Netflix’s festive fantasy about a kid and her inventor granddad is pure infectious energy – and with exquisite detail
Christmas is coming. And if anyone is not convinced it’s the most wonderful time of the year, here’s an excessively Christmassy Victorian-set musical on
Netflix to batter you into good cheer. In many ways, Jingle Jangle feels like a fairly boilerplate family movie (think Chitty Chitty Bang Bang or Willy Wonka) but with one big difference: the characters are mostly black. There’s a brilliant scene where a group of children have a snowball fight on a Dickensian cobbled street. Their ringleader is brainiac child genius Journey (Madalen Mills), a 10-year-old girl. As the kids pelt each other with snowballs, a song by Ghanaian
Singer Bisa Kdei plays, and Journey and her
Friends break into African dance moves. Their ethnicity is not the point of their characters or of the scene, but their culture and heritage are seen and celebrated.
Forest Whitaker plays Journey’s inventor grandfather Jeronicus Jangle. As a young man, he owned world-famous toyshop Jangles and Things, maker of steampunk-inspired gadgets. But Jeronicus lost everything when dastardly apprentice Gustafson (Keegan-Michael Key) stole his book of toy blueprints. Thirty years later, he is a broken man, played with gentle mournfulness by Whitaker, an
Actor perpetually enveloped by a grey cloud of disappointment. The big surprise is that he can sing too, belting out the movie’s big R&B-ish duet Make It Work (written by John Legend) with Anika Noni Rose.