Review: ‘The Sea Beast’ is a charming, animated adventure

Disney veteran Chris Williams makes his Netflix debut in a film about sea monsters

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3 MIN READ
The Sea Beast NETFLIX OFFCIAL (7)-1657625196967
Zaris-Angel Hator as Maisie Brumble.
Netflix

For a young imagination, there is something uniquely captivating about a stowaway story on the high seas. The stakes are great, but the adventure is so far removed from any reality most kids know that it becomes a purely transportive experience. It is a fantasy you can get wrapped up in and put away when it’s over.

Disney veteran Chris Williams (‘Big Hero 6’) said it was the rollicking adventures he grew up watching, ‘King Kong,’ ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark,’ ‘Treasure Island’ and ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ among them, that made him want to make movies. And with ‘The Sea Beast,’ an animated fantasy adventure which is out now on Netflix, Williams, who directed and co-wrote, has made something quite winning for all ages.

In this world, which seems to be set in some gilded, imaginary kingdom in the late 17th century, giant, colorful sea monsters roam the Dregmorr Sea and are great threats to towns and ships. Monster hunting has become a full-time job for brave seafarers, many of whom are essentially celebrities whose adventures and daring are written about in books cherished by children.

One of those children is Maisie Brumble (Zaris-Angel Hator), a spirited orphan who dreams of fighting sea beasts herself like her hero Jacob Holland (Karl Urban). So she decides to stowaway on his ship, the Inevitable, led by Captain Crow (Jared Harris), to help in their pursuit of the biggest conquest yet, the Red Bluster.

THE SEA BEAST - (L-R) Zaris-Angel Hator as Maisie Brumble, Jared Harris as Captain Crow, Karl Urban as Jacob Holland and Marianne Jean-Baptiste as Sarah Sharpe. Cr: NETFLIX © 2022

‘The Sea Beast’ is notable for its refusal to dumb itself down for a young audience. It’s anchored by interesting and fairly complex characters who actually have arcs to play. Harris’s Captain Crow is an unambiguous Ahab type, but he also has a sweet, surrogate paternal relationship with Urban’s Jacob, whom he rescued from a shipwreck at a young age. At times, ‘The Sea Beast,’ with a lively score by Mark Mancina, more closely resembles something like ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ than your typical animated fare.

The action scenes are really quite exciting, too, and after an epic battle with the Red Bluster, Jacob and Maisie find themselves stranded on an island together and fighting for survival. For anyone who felt let down by the little Leia and Obi-Wan relationship in the recent Kenobi series, ‘The Sea Beast’ features a much more compelling version of that relationship. Much of that has to do with Maisie’s believably precious dialogue. Plus, there’s a nice message at the end (though to reveal what that is would definitely be considered a spoiler). It straddles the delicate line of being both classic and modern.

THE SEA BEAST - Zaris-Angel Hator as MAISIE BRUMBLE and Karl Urban as JACOB HOLLAND. Cr: Netflix © 2022

The monsters themselves, though the size of Godzilla and packing Godzilla’s destructive power, are exaggeratedly cartoonish (comparisons to ‘How to Train Your Dragon’ are inevitable). This might seem like a silly thing to say considering it is a cartoon, but it’s an interesting choice when everything else is so painstakingly rendered with realistic, tactile details. It’s not a criticism, exactly. But it does ensure that the monsters won’t immediately be the stuff of nightmares for the youngest viewers, which seems to be a fair trade off.

Don’t miss it!

‘The Sea Beast’ is streaming on Netflix

THE SEA BEAST - Zaris-Angel Hator as MAISIE BRUMBLE and Karl Urban as JACOB HOLLAND. Cr: Netflix © 2022
THE SEA BEAST - (Pictured) Karl Urban as Jacob Holland. Cr: NETFLIX © 2022
THE SEA BEAST - (Pictured) Zaris-Angel Hator as Maisie Brumble. Cr: NETFLIX © 2022
THE SEA BEAST - Jared Harris as CAPTAIN CROW. Cr: Netflix © 2022

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