
Sexuality/Nudity Acceptable
Violence Acceptable
Vulgarity Acceptable
Anti-Catholic Philosophy Acceptable
This movie is a surprise in a good way. It's a children's movie with a surprisingly dark center that is both funny and touching.
The Sheep Detectives follows the lives of the sheep in the care of George (Hugh Jackman), who loves and cares for his flock. The smartest of the sheep is Lily (Julia-Louis Dreyfus) who is able to figure out the ending to the mystery stories that George reads to the sheep at the end of every day. Most of the sheep live simple, pleasant lives. One of them, Sebastian (Bryan Cranston) lives a more solitary and foreboding existence mostly away from the community. When George is murdered, Lily takes it upon herself with the help of her friend Mopple (Chris O'Dowd) to go into the local town and solve the murder. Seeing as how the town's only policeman, Tim (Nicholas Braun), seems a bit of a fool, Lily and her friend have their work cut out for them.
First of all, what the movie gets right is that it plays out like a traditional British murder/mystery. Lily knows the tropes and so does the audience. In that sense, the story is a bit meta, but not in a way that overwhelms to the narrative. Fans of the genre will enjoy watching Lily apply what she has learned to the evidence. The colorful list of suspects is a hodge-podge of small-town personalities that could be the source of potential dangers. Behind every polite smile could be a dagger.
The second thing the movie does really well is that it hits the proper emotional beats. Part of the movie is Lily's journey to heroism. In the story, sheep have the ability to force themselves to forget things that they don't want to remember (except for Mopple who does not have this ability). At first Lily and all the sheep want to forget George because it is too painful to remember him. But as Lily goes deeper into the mystery, she learns things that cause her even more fear, stress, and pain. The temptation to bury those memories becomes overwhelming and it only takes a heroic act of the will and her love of George and her friends that pushes her onward.
The third thing that surprised me was that they allowed their characters to have depth and growth. It seems silly that you should find such a strong character arc in CGI sheep. But they do the same thing with the human characters. Tim the cop could have easily been a one-note stereotype of an idiot. But unexpectedly, he develops as a character. He isn't the smartest, but he knows he's not the smartest and works to think through the problem for the sake of justice. This puts him in some precarious moral and relational dilemma's where he, like Lily, has to learn to trust himself.
Director Kyle Balda shots the film beautifully, making you yearn for the pastoral peace found in Geroge's pasture. Some of the shots are downright beautiful, almost too beautiful for a movie like this. There is one particularly, where George is carrying Sebastian on his shoulders that is such a moving homage to Jesus the Good Shepherd that hit just the right note. Balda also knows how to use the visuals to bring about his emotional moments. There is one scene where the sheep enter an unfamiliar barn and with some simple visual items shot in just the right way, the sense of danger and terror hit very hard.
The Church and Christianity are brought up, but the movie's attitude towards them seems more ambivalent than antagonistic. George is not a churchgoer, but he does make a dramatic entrance one day and give a large sum of money to Reverend Hillcoate (Kobna Holdbrook-Smith). The clergyman isn't a saint, but the movie also doesn't paint him as an outright villain the way they did in last year's Wonka. There is also a funny line where Sebastian tries to explain who God is to the other sheep which is a little irreverent but not insulting. My only caution is that since this is a movie aimed at children, parents might want to be aware that it does not portray the faith with reverence, though it doesn't explicitly attack it either.
That also gets to one of my criticisms of the movie: it's a children's movie that is also a murder mystery. There is something about the darkness of the subject and the innocence of the target audience that doesn't quite jibe with me. Because of this, the movie is almost in almost a no man's land of who it's made for.
The performances are fine, but they are broad in the way that you would expect from most children's movies. Cranston does bring a great deal of gravitas to the character of Sebastian with some fantastic voice work. Everyone else does their level-best I'm sure, but because the sheep are photo-realistic, it has the same problem as The Lion King remake had with range of emotion.
Thematically, there are some beautiful messages about love, courage, loyalty, and memory. There is also a nice sub-plot about overcoming prejudices that is a bit on the nose, but it works in a movie like this. And while the explicitly Christian elements are not very strong, there is a lot of Christological imagery, especially in how the sheep see George.
I was charmed by the characters and drawn into the mystery. I would be happy to see another adventure of The Sheep Detectives. If you are looking for a fun time at the movies, you can count on these sheep.









