|  | Squid:  |  | It’s been a long road for the Craig McCracken/Genndy 
                  Tartakovsky team, starting out with a few cartoon one-offs about 
                  a silly girl who loves to dance and generally annoy her brainy 
                  little brother, and another about a freakish backwoods monster 
                  who goes berserk when his meat jam fails to win over the judges 
                  at a crafts fair. Over the years, they have learned to refine 
                  the art of cartooning, plumbing the depths of the cartoons they 
                  love, to extract the best elements to "homage", and playing 
                  with those elements in a new form. Take the newest creation, 
                  Samurai Jack, on the Cartoon Network, a real gem 
                  of an animated feature. Or, take their latest offering, The 
                  Powerpuff Girls Movie. The look and feel of the movie is definitely steps beyond what 
                  they felt comfortable with on the small screen. While they still 
                  keep the basic elements that give The Powerpuff Girls 
                  its own unique style, they are able to take the highlights of 
                  these elements and extend them out into something truly spectacular 
                  and enjoyable to watch. The story itself doesn’t try to be an 
                  epic or anything; it basically covers the first few days of 
                  the Powerpuff Girls existence, how Mojo Jojo got his volcano-top 
                  observatory, and the first time the Girls discover that they 
                  can be heroes with their powers. But the movie really shines when it just lets itself go and 
                  lets the flow of the action direct the movie. For instance, 
                  one of the earlier sequences follows the girls during an out-of-control 
                  game of tag. During this whole scene, which itself is actually 
                  quite long, I was really into it, probably as much as I was 
                  during some of the dogfight scenes in Star Wars. 
                  The swooping and the colors and the expressions of the girls 
                  and the hapless citizens of Townsville really made this into 
                  something fun. The animation itself, at once a tribute to Japanese 
                  anime style and simplicity, takes the clean lines and stylization 
                  to a truly technically refined place, and lets the basic ideas 
                  shine in a way that might be tough to capture on the small screen. 
                  This might be a place for the people who watch the TV show who 
                  ask, “Why do they draw it that way?” to understand the real 
                  beauty of what the artists were trying to accomplish. One nice thing about this movie is it doesn’t try to “work 
                  on two levels”. I think during the entire ninety minutes of 
                  the movie, there were maybe three or four jokes or references 
                  that you wouldn’t expect little kids to get. But for the most 
                  part, the things I thought were funny were the same things my 
                  ten-year-old fellow attendees thought were funny; the same things 
                  I thought were touching, they thought were touching; the same 
                  things I thought were cool, they thought were cool. It really 
                  shows what can be done with a simple approach to cartooning. 
                  It doesn’t try to out-Shrek Shrek or anything, 
                  and that’s nice. I can understand adult parents not wanting 
                  to watch an hour and a half of Happy Little Elves 
                  or something, but if you’re an adult and you don’t enjoy what 
                  a fun movie this is, you really take life too seriously. It’s 
                  okay if you don’t want to admit to other adults that you enjoyed 
                  this movie, just so long as somewhere inside of you, some part 
                  of your psyche is going “Swoosh! Swoosh! Pow!” And if you want 
                  to do that on the outside, around the parking lot after the 
                  movie lets out, well, that’s perfectly understandable too. |  |