To begin with, the writing doesn’t take younger audiences for granted. The narration is constantly alert and smart. From the moment when Flora finds her super-hero ally, the narrative opens up its arms to invite us into Flora’s adventures which are crazy but never unbelievable. Yes, even the squirrel with super-heroes is believable when you place it in a prankish playful and ebullient perspective.
In her breathless adventures with her squirrel-friend, Flora is joined by a temporarily blinded solemn and devoted boy William(Benjamin Evan Ainsworth). Both the kids in the lead are excellent. They know they are in this for the fun and adventure. But they also know that at the end of the day there has to be more to this joyride than meets the eye.
The handsomely mounted prettily packaged saga of inclusive tolerance and bonding makes space for pace grace and a whole lot of reflection on what makes life worth living.
There is an interesting sideshow involving Flora’s writer-parents. While the father (Ben Schwatz) is a failed comic book writer, Flora’s mother is a romantic novelist whose latest creation is stuck due to writer’s block. Such a catastrophe never hits this film. It’s a smooth sailing effervescent yarn that will never make you yawn and leave you with a big smile.
Image source: Instagram/#floraandulysses/Youtube/WaltDisneyStudios
Image source: Instagram/#floraandulysses/Youtube/WaltDisneyStudios