This Netflix vacation picture offers energetic sequences, mannerly music and a delightful bandage.
Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey
NYT Critic's Option
Directed by David E. Talbert
Family, Fantasy, Musical
PG
2h 2m
The magic of "Jingle Jangle: A Christmas Journey," a fun seasonal Netflix offering, hinges on conventionalities — in reinvention, imagination and the power of even the virtually familiar stories to offer fresh lessons.
The musical adventure, written and directed by David E. Talbert, opens with a grandmother (Phylicia Rashad) telling her two grandchildren the tale of Jeronicus Jangle (played at a immature historic period by Justin Cornwell), an inventor who has it all: a beautiful family, a successful shop filled with his whimsical inventions and the adoration of his community. That is until he is betrayed by his apprentice, Gustafson (played in younger years past Miles Barrow and at an older age by Keegan-Michael Key), who steals his most fantastical toy — an animatronic bullfighter named Don Juan Diego (voiced by Ricky Martin).
The flick follows a "Christmas Ballad"-style path from here: Gustafson'south expose breaks Jeronicus, who becomes depressed, loses his spirit for invention and becomes estranged from his daughter. Decades later on, Jeronicus'due south equally inventive granddaughter Journey (Madalen Mills) comes to visit the now curmudgeonly human being (played brilliantly past Wood Whitaker) with the plan to help him reunite with her mother (Anika Noni Rose) and rediscover his belief.
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