8 / 10
The Boxtrolls is Laika’s third feature and a strange, beautiful, sometimes overstuffed adventure that does not get the credit it deserves. Anthony Stacchi and Graham Annable co-directed. The script is loosely adapted from Alan Snow’s novel Here Be Monsters. Isaac Hempstead Wright voiced Eggs, a human boy raised by the underground creatures known as Boxtrolls who wear cardboard boxes the way crabs wear shells. Ben Kingsley voiced Archibald Snatcher, the exterminator obsessed with achieving social standing by eliminating the Boxtrolls. Elle Fanning voiced Winnie. Jared Harris voiced Lord Portley-Rind. Richard Ayoade, Tracy Morgan, and Nick Frost voiced the rest of Snatcher’s gang. Toni Collette voiced Lady Portley-Rind. The cast is dense.
Laika is the American stop-motion studio responsible for Coraline (2009), ParaNorman (2012), this film, Kubo and the Two Strings (2016), and Missing Link (2019). Each of their productions is technically ambitious and at least one or two beats short of being a masterpiece. The Boxtrolls is the second-best of their first three features. ParaNorman is the best. Coraline is the most influential. The Boxtrolls is the least seen.
The Visual World
The film’s setting is the imaginary town of Cheesebridge, where social standing is measured by the consumption of cheese. The town is built on stop-motion sets that combine Victorian architecture with a heightened, slightly Tim Burton-adjacent aesthetic. The cheese-tasting scenes are some of the most elaborate practical food animation ever produced.
The Boxtroll designs are the film’s strongest creative achievement. The creatures wear cardboard boxes labeled with whatever was inside the box originally, which the audience picks up as a naming convention. Eggs is the boy raised by Boxtrolls and called Eggs because that was what was in his original box. The visual identification of each Boxtroll by his box label is the kind of design choice that holds up across the runtime.
For Writers
A naming convention rooted in the world can replace dozens of pages of characterization. Each Boxtroll’s name is determined by what was originally in his box. The audience learns the rule once and applies it to every Boxtroll they meet. The lesson is that consistent worldbuilding details reduce the cognitive load on the reader. If you can teach the reader how something works once and then trust them to follow the rule, your worldbuilding does work without requiring page space to do it.
The Plot Problem
The script tries to do too many things. Eggs’s identity arc. Winnie’s relationship with her absent father. Snatcher’s class climbing. The town’s exterminator system. The cheese politics. A late-act revelation about Snatcher’s true nature. A late-act revelation about Eggs’s true origin. The Boxtrolls’ culture and rituals. A romance subplot. The film has approximately four films worth of plot in eighty-nine minutes.
The clutter is partly the cost of adapting Alan Snow’s much longer novel. The book has time to develop its threads. The film does not. Some characters get short shrift. Some plot turns happen before the audience has fully invested in them. The third act is energetic but not always coherent.
For Writers
Adaptation requires cutting. The Boxtrolls preserves too much of Alan Snow’s novel and the film suffers for it. The writers were unwilling to throw out subplots that worked in the book but did not have time to develop on screen. The lesson is that adapting a novel to a feature is mostly an exercise in subtraction. Find the central spine. Cut what does not serve it. The audience will not miss what was never on screen.
Ben Kingsley
Ben Kingsley voices Snatcher as a man whose primary motivation is not malice but desperate class-climbing ambition. Snatcher wants to be a White Hat, a member of the town’s elite who get to taste cheese in the town hall. He cannot eat cheese without his head swelling grotesquely because he is allergic. The film makes this a literal physical comedy element and a metaphor for the absurdity of the social system he is trying to enter.
The performance is the film’s most committed element. Kingsley gives Snatcher a specific voice, a specific physicality (through the animators), and a specific moral logic. Snatcher is genuinely funny and genuinely dangerous. The character is the best villain in any Laika production.
For Writers
A villain whose ambition is social rather than territorial is harder to defeat and more interesting to write. Snatcher does not want to rule. He wants to be invited to the table. Class anxiety is a more relatable motivation than world domination. The lesson is that an antagonist’s goal should connect to something the audience recognizes from real life. Snatcher’s specific desire is funny and tragic because everyone has known a Snatcher.
Craft Note
Anthony Stacchi and Graham Annable co-directed. Irena Brignull and Adam Pava wrote, adapted from Alan Snow’s novel Here Be Monsters. Isaac Hempstead Wright voiced Eggs. Ben Kingsley voiced Archibald Snatcher. Elle Fanning voiced Winnie. Jared Harris voiced Lord Portley-Rind. Richard Ayoade voiced Mr. Pickles. Tracy Morgan voiced Mr. Trout. Nick Frost voiced Mr. Gristle. Laika Entertainment produced. Released September 2014. Approximately sixty million dollar budget. One hundred and ten million worldwide gross. Nominated for Best Animated Feature at the 2015 Academy Awards.
The Verdict
8/10. A visually distinctive, narratively crowded Laika production that deserves more attention than it gets. Ben Kingsley’s Snatcher is the highlight. The Boxtroll designs are memorable. The script needed to cut one or two subplots. Watch it for the visuals and for Kingsley.
FAQ
What is Laika?
An American stop-motion animation studio based in Oregon. Founded in 2005. Coraline, ParaNorman, The Boxtrolls, Kubo and the Two Strings, and Missing Link are their feature productions.
Is it based on a book?
Yes. Here Be Monsters by Alan Snow. The novel is longer and more elaborate than the film.
How does it compare to other Laika films?
Below Coraline and ParaNorman. Above Missing Link. Roughly equivalent to Kubo and the Two Strings.
Is it appropriate for children?
Yes, with caveats. Some of the Snatcher transformation sequences are grotesque. Younger children may find them upsetting.
Who voices the Boxtrolls?
Various Laika staff members provided the Boxtroll vocalizations. The creatures speak in their own non-English language throughout.
What is the cheese thing?
Cheebridge’s social hierarchy is built around the consumption of artisanal cheese. The elite White Hats taste rare cheeses in the town hall. Lower-class characters are not permitted. The satire is about class systems generally.
Should I watch this?
Yes, especially if you have not seen other Laika films. A reasonable introduction to the studio’s work.