‘The Mitchells vs. the Machines’: Animation With a Message

A rollicking animated family adventure that doubles as an anti-tech/AI manifesto.
‘The Mitchells vs. the Machines’: Animation With a Message
(L–R) The Mitchell Family: mother Linda (voiced by Maya Rudolph), daughter Katie (voiced by Abbi Jacobson), father Rick (voiced by Danny McBride), and son Aaron (voiced by Mike Rianda), in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)
Michael Clark
1/2/2024
Updated:
1/5/2024
0:00
 PG | 1h 54m | Animation, Comedy, Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi, Family | 2021

For the entirety of the 20th century, Disney ruled the world of feature animation with such domination that other major studios essentially threw in the towel, but not before giving it the old college try once in a while.

At least once a year, Columbia Pictures (now Sony), 21st Century Fox (now Disney), Paramount Pictures, Universal Pictures, and/or Warner Brothers would take a stab at challenging the “Mouse,” only to mostly go down in flames. Their successes were few and far between.

This all changed in 2001, when the 3-year-old upstart DreamWorks delivered “Shrek.” Even though “Shrek” finished just behind the (Disney-distributed) Pixar release “Monsters, Inc.” at the box office, it won the first-ever Oscar for “Best Animated Feature.” Disney’s reign had ended.

(L–R) The Mitchell Family: son Aaron (voiced by Mike Rianda), father Rick (voiced by Danny McBride), daughter Katie (voiced by Abbi Jacobson), and mother Linda (voiced by Maya Rudolph), in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)
(L–R) The Mitchell Family: son Aaron (voiced by Mike Rianda), father Rick (voiced by Danny McBride), daughter Katie (voiced by Abbi Jacobson), and mother Linda (voiced by Maya Rudolph), in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)

Self-Destructing Disney

Over the past two decades, Disney, by its own hand, has lost sight of exactly why it was such an indelible, bulletproof brand, resulting in even more market loss and an increase in negative consumer perception.

Produced by the brain trust that was responsible for the brilliantly off-kilter “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” and “Lego Movie” franchises (Phil Lord and Christopher Miller), “The Mitchells vs. the Machines” (“Machines”) further explores the type of not-so-subliminal messaging started by Pixar in the 1980s.

It’s a movie that’s both family friendly and socially aware. To be clear, “aware” isn’t the same thing as “woke,” a condition that seems to have permanently and irrevocably afflicted Disney’s animation division.

“Machines” is aware because it recognizes and points out with knowing humor that humanity as a whole has become far too reliant and dependent on electronic knowledge and stimuli for its own good.

Originally titled “Connected,” “Machines” gets to the set-up quickly. Family patriarch Rick (voiced by Danny McBride) has had his fill of various electronic devices intruding on “quality time” at the family dinner table.

Aaron Mitchell (voiced by Mike Rianda) in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)
Aaron Mitchell (voiced by Mike Rianda) in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)

Virtual Bliss

Rick’s wife, Linda (Maya Rudolph), daughter Katie (Abbi Jacobson), and son Aaron (Mike Rianda, also the director and co-writer) are glued to their phones and tablets, thoroughly oblivious to their surroundings in electronic, virtual-world bliss. Beyond frustrated, Rick snaps and slaps Katie’s phone out of her hands, which essentially damages all of its contents, including several rough-hewn short films.

Budding filmmaker Katie is, to say the least, beyond perturbed at Rick’s actions and immediately slips into incredulous mode. Her already tenuous relationship with her father goes from DEFCON 3 to DEFCON 1 when Rick suggests that, instead of Katie flying from Michigan to California to attend film school, the family drives there in a manner not all that dissimilar to that of the Griswold family in “National Lampoon’s Vacation.”

Making a bad situation worse, Rick’s choice to cram everyone into the family wagon for an extended road trip halfway across the country only adds salt to Katie’s wound, and she isn’t shy in voicing her displeasure.

PAL and HAL

The principal subplot is something of a parallel story to the Mitchell’s tense interaction. Dr. Mark Bowman (Eric André) is a Steve Jobs-type looking to create a better version of PAL (Olivia Colman), a first-generation form of artificial intelligence (AI).

The filmmaker’s naming of this creation PAL wasn’t lost on me, as it so closely resembles that of the evil AI HAL character from “2001: A Space Odyssey.” PAL is equally as arrogant and devious as HAL, and isn’t about to take being deemed obsolete lightly.

Rick (voiced by Danny McBride) and daughter Katie (voiced by Abbi Jacobson), in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)
Rick (voiced by Danny McBride) and daughter Katie (voiced by Abbi Jacobson), in “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)

My sole issue with “Machines” was the manner in which the two major story lines eventually cross. It’s far from a deal-killer, and has no net effect on the ultimate desired message: Humankind has produced (proudly, I should add) an intangible form of thought that doubles in “intellect” every 48 hours. There will likely come a point in the relative near future when AI will have no need for its creators. Like PAL, humanity will be tossed on the metaphoric trash heap.

What the “Machine” filmmakers did here (and those behind “WALL*E” as well) is to point this out in a humorous and (relatively) lighthearted manner why AI is the last thing that humanity needs at the moment. To be sure, it’s a cautionary tale, yet it does so without any furrow-browed, tsk-tsk, finger-wagging.

The internet, computers, smartphones, and 10 zillion-plus apps were ostensibly invented to make our lives easier and bring us closer together, when in reality they’ve achieved the exact opposite result.

Theatrical poster for “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)
Theatrical poster for “The Mitchells vs. the Machines.” (Columbia Pictures)
The movie is available on home video and streaming on Netflix, Vudu, Amazon Prime, Apple TV+, YouTube, and DirecTV.
The Mitchells vs. the Machines’ Director: Mike Rianda Voice Cast: Abbi Jacobson, Danny McBride, Maya Rudolph, Olivia Colman, Eric André, Mike Rianda MPAA Rating: PG Running Time: 1 hour, 54 minutes Release Date: April 23, 2021 Rating: 4 out of 5
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Originally from Washington, D.C., Michael Clark has provided film content to over 30 print and online media outlets. He co-founded the Atlanta Film Critics Circle in 2017 and is a weekly contributor to the Shannon Burke Show on FloridaManRadio.com. Since 1995, Mr. Clark has written over 4,000 movie reviews and film-related articles. He favors dark comedy, thrillers, and documentaries.
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