Not only will audiences be fixed to the screen by Raya’s adventures, they’re going to be mesmerized by the film’s visual design. The storytelling moves along at a brisk clip, tight and tense, with lots of action and some humor to keep young viewers interested. Yes, adults will figure out how the story is going to play out, but the writing is honest and crisp and avoids sliding into sloppy clichés. This is a remarkable film with a compelling, original plot set in a believable, magical, Asian-flavored world. No one can touch Disney when the studio is at its peak, which it very much is with Raya and the Last Dragon. But the Kumandran lands are dangerous and Raya is not the only person seeking the gem… Blaming herself for the chaos, Raya sets off on a six-year quest to find Sisi the dragon, retrieve the five fragments of the Dragon Gem, and vanquish the Druun forever. A simple mistake by his trusting young daughter, Raya (voiced by Kelly Marie Tran), results in the shattering of the Dragon Gem and a new wave of Druun attacks. He invites delegations from each realm but his guests don’t share his sincerity. Passing centuries deepened the breach between the different kingdoms but now Heart’s chieftain is determined to reconcile the divided lands and create Kumandra anew. Sisi, the last dragon, disappeared, leaving the Dragon Gem in the keeping of the people of Heart. The nation splintered into five different realms, each named for a part of the dragon: Heart, Fang, Spine, Tail, and Talon. Sadly, the end of the war also saw the end of Kumandra. All seemed lost until the last surviving dragon (voiced by Awkwafina) used the power of the Dragon Gem to stop the Druun and restore the all the people (but not the dragons) who had been turned to stone. Five hundred years ago, the land of Kumandra was attacked by the Druun, swirling dark forces that turned people and dragons into stone.
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