Little Nicholas: Happy As Can Be Explained

Little Nicholas: Happy As Can Be
Native Name:
Director:Amandine Fredon
Benjamin Massoubre
Producer:Adrian Politowski
Christel Hénon
Aton Soumache
Based On:Le Petit Nicolas by René Goscinny and Jean-Jacques Sempé
Starring:Alain Chabat
Laurent Lafitte
Simon Faliu
Music:Ludovic Bource
Animator:Juliette Laurent
Keelan MacLeod
Julien Maret
Sevan Selvadjian
Editing:Benjamin Massoubre
Studio:On Classics (Mediawan)
Bidibul Productions
Distributor:BAC Films
Runtime:82 minutes
Country:France
Language:French

Little Nicholas: Happy As Can Be (French: Le Petit Nicolas : Qu'est-ce qu'on attend pour être heureux ?) is a 2022 French animated comedy film directed by Amandine Fredon and Benjamin Massoubre.[1] The film portrays the story of René Goscinny and Jean-Jacques Sempé as they create the influential Le Petit Nicolas series of illustrated children's books, blending both scenes that directly adapt vignettes from the books and scenes that depict the real world creation of the books including Goscinny and Sempé interacting with and talking to Nicholas directly.[2]

The film stars Alain Chabat as Goscinny, Laurent Lafitte as Sempé, and Simon Faliu as Nicholas. Goscinny's daughter, Anne Goscinny, was one of the writers.[3]

The film premiered as a special screening at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival.[3]

Critical response

Allan Hunter of Screen Daily praised the film, calling it a charming animation with "some of the style of Sylvain Chomet", and writing that it "unfolds at a cracking pace, mirroring the boisterous, fizzing energy of a curious young mind. Ludovic Bource’s jaunty jolly score propels everything along, finding a musical style for every mood. Jean-Jacques’s wide-eyed arrival in Paris plays like a dynamic Gene Kelly song’n’dance number, there is a tango for René’s time in Argentina, a brassy exuberance to match the sense of expectation when René arrives in New York for the first time."[4]

Kaveh Jalinous of Under the Radar wrote that "Little Nicholas’ animation style, primarily reliant on watercolor, is the perfect visual accompaniment to the film’s breezy narrative. The animators’ minimalist usage of colors not only makes each shot look as if it was ripped out from the books themselves, but also draws heightened attention to both the forms of compositions and the contrast between filled-in spaces and empty ones. The simple everyday animation, especially paired with the film’s narrative, reinforces that Little Nicholas is for everyone."[2]

Peter Debruge of Variety was more mixed, praising the story vignettes but writing that the "real-world" segments lacked dramatic impact.[1]

Awards

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)Result
Annecy International Animation Film Festival2022Best Animated Feature FilmAmandine Fredon, Benjamin Massoubre[5]
European Film Awards10 December 2022Best Animated Feature Film[6]
Lumières Award16 January 2023Best Animated Film[7]
César Awards24 February 2023Best Animated Film[8]
Annie Awards25 February 2023Best Animated Feature, Independent[9]

Notes and References

  1. Peter Debruge, "‘Little Nicholas: Happy as Can Be’ Review: The Pint-Size Hero of a Cartoon ‘The 400 Blows’ Meets His Makers" . Variety, 19 June 2022.
  2. Kaveh Jalinous, "Little Nicholas: Happy As Can Be" . Under the Radar, 21 December 2022.
  3. Lise Pedersen, "The Little Nicholas Meets His Makers in Cannes World Premiere Animation Film" . Variety, 19 May 2022.
  4. Allan Hunter, "'Little Nicholas - Happy As Can Be’: Review". Screen Daily, 20 May 2022.
  5. Valerie Complex, "‘Little Nicholas – Happy As Can Be’ Takes Top Honor At Annecy International Animation Film Festival" . Deadline Hollywood, 18 June 2022.
  6. https://cineuropa.org/en/newsdetail/432092/ "The European Film Awards announce their nominees in the Comedy, Animated Feature Film and Short Film categories"
  7. Rebecca Leffler, "Dominik Moll’s ‘The Night Of The 12th’ scoops best film prize at France’s Lumiere Awards" . Screen Daily, 16 January 2023.
  8. Jamie Lang, "‘Ernest & Celestine,’ ‘My Sunny Maad,’ ‘Little Nicholas’ Score French Academy César Nominations" . Cartoon Brew, 25 January 2023.
  9. Terry Flores, "Led by ‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio,’ Netflix Dominates Annie Awards Nominations" . Variety, 17 January 2023.