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Review: The story may be basic, but the visually dazzling ‘Elemental’ has romance to burn

Ember (voiced by Leah Lewis) and Wade (Mamoudou Athie) in the movie “Elemental.”
(Disney / Pixar)
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It’s rare that beloved animation studio Pixar makes a straightforward romantic movie — the films it produces frequently focus on family love and friendship. It’s not often we see a swooning love story between two individuals such as the one in Peter Sohn’s “Elemental,” a kind of “Romeo and Juliet” riff featuring the forbidden love between two elements that don’t usually mix: fire and water.

“Elemental” is also an immigrant story, about a family forced to leave their homeland to seek a new life in a strange place. A pre-title sequence follows Bernie (Ronnie del Carmen) and Cinder (Shila Ommi) as they arrive in Elemental City from their home in Fireland. Though water, earth, air and fire share a complicated coexistence in this bustling metropolis, Bernie and Cinder don’t find warm hospitality there. As they seek shelter for their burgeoning family with Cinder pregnant and are turned away, it harks back to the biblical story of the birth of Jesus.

The couple transform their “manger,” a crumbling old building, into the Fireplace, a shop and cafe that serves as the hub of Firish culture in the heart of Firetown. They hope that their daughter Ember (Leah Lewis) will be able to take over the shop when she’s ready, passing on their business to her with the same reverence that they intend to pass on their beloved, ever-burning Firish blue flame.

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Wade (voiced by Mamoudou Athie) and Ember (Leah Lewis) in the movie “Elemental.”
(Disney / Pixar)

Sohn and screenwriters John Hoberg, Kat Likkel and Brenda Hsueh are working well-known, much-beloved stories and tropes, transposing these tales into this fantastical world of humanoid elements. These character types — a pair of star-crossed lovers, or a gruff but loving immigrant father, fiercely proud and protective of his only daughter who is caught in a perfectionism trap — make it easy to slip into their emotional journey, even if they are made of fire, earth, water and air, and possess all the attendant chemical and physical qualities of each element.

Accepting that the story beats are overly familiar is a bargain one makes with the filmmakers in order to enjoy the visually dazzling world of “Elemental.” One has to wonder if the concept for the film came about because the Pixar animators wanted a chance to demonstrate their aptitude with such challenging substances as fire and water. The character’s surfaces are constantly moving: faces of flame flicker and crackle with the grace of a watercolor painting; bubbles float and churn and pop through the bodies of the watery folk, held together with a tenuous viscosity. It’s a truly eye-popping and detailed expression of animation technology and technique. The environments of Element City are vibrantly rendered, especially Firetown, a vague melange of Asian, Eastern European and Middle Eastern influences, which are reflected in Thomas Newman’s score.

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But it’s the romance that makes “Elemental” worth your time and emotional investment, thanks to a romantic male lead who isn’t made up of the same stuff we’ve seen in Disney movies of yore. Wade (Mamoudou Athie) is water, and he’s an emotional guy. After Ember loses her temper and bursts a pipe in the shop, Wade, a chipper city inspector, comes flowing into her life. They pair up to track down the source of the leak that threatens Firetown and the Fireplace, and along the way fall in love, much to Ember’s chagrin, fearing the disapproval of her parents.

But this modern kind of love proves irresistible. It’s a refreshing update to Shakespeare’s hormonal teens, and the proud, barrel-chested Disney princes of yore. Voiced with a unique tenderness by Athie, what makes Wade lovable is his kindness, his vulnerability, his willingness to share his emotions and his delight in all of Ember’s distinctly fiery qualities. She’s spunky and hot-headed, he’s sweet and adorable — if they touch, it could be a disaster, but somehow, their chemistry just works, bringing the charming “Elemental” to a lively roiling boil.

Walsh is a Tribune News Service film critic.

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‘Elemental’

Rated: PG, for some peril, thematic elements and brief language

Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes

Playing: Starts in general release June 16

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