Review: A yeti prompts a China travelogue in ‘Abominable’
“Abominable” is just about the most cuddly piece of East-West synergy a corporation could dream up.
The first co-production between DreamWorks Animation and the Shanghai-based Pearl Studios (formerly known as Oriental DreamWorks), “Abominable” is a rare kind of creature but the sort we’re likely to see more and more of in movie theatres. The Chinese box office will soon overtake the North America as the globe’s top movie market, inevitably reorienting big-screen entertainment.
There’s nothing wrong with aiming for moviegoers on each side of the globe. For Hollywood productions of a certain budget, it’s long been considered a necessity. And, of course, the intermingling of cultures — like in Lulu Wang’s lovely and heartfelt “The Farewell,” released earlier this year — often fuels brilliant, border-straddling tales.
But “Abominable,” about a girl who discovers a yeti on the rooftop of her Shanghai apartment building, is so safe, so risk-free, so bland, that its business imperatives are never just off-screen.