![]() One day, another young sea monster named Alberto (Jack Dylan Grazer) appears to retrieve some of the artifacts. And when he finds some random detritus scattered in his fishes’ grazing region - an alarm clock, a little picture, a wrench - he starts to daydream. Yet, like the Little Mermaid before him, Luca is curious about what’s going on up above. Especially for sea monsters, who are not themselves dangerous to humans but are regarded as such and hunted with fearsome spears. According to his parents, it’s dangerous up there. ![]() He watches over the fish, who are little bubbly airheads with the mannerisms of sheep, and stays away from the surface. He lives with his mother Daniela (Maya Rudolph), father Lorenzo (Jim Gaffigan), and crotchety badass of a grandmother (Sandy Martin). The story centers on Luca (voiced by Jacob Tremblay), a shy young sea monster who herds fish by day in a cove off the coast of the Italian Riviera. And just like those kinds of stories, there’s a buried wisdom within Luca that shifts a little depending on who’s looking at it, like the color of light refracting off a wave. Luca could take place this summer or a century ago. It has a softer, more hand-drawn feeling than some other Pixar offerings, almost as if it’s 2D in places, which gives the impression of timelessness. ![]() It’s a tiny vacation with a healthy serving of imagination.ĭirector Enrico Casarosa says the look of his new film is inspired by everything from Renaissance maps - the kind haunted around the edges by scaly sea monsters - to Japanese woodcuts and his own childhood memories of summers in southern Italy. (They’re also both sea monsters, but more on that later.) There is pasta and gelato, fountains and cycling, a mustache-twirling villain and starry night skies. Luca is probably the most summery movie that Pixar’s ever made - a light, gentle, sweet tale of a young boy and his best friend who go on an adventure in a tiny Italian town.
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