Advertisement

Review | Turning Red movie review: Bao director’s Pixar coming-of-age comedy is both funny and authentic

  • Meilin’s adolescence in Toronto’s Chinatown is marked by routine until she hits puberty and hears of a family curse: any outburst and she becomes a red panda
  • Chinese-Canadian Domee Shi, an Oscar winner for Bao, directs with panache and sensitivity this story of a tiger mum – or is it panda mum? – and her daughter

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Meilin (voiced by Rosalie Chiang) in a still from Turning Red, directed by Domee Shi. Sandra Oh co-stars voicing Meilin’s mother, Ming. Photo: Disney/Pixar

4/5 stars

Advertisement

A precocious teenager discovers, much to her horror, that she can transform into a giant red panda in Turning Red, the latest animated offering from Pixar Studios. The film marks the feature directing debut of Chinese-Canadian Domee Shi, who won an Academy Award in 2019 for her animated short film, Bao.

Set in Toronto’s Chinatown circa 2002, Shi’s bright and fluffy coming-of-age caper is an often hilarious and commendably frank appreciation of the awkwardness of adolescence.

The action-packed adventure also serves as a nostalgia-fuelled celebration of filial piety and a cautionary tale about the dangers of over-parenting.

Meilin (voiced by Rosalie Chiang) is a 13-year-old straight-A student, and the only child of the indomitable Ming (Sandra Oh) and her introverted husband, Jin (Orion Lee).

Advertisement
Advertisement