Synopsis
A little anti. A little hero.
A knight framed for a tragic crime teams with a scrappy, shape-shifting teen to prove his innocence.
Directed by Nick Bruno, Troy Quane
A knight framed for a tragic crime teams with a scrappy, shape-shifting teen to prove his innocence.
怪物少女妮莫娜, 니모나, นิโมนา, Німона, Нимона, ニモーナ, נימונה, نيمونا, نیمونا, निमोना
This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
Nimona needing 1000 years to get over her toxic homoerotic friendship with a straight girl is just like me fr
Chloë Grace Moretz saying "If you don't, you'll die in this closet' is gay cinema at its finest
Breaks animation tradition, not by having an emphasis on LGBTQIA+ relationships and stories, but by having their cartoon dance party at the midpoint of the film instead of at the end.
No wonder Disney tried to kill this film. It makes every single film they've made in fucking years look like absolute DOGSHIT
“We can’t change how they see us.”
At this point, you might as well embrace the minor Hollywood annoyances – “awkwaaard” joke and all – because when you have a trans-coded, rascally punk who can steal a show like this, a romantic arc this nuanced, queer/anti-fearmongering text this flagrant, an environment this eye-catching, the year’s most riveting shapeshifting action this side of Dungeons & Dragons and you’re this vulnerable to crying, how can you fall out of love with something as fractured yet sincere as this? Frankly, it’s quite incredible that this is an actual movie playing in theatres that was allowed to exist in the American mainstream at all. Blue Sky’s masterpiece.