Jumbo The Movie ◉
We’ve all had that one inanimate object we felt oddly attached to. A childhood stuffed animal. A first car. A perfectly weighted pen. But have you ever fallen in love with a theme park ride? Deep, romantic, soul-shaking love?
What starts as a fascination (polishing its metal arms, whispering to it after hours) quickly deepens into a full-blown, sensual romance. Yes, you read that correctly. Jeanne and Jumbo become a couple.
Just don’t be surprised if you look at your nearest carousel a little differently afterward. jumbo the movie
Jumbo won’t be for everyone. Some will call it absurd. Others will call it a masterpiece of compassionate oddity. But if you’re tired of predictable rom-coms and ready for a film that treats loneliness, desire, and machinery with equal gravity, give it a spin.
On paper, Jumbo sounds like a late-night cable fever dream or a meme waiting to happen. But Wittock directs with such sincerity and visual poetry that you never laugh at Jeanne. Instead, you feel her isolation, her longing for a connection that doesn’t judge, demand, or hurt. We’ve all had that one inanimate object we
Merlant’s performance is the key. She treats Jumbo not as a machine but as a gentle giant—responding to its lights, its rhythmic movements, its hum. The film uses gorgeous practical effects (vibrating floors, strobes that feel like heartbeats) to make the ride seem almost alive.
Welcome to the wonderfully weird world of Jumbo (2020)—the French-Belgian film that asks, and answers, that very question. A perfectly weighted pen
★★★★☆ (4/5) – Strangely beautiful, deeply humane, and unlike anything else. Have you seen Jumbo? Would you ever fall for a ride? Let me know in the comments—or keep it to yourself. No judgment here.