I never thought Charlie Kaufman could write a plot that translates his anxiety into any format suitable for children. Yet, somehow, he does just that with ORION AND THE DARK. Despite having an original story and a unique protagonist, the overall narrative gets bogged down at times for me to have loved it as much as I wanted to. Yet, I respect the hell out of this film. In animation, we get countless uninspired Illumination garbage (MIGRATION) and TROLLS sequels. So, when a movie arrives with a different voice, I encourage audiences to seek it out.Ā
What doesnāt work:
- Dark āĀ Iām a big fan of Paul Walter Hauser, yet heās miscast as Dark. I wanted more depth to the performance mixed with humor. Itās on the page (or at least the writing has it), yet Hauser seems like heās miscast in the role.
- The Second Act āĀ Just when the film hits its stride, the second act of ORION has our protagonist going on one too many side quests. I wouldāve loved seeing more of Orionās relationship with his (canāt name character because itās a spoiler). Yet, when that relationship does come, it blasts off to stick the landing in the 3rd act.Ā
- The Comedy āĀ I wanted Darkās friends to have more funny moments (like how Sleep puts people to sleep). The script couldāve used a punch-up to have the tremendous voice actors make the audience laugh.
Despite having a ādreamā like setup, ORION AND THE DARK only semi-soars through the night. Orionās complex anxiety-filled issues are a step in the right direction for animated films to give kids who have catastrophic thinking a voice. That voice is wrapped in a movie thatās part INCEPTION, INSIDE OUT, and THE PRINCESS BRIDE. With those films as inspiration, ORION is right on the cusp of being a classic, but just misses.
Itās available to stream on Netflix.

