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Hand-drawn tale of friendship exudes charm

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STUDIO CANAL
A starving Ernest, a bear, stumbles across Celestine, a mouse, while foraging for food and the two become friends in “Ernest & Celestine,” a French-Belgian animated film playing at Kahala 8.
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STUDIO CANAL
Celestine, left, (voiced by Pauline Brunner) and Ernest, (Forest Whitaker), become friends in “Ernest & Celestine.”

The delicate and lovingly handmade "Ernest & Celestine" captures the whimsy and warmth of a dearly felt children’s picture book like few movies before.

The Oscar-nominated animated French-Belgian film is a simply rendered tale about a friendship between a mouse and a bear, painted with watercolor backgrounds and hand-sketched characters. In a movie landscape crowded with awesome digital animations and forgettable big-budget cartoon blockbusters, "Ernest & Celestine" is a humble oasis of gentle and inventive storytelling.

Though the film lost out to Disney’s mighty "Frozen" at the Academy Awards, children and adults will be thrilled by this meek underdog, which is being released both in its original French and an English redubbing voiced by Forest Whitaker, Lauren Bacall, Paul Giamatti and child actress Mackenzie Foy. (This review is of the French original, which holds the charm of hearing little children mice speaking timidly in French. Be warned: The cuteness is almost unbearable.)

An orphanage of mice has gathered around Celestine (voiced by Pauline Brunner, the daughter of "Triplets of Belleville" producer Didier Brunner, also a producer here), a bright young mouse who — despite the stern warnings of their frightful headmaster (Anne-Marie Loop) that such ideas are dangerous — imagines a bear and mouse as pals.

‘ERNEST & CELESTINE’
Rated: PG
* * *  1/2
Opens Friday at Kahala 8

In the world of "Ernest & Celestine," this is tantamount to heresy. The mice live below ground and the bears above — the car-driving, shop-keeping human equivalents in this universe. Their lone interaction is when a bear cub loses a tooth, which the "fairy mouse" replaces with a coin. (This, it turns out, is a mutually beneficial deal, since mice dentists depend on bear teeth to fashion tooth replacements.)

It’s when Celestine is on such a fairy mouse mission that she’s discovered by a shrieking family and thrown out of the house and into the trash. The next day, she’s unwittingly rescued by Ernest, a grumpy and woefully unsuccessful street musician clad in a ragged old overcoat and hat. (When police confiscate his one-man-band instruments, Ernest eats the ticket.)

Desperate for food, he initially tries to swallow Celestine, too, as he rummages through garbage cans. Though greatly outsized, she cheerfully extends her paw and introduces herself. The plucky Celestine then slaps him across the nose and chastises, "Do you think a little mouse like me will fill you up?"

But after Celestine leads him to sweets, they start up an unlikely friendship and, later, become wanted burglars on the lam. Celestine is sought by mice police (for Celestine’s affiliation with a bear), while Ernest is pursued by bear police (for his food stealing and, to help Celestine, tooth thievery). Even holed up in his country cabin, they don’t immediately hit it off, as Ernest still turns his nose up at living with an inferior mouse.

It’s a little story, told economically and with graceful minimalism. Sound effects have the simplicity of a Richard Bresson film. The music by jazz cellist Vincent Courtois is a sweetly melancholy companion to the fairy tale, which despite its cuteness, has a rascally French sense of humor, too.

Where did such a lovely little movie come from? It’s based on the whimsical children’s books by Belgian author Gabrielle Vincent (the first "Ernest & Celestine" book dates to 1980) and

directed by young French animator Benjamin Renner, joined by co-directors Vincent Patar and Stiphane Aubier.

Together, they’ve created not just a positively charming movie, but an ode to the tactile pleasures of handcrafted artistry. Moviegoers will swear the coloring ink must have stained their local theater’s movie screens.

It’s very nearly the sweetest thing ever, a magical reminder that the movies just need a little heart and the resolve to be intimate when so many films would rather boast their size. It’s a movie to share, like a cherished picture book or a beloved "Calvin and Hobbes" Sunday strip, with imaginative pipsqueaks like Celestine.

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The last showing of the day will be in French with English subtitles. All other showings will be in English.

Review by Jake Coyle, Associated Press

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