Wendy Ide 

Mavka: The Forest Song review – formulaic Ukrainian animation makes a plea for nature

A green-haired sprite chooses between love and ecology in this computer-animated fantasy enhanced by a folky soundtrack
  
  

a computer animated green-haired girl meets a brown-haired boy in a forest setting
Duty v love: Mavka: The Forest Song. Photograph: Publicity image

A slightly synthetic-looking animation style undermines the message of this Ukrainian tale (released both in its original Ukrainian version and an English-language one), which, like numerous films before it, makes a case for coexistence between humanity and the natural world.

Mavka is a green-haired woodland sprite who finds herself charged with the job of guarding the “Heart of the Forest”. But she is torn between duty and her love for musician Lukas, a human, and as such, part of the threat that she is sworn to fight against. It’s formulaic stuff, but the use of folk music – Lukas spends a lot of time noodling on his flute – adds a distinctive character and degree of charm.

Watch a trailer for Mavka: The Forest Song.
 

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