10/10
One of my ALL-TIME favourite films! Must have been a real world wonder to see this in the theatre!!!!
20 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Airplane!, American Gigolo, Friday the 13th, The Elephant Man, The Shining, Caddyshack, Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back. A good year for film indeed :D

This is the 4th and last theatrically released movie based on Peanuts to date. As much as I loved the other 3 movies and how different each one were this is by FAR my #1 pick. I would rate this much higher than a 10 but nevertheless the message is clear :) What can I say; I LOVE Peanuts and I LOVE this movie! The title just shouts different and that is what I love about the two other Peanuts movies (Snoopy, Come Home!! and Race for Your Life, Charlie Brown!!) Because it sounds so expressive and inviting. Bon Voyage Charlie Brown is not only my favourite Peanuts movie; it's one of my ALL-TIME favourite films!

I guess the best place to start is the plot of the story. The opening starts in France at a local bar when a man (the Baron) with a cane comes out to his car and drives home to an old creepy looking château; we then see a girl in the château writing a letter. Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Woodstock, Linus, Marcie and Peppermint Patty (my favourite Peanuts character) are chosen to go to France for two weeks as foreign exchange students representing their schools. Charlie receives the letter from the girl named Violette only to have no idea what it says. Marcie, having learnt a bit of French, reads the letter saying he has been invited to stay at a château called "home of the bad neighbour". This makes him uneasy of course. The gang rents a car that Snoopy drives (of course, he can do everything!) Marcie and PP stay with a boy named Pierre and Charlie, Linus, Snoopy and Woodstock go to the château but strangely they cannot go inside and have a suspicion they were not invited by the Baron. This sets the mood for confusion, and mystery, something very different for Peanuts. The artwork and backgrounds are subtle and peaceful to look at. And when the animation is good, it's REALLY good. Ed Bogus and Judy Munsen rock the soundtrack; one of my favourite scenes is when Judy Munsen sings the beautiful "I want to remember this" as the kids travel by train to Dover from Victoria Station in England, gazing upon the gorgeous landscapes and towns' only Europe has and Snoopy's interaction with an English cab driver is both funny and in my opinion, the best animated scene in the movie. The feel and atmosphere of the movie has a well-thought-out mixture of bright light hearted scenarios and dark haunting back drops of night, the Baron and the château. Peppermint Patty is her usual funny and boisterous self as she sleeps in class, gets answers wrong and also develops a crush on Pierre but hilariously never notices that Marcie and he are romantically involved. The music for the climax is strangely placed. Near the end of the movie the château is engulfed in flames with only Linus and Violette trapped inside and Snoopy is pulling an old fashioned fire hose across the river to the château and Woodstock is sprayed out and plays a violin while all this is going on! It's funny but strangely placed.

In closing, Bon Voyage Charlie Brown is Peanuts animation at its best; with the exceptions of "She's A Good Skate, Charlie Brown," and the sequel to Bon Voyage "What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown." With American animated movies coming out today, with all its CGI, fast pace, celebrity casted, popular music and rhetoric writing, this film is a real breath of fresh air and an animation treasure. I picture watching this in theatres must be like walking in a luscious meadow during a cool spring evening. A delightfully soothing motion picture Charles Schulz and Bill Melendez were best at, from a time when pacing was appreciated.
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