Michael B Jordan and Juno Temple voice indistinctive body-swap caper for kids with muddled empathy message This March’s Pixar adventure Hoppers might not have been a vintage offering but it was a minor, much-needed victory for a studio whose magic touch had faded over time. It was a rare non-sequel that appealed to both critics (a 94% rating on Rotten Tomatoes) and audiences (with $164m it was Pixar’s biggest original hit domestically since Coco) and had just about enough of the head plus heart formula many of us had grown to love and, recently, miss. Its success has reminded us just how it should be done right (or at least right enough) and how many, many others have failed to get even close to that place. Smarter competitors have found their own lanes – the maximalist mania of Illumination’s Minions movies, the specific, zeitgeist-y superhero stories of Sony’s KPop: Demon Hunters and Spiderverse – but there’s been a weak yet constant flow of obvious attempts to replicate what Pixar does so well. What nudges Swapped – a Skydance film once intended for Apple that now lands on Netflix – that much further into the shadow is not just how it follows the general template but how it also seems to be a closer copy of Hoppers itself. It’s more unfortunate timing than anything but it’s hard to watch without thinking briefly back with even a less memorable Pixar film seeming like a stone cold classic in comparison. Continue reading...
Back to Entertainment
Entertainment
May 1, 2026 at 7:01 AM
Swapped review – animated Netflix adventure plays like off-brand Pixar
The Guardian US Culture