Movie · 2014 · Animation, Family, Fantasy · 1h 35m · PG · English
Curator score: 6.4/10 (374.5K ratings)
Two worlds. One love.
Overview
The journey of Manolo, a young man who is torn between fulfilling the expectations of his family and following his heart. Before choosing which path to follow, he embarks on an incredible adventure that spans fantastical worlds where he must face his greatest fears.
Ratings
Curator score: 6.4/10
IMDb: 7.2/10
Letterboxd: 3.75/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 82%
Metacritic: 67
TMDB: 7.5/10
Director
Jorge R. Gutierrez
Production
Reel FX Creative Studios, 20th Century Fox Animation, Chatrone
Cast
Diego Luna, Channing Tatum, Zoe Saldaña, Christina Applegate, Eugenio Derbez, Cheech Marin, Gabriel Iglesias, Ron Perlman, Kate del Castillo, Ana de la Reguera, Dan Navarro, Ice Cube, Héctor Elizondo, Danny Trejo, Carlos Alazraqui, Emil-Bastien Bouffard, Elijah Rodriguez, Genesis Ochoa, Plácido Domingo, Grey DeLisle
Where to watch
Disney Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A vibrant, music-driven fantasy with a strong visual identity, playful humor, and heartfelt themes about duty, love, and family expectations. It’s especially rewarding if you like folkloric storytelling, stylized animation, and stories that mix romance, comedy, and the afterlife.
Best for
fans of colorful animated fantasy
viewers who enjoy Mexican folklore and Día de Muertos imagery
people who like musical storytelling with pop-song covers
families looking for a lively adventure with emotional stakes
audiences who appreciate offbeat, stylized animation
Skip if
you want a more restrained or emotionally subtle family film
you dislike pop-song covers in animated movies
you prefer animation with a more polished mainstream Disney/Pixar feel
you’re looking for a purely comedic story without romance or melodrama
Overview
The Book of Life is one of those animated films that feels like it was built from a burst of personality. Its world is ornate, playful, and steeped in folklore, with a visual palette that makes every realm feel handcrafted and celebratory. The movie’s greatest strength is how confidently it blends myth, romance, and slapstick into something that feels both kid-friendly and a little mischievous.
Worth noting
At heart, it’s a story about choosing your own path without severing yourself from family or tradition. That emotional core gives the film more weight than its candy-colored surface suggests, even when the humor gets broad or the musical choices get intentionally goofy. The result is uneven in spots, but the energy is infectious and the style is memorable.
Bottom line
If you’re open to a movie that wears its influences proudly while still feeling distinct, this is an easy recommendation. It has enough charm, visual invention, and sincere feeling to stand out in the crowded field of animated fantasy, especially for viewers who like their family films with a little edge and a lot of color.
Top Letterboxd reviews
jay (4★) · 7040 likes
i lost it when manolo started singing creep it was so random
vi (5★) · 5325 likes
manolo's entire family is dead
vi (5★) · 3645 likes
diego luna? i don't even know who that is-- *trips* *hundreds of pictures of diego luna spill out of my pockets* listen okay these aren't mine i don't even know who diego luna is i'm just *tries to gather them up frantically* listen i-- just listen *thousands of pictures of diego luna fall to the ground* fUCK i'm just holding them for a friend okay just LISTEN
Vee (3.5★) · 2893 likes
a prime example of the “polyamory would solve this” - trope