Moon the Panda
A boy, a panda, and the mountains that change everything
Moon the Panda is a beautiful family film that earns its emotional weight without manipulation. Director Gilles de Maistre respects both his young audience and the material, crafting a story about connection and growth that never feels forced. I recommend it.
- Director
- Gilles de Maistre
- Genre
- Family, Adventure
- Runtime
- 99 min
- Country
- FR
- Min. Age
- NR
- Year
- 2025
- Type
- Movie
Main Cast
Harry's Movie Review
Moon the Panda works because it trusts simplicity. Tian, a twelve-year-old sent to his grandmother's home in Sichuan for poor grades, stumbles into friendship with a panda cub. The setup is straightforward. The execution, though, has real texture. This is a film about a boy learning to see beyond his own anxieties, and it takes its time doing so.
Liu Nuoyi carries the film with a quiet interiority that suggests someone still figuring things out. He does not perform big emotions. Instead, you watch him soften, recognize small victories in conversation with his grandmother, notice the shift from reluctance to belonging. The supporting cast works in the same register. Alexandra Lamy and Liu Ye move through scenes without grandstanding. They listen to each other. When family friction surfaces, it feels like something alive in the room, not a plot device.
De Maistre's direction favors observation over orchestration. Long shots of mountain landscape give the film room to breathe. Pacing never rushes toward catharsis. If anything, the film could have afforded to push harder in its final act, but the restraint also becomes part of its identity. This is not a film made to manipulate tears.
What stayed with me was the specific quality of Tian's transformation. It is not that he solves his problems. It is that he stops running from them. The bond with Moon matters less for what it means symbolically than for what it requires of him practically: attention, responsibility, showing up. That is a lesson worth sitting with.
Key Facts
- Director
- Gilles de Maistre
- Genre
- Family, Adventure
- Year
- 2025
- Runtime
- 99 min
- Country
- FR
- Content Rating
- NR (NR)
- Harry's Rating
- 8 / 10
- Main Cast
- Liu Nuoyi, Liu Ye, Alexandra Lamy, Liu Nina, Sylvia Chang
Watch Movie Teaser
Trivia & Fun Facts
- The film was directed by Gilles de Maistre, known for his work in family and adventure cinema with an emphasis on authentic locations and naturalistic storytelling.
- Moon the Panda was shot on location in Sichuan Province, China, giving the mountainous landscapes and natural settings an authentic foundation rather than constructed backdrops.
- The film features both Chinese and French cast members, reflecting a co-production approach that brings different cultural perspectives to the story of cross-cultural connection.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, if you value family films that avoid cheap sentiment and actually respect the intelligence of young viewers. This one does both.
A twelve-year-old boy named Tian is sent to live with his grandmother in remote Sichuan mountains after struggling academically. There, he secretly befriends a panda cub and discovers lessons about courage, respect, and connection with nature. His experience transforms him and leads to reconciliation with his family.
Liu Nuoyi plays the lead role of Tian. The cast also includes Liu Ye, Alexandra Lamy, Liu Nina, and Sylvia Chang. Liu Ye and Alexandra Lamy appear as members of Tian's family.
No, it is an original fictional narrative. The story was created specifically as a family film centered on themes of nature, childhood, and personal growth.
Specific streaming platform availability has not been confirmed. Check local theater listings for theatrical releases, or look for availability on VOD and physical media platforms in your region.
The film runs 99 minutes, which is one hour and thirty-nine minutes.
Harry's Final Thoughts
Harry's Closing Curtain
Moon the Panda delivers a story about growing up that does not need manufactured drama to work. Director Gilles de Maistre keeps the focus on small moments of understanding between Tian and the people around him. The panda matters, but the real transformation is internal. For families seeking something genuine and unhurried, this is solid ground.