Wish will land with younger audiences, and tick a lot of the right boxes for adults that grew up watching Disney films, but its not-fully-formed plot lets it down.

By Laura Rutkowski

Published: Monday, 20 November 2023 at 16:24 PM


3.0 out of 5 star rating

The Walt Disney Company has been commemorating its 100th anniversary all year long, with celebrations leading up to a very special event – the release of the film Wish.

The musical that blends 2D and 3D animation is set in the kingdom of Rosas, which is ruled by the powerful sorcerer King Magnifico (Chris Pine), the only one allowed to use magic. He sets up the community to safeguard people’s wishes, with the ability to grant them when he chooses.

Asha (the Oscar-winning Ariana DeBose) is desperate to be his apprentice, but when she realises some wishes will never be granted, including that of her 100-year-old grandfather (Victor Garber), she makes her own wish upon a star. As she does, it takes on life as Star, an energetic yellow being that will help her and her friends protect Rosas from the power-hungry Magnifico.

When You Wish Upon a Star was written by Leigh Harline and Ned Washington for 1940’s Pinocchio, and since the 1980s, the melody has played over the Disney logo before all its films. Disney is very much in the business of making magic, and for its 62nd animated feature film, it taps into our collective nostalgia, but fails to make this an instant classic, like, indeed, Pinocchio, or the more recent Encanto.

Asha, Star and Valentino in Wish
Asha, Star and Valentino in Wish.
Disney

There is clear evidence of tapping into the catchiness of Lin-Manuel Miranda’s soundtrack for the latter, with a few bits of rap-singing throughout Julia Michaels and Benjamin Rice’s songs for Wish.

Theatre star DeBose and Pine really shine in their musical numbers – Magnifico’s This Is the Thanks I Get?! is an indignant anthem fit for any Disney villain, and Asha’s This Wish and I’m a Star are empowering bops. While they’re perfectly pleasant, the only problem is they fail to become earworms like Frozen’s Let It Go or Aladdin’s A Whole New World.