IMDb RATING
6.3/10
26K
YOUR RATING
In this animated musical, a girl builds a rocket ship and blasts off, hoping to meet a mythical moon goddess.In this animated musical, a girl builds a rocket ship and blasts off, hoping to meet a mythical moon goddess.In this animated musical, a girl builds a rocket ship and blasts off, hoping to meet a mythical moon goddess.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 3 wins & 60 nominations total
Glen Keane
- Space Dog
- (voice)
- …
Brycen Hall
- Young Fei Fei
- (voice)
- (as Brycen Taylor Hall)
Ruthie Ann Miles
- Mother
- (voice)
Edie Ichioka
- Bungee
- (voice)
Greg Watanabe
- Male Customer
- (voice)
- …
David Chen
- Townsperson
- (voice)
- …
Sandra Oh
- Mrs. Zhong
- (voice)
Robert G. Chiu
- Chin
- (voice)
Margaret Cho
- Auntie Ling
- (voice)
- …
Kimiko Glenn
- Auntie Mei
- (voice)
- …
Artt Butler
- Uncle
- (voice)
- …
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It's quite often when an animated film comes out and they try to imitate or to simulate the same narrative aspects or the same characterisation or even the same animated standards of Disney. Sometimes it's so good it stands out, but other times the story mechanics are very familiar with Disney that it can make the film very far from being a success. Over the Moon is a charming Chinese inspired animation that's both victim to that but also different to that and thankfully sets the bar quite high in animated filmmaking. The story is very familiar a teenage girl is trying to get over the death of her mother and to do that she must embark on a journey of enlightenment to move on. We've seen it all before, but the one thing that's different is the colours whether it's the weird and wonderful creatures walking around or the stunning picturesque views of China's landscape. It will often remind you of Spirited Away or Inside Out or other brilliantly successful animations. Granted Over the Moon may not be new when it comes to the storytelling or the pain we all experience when feeling grief but the colours alone make it a wild success and lest we forget the glorious tunes to boot which will make you cry, make you dance and make you smile. It's likely that Netflix will go to the Oscars with this but whether they'll get the prize is a different story. But it flies high past other films of 2020 and could actually be the best animated film of the year...maybe. 4/5.
Started of very well, nice and gripping story. And then comes the moon with neon colors and a stupid pop star God.
Is this what we really want to show the children? There are better ways to tell a story about loss and progress with life.
Top notch animation. but if you've seen as many animated films as i've done then the plot won't stand out in any way.
As a Chinese person, I LOVED seeing so much wonderful cultural representation and the all-Asian cast. As a kid, there was very little of this type of thing available to me and I'm happy that my four year old enjoys this movie and sees positive representations of this part of her heritage.
I thought the visuals were stunning, and the animation and character design were lovely.
Otherwise, it was... fine. I feel like the movie started off strong. I got teary during the first part. Then the story just got kind of confusing and I felt very little emotional connection to the characters. The singing is good, but I didn't find the music as catchy or memorable as some other recent musicals. I'll watch this again with my kid and I prefer it to something like Frozen, Cars, or The Good Dinosaur, but I don't think it's as good as my favorite Pixar films like Wall-e or Monsters, Inc.
I thought the visuals were stunning, and the animation and character design were lovely.
Otherwise, it was... fine. I feel like the movie started off strong. I got teary during the first part. Then the story just got kind of confusing and I felt very little emotional connection to the characters. The singing is good, but I didn't find the music as catchy or memorable as some other recent musicals. I'll watch this again with my kid and I prefer it to something like Frozen, Cars, or The Good Dinosaur, but I don't think it's as good as my favorite Pixar films like Wall-e or Monsters, Inc.
A Netflix animated movie that very much follows the Disney/Pixar conventions. It's done well and with sensitivity, but it's let down by a mediocre middle section.
Loosely based on a Chinese legend, it tells the story of a girl whose mother dies and has to face the possibility of his father marrying again. She is not ready to let go and accept someone else in her family, so she ends up travelling to the moon with the unwelcome company of her annoying little step-brother to find proof that the fairy tales her mother told her were real, and hopefully convince her dad to remember her mother and not marry again.
The 3D animation looks quite good in the scenes set in China, with very expressive characters suiting the sentimental story being told. Once on the Moon, however, the acid-trip colors used there can't hide that the animation becomes more simplistic and cheap.
It's also in that middle part where the sensitive storytelling turns into a collection of so-so animation for children tropes. The improvement of the relationship between the main character and her step-brother is explored very superficially.
The songs (for this is a musical) are nice, and the resolution is satisfactory. Sure, the message here is very conventional, but then this is a movie for children, and it is with enough charm that I found it touching. It is a pity that they couldn't come up with something more special for the middle section.
Loosely based on a Chinese legend, it tells the story of a girl whose mother dies and has to face the possibility of his father marrying again. She is not ready to let go and accept someone else in her family, so she ends up travelling to the moon with the unwelcome company of her annoying little step-brother to find proof that the fairy tales her mother told her were real, and hopefully convince her dad to remember her mother and not marry again.
The 3D animation looks quite good in the scenes set in China, with very expressive characters suiting the sentimental story being told. Once on the Moon, however, the acid-trip colors used there can't hide that the animation becomes more simplistic and cheap.
It's also in that middle part where the sensitive storytelling turns into a collection of so-so animation for children tropes. The improvement of the relationship between the main character and her step-brother is explored very superficially.
The songs (for this is a musical) are nice, and the resolution is satisfactory. Sure, the message here is very conventional, but then this is a movie for children, and it is with enough charm that I found it touching. It is a pity that they couldn't come up with something more special for the middle section.
Did you know
- TriviaThis is the final film written by Audrey Wells before her death in 2018. The film is dedicated to her.
- Quotes
Young Fei Fei: Magnetic levitation's the coolest.
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Tiana's Splashing Palace (2020)
- SoundtracksOn the Moon Above
Written by Christopher Curtis, Marjorie Duffield and Helen Park
Performed by Ruthie Ann Miles, John Cho and Cathy Ang
- How long is Over the Moon?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Más allá de la Luna
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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