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"Elio" debuts in movie theaters on Friday
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Critics have praised the movie from Pixar
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Disney ( DIS ) projects an opening around $25 million
By Danielle Broadway
LOS ANGELES, June 18 (Reuters) - Zoe Saldana feels like
her new film "Elio," from Walt Disney's ( DIS ) Pixar Animation
Studios, is a story about the imperfect journey that parents and
their children go through.
"I think it's okay to look at your kids and sort of just not
know what to do, because that is a way that you can connect with
your children, because half of the time they don't know what to
do as well," Saldana, a mother of three, told Reuters.
"Elio" debuts in movie theaters on Friday. The film follows
a lonely eleven-year-old boy named Elio Solis, voiced by Yonas
Kibreab, who unintentionally becomes the intergalactic
ambassador of Earth after being sent to a planet called
Communiverse.
He must work with alien lifeforms, eventually realizing that
he is not alone.
Film critics have applauded the movie from Pixar, the famed
animation studio behind "Toy Story" and "Finding Nemo." "Elio"
has earned an 81% positive score in reviews collected on the
Rotten Tomatoes website.
Hollywood studios, however, have faced challenges in drawing
audiences to theaters for films with original stories. "Elio"
may debut with some of the lowest opening weekend ticket sales
of any movie from Pixar, according to industry analysts.
From Friday through Sunday, "Elio" is expected to bring in
between $20 million and $30 million at U.S. and Canadian
theaters, said Shawn Robbins, founder and owner of Box Office
Theory and director of analytics for Fandango.
Disney ( DIS ) projects an opening around $25 million.
In the movie, Saldana voices Olga Solis, Elio's aunt who
takes care of him, alongside Brad Garrett as Lord Grigon, a
bulky, worm-like alien warlord, father and ambassador.
Garrett, a father of two, noted that Grigon has his own
parenting journey in the film that starts off a little rocky.
"There's so many over-controlling parents, right? That tried
to mold their kid into what they had wanted to be, or what they
think they should be," Garrett said, referring to Grigon.
The "Everybody Loves Raymond" actor said "Elio" is a movie
that speaks to how everyone is unique, and children have their
own path.
Kibreab echoed this, saying that he believes the film is
rooted in families that support one another fully.
"They're always going to be there for you whenever you need
a shoulder to lean on and also if you're feeling doubt or
feeling lonely," he said.
For co-director Domee Shi, feeling isolated at a point in
her life helped her create the character Elio.
"This is about the weird kid before they've made any
friends, when they are just feeling so alone," the "Turning Red"
director said.
"I feel like I went on that journey. Definitely at some
point in my life as a kid too, I felt like that weird, artsy kid
who was the only kid in Toronto that watched anime at some
point, but once I went to animation school and I found my
people, that's when I felt like I opened up," she added.