Coco (2017)
This is the story of an ambitious musician who is being transported to the land of the dead by accident. There he meets his musician great-great-grandfather whose help he enlists with to be returned to his family among the living.
25 November 1982, Mexico City, Distrito Federal, Mexico
6 April 1947, Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA
26 June 1940, Delano, California, USA
1 May 1961, Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico
December 01, 2017
After its spectacular visuals and music, its true and celebrational inclusion of Mexican culture; what stays with us about COCO, is the loving heart of a family, and the strength of a little boy who won't give up his dream.
November 22, 2017
This engaging Pixar animation plays magnificently with elements of Mexican folklore and fine art.
November 30, 2017
A beautiful ode to the love of family.
December 03, 2017
A very lovely movie that contains not one single surprise in its comfortably loose 109 minutes.
November 24, 2017
Does Coco rise to the heights of Pixar's very best work? No. But it is a generous, heartfelt film, full of color and music, one that offers a timely Thanksgiving tribute to the intergenerational importance of family.
December 03, 2017
Coco is a beautiful and moving film, but there's something inherently funny about Pixar now making movies where even dead people die again.
November 22, 2017
Pixar rebounds nicely with Coco, a big, spangly animated fiesta with its fair share of "heart."
December 01, 2017
A dramatic, dazzling adventure that puts a fresh spin on la importancia de la familia.
November 22, 2017
None of Coco's few flaws can fatally undermine the film because it is, most of all, a smart and enduring piece of storytelling with a satisfyingly twisting narrative and richly complex theme.
December 01, 2017
Disney-Pixar's best at least since Toy Story 3.
December 04, 2017
There is a lot to admire about Coco, particularly its energy and its story that attempts to find resolution between commitment to one's family and one's own sense of identity.
November 25, 2017
Of every Pixar film that deals with family, memory, and loss, ask, "Is there sufficient reason for the tears that will inevitably run down my face by the end?" Yes, thanks in no small part to the ingenious use of De La Cruz's hit song, "Remember Me."

