly. Their film might bring this ordinary boy, his beagle and their buddies into the 21st century, but it doesn't stray far from all the things that have made Peanuts such a cherished property for decades.

Story-wise, that means a raft of scenarios fans will instantly recognise, and even the most casual of Peanuts readers or viewers probably will as well. Charlie Brown doesn't just tussle with his preferred outdoor activities, but with getting the attention of the Little Red-Haired Girl. His pals all continue to hang around, including his little sister Sally, best buddy Linus, the opinionated Lucy and tomboy Peppermint Patty. Back at home, mischievous pooch Snoopy dreams up a novel involving his World War I pilot alter ego, his girlfriend and his nemesis.

If you're buzzing with not only nostalgia, but déjà vu, that's understandable. With Schulz's son Craig and grandson Bryan among the film's writers, The Peanuts Movie was always going to tread gently in its predecessors' footsteps. In what amounts to a series of interlinked vignettes, the film tells fond and familiar tales about beloved characters, with a tone of adoration more important than offering up any surprises. Indeed, consider the first Peanuts flick in 35 years a best-of compilation or a greatest hits package.

The affectionate tribute that results comes complete with gorgeous 3D CGI animation that mimics pen strokes, a score that's appropriately jaunty, and the smart use of children instead of famous actors as voice talent. And while the movie's episodic nature means that some segments soar above others, when they do, they're something special. Charlie Brown's attempts to read War and Peace and his reaction when his classmates brand him a genius aren't just earnest and endearing — they're easily the film's highlights. Director Steve Martino (Ice Age: Continental Drift) might not be able to sustain the Peanuts magic for 88 minutes, but he certainly whips up a couple of memorable chapters.

Of course, adapting comic strips into movies is a tricky task, even with ample material to call upon. Gags that work so well over four illustrations don't always translate to the cinema, particularly when pieced together and stretched out to feature film length. Accordingly, The Peanuts Movie is as slight and patchy as it is sweet, charming and amusing. When it all comes together though, it fittingly serves up another lesson about taking the good with the bad.

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