Before watching Jenny Slate’s latest film Marcel the Shell With Shoes On, prepare to be deep in your feelings for days to come.
The actress voices a tiny stop motion one-inch shell with a larger-than-life personality, who is living a quiet but meaningful existence alongside his grandmother Connie after being separated from the rest of their family and thriving shell community. The A24 film is currently showing at select theaters and it is the feature-length adaptation of a popular YouTube series of the same name, which Slate and her ex-husband Dean Fleischer-Camp created and debuted in 2010. The first video they released currently has more than 32 million views and thousands of comments praising Fleischer-Camp and Slate for writing and creating such a fun, lively, little animated character who shows a vivid range of emotions.
The animated YouTube clips showed the one-eyed shell’s day-to-day life and his nuggets of wisdom like, “Guess why I smile a lot? ‘Cause it’s worth it.” But the film brings us closer to Marcel and his story when a documentary filmmaker Dean discovers him and his grandmother living inside an Airbnb. Marcel tells Dean the story of how he got separated from his shell family and the filmmaker posts the short film online, and Marcel becomes an online sensation, gaining fans and media attention that promise to bring him closer to finding his long-lost family.
“As a person, I can feel reluctant to show that I can get angry and that I do have doubts both personal and larger ones,” Slate tells Complex. “I feel hesitant sometimes and I feel fear and so I think for me playing this character and showing that in this beloved character, he can also be in a really bad mood. It helped me to integrate those things and make them more accessible in my own behavior and understand that there is no feeling that is not allowed.”
She added: “It’s only a process of how you regulate your behavior when you’re interacting and Marcel is trying to do that as well.”
The film also stars Isabella Rossellini, Rosa Salazar, Thomas Mann and 60 Minutes’ Lesley Stahl. Check out our interview with Jenny Slate about the inspiration behind her character Marcel, allowing ourselves to feel all of our emotions, and the dangers of forced positivity.
What was the whole thought process behind creating this character and his story?
It’s just instincts and the compulsion to perform. I think while Dean put a lot of time into the stop motion animation that went into making the shorts, the performance itself and the character that we crafted really came from the two of us just playing around and I think that is why there is that thing in there. It’s like a life force that we drummed up by playing a fun game with each other.
But I think also behind every character that I create or a bit of standup that I perform or essay that I write, there is always a good group of emotions that needs to be expressed. For me, at the time, I did feel rather small but I also felt like I liked myself and it was irritating to me that for some reason it felt like those two things couldn’t sit side-by-side and be in the same area together. A lot of times I think I have an instinct to prove that I exist and I think I’m worth it and I think that is at the start of it.
Marcel is such a tiny little being but he’s such a big heart, and such a big personality, and your performance really captivated his wide range of emotions. What was it like to voice this character, and bring this character to life that we’ve never really seen before?
Marcel is really kind and he’s really straightforward. But the other thing is he does feel fear, and he has doubts and he can be hesitant and shut down and I think while it is very easy for me to perform the parts of Marcel that are kind and funny and all of the things that I want to be and want people in my life to see as qualities that I have.
As a person, I can feel reluctant to show that I can get angry and that I do have doubts both personal and larger ones. I feel hesitant sometimes and I feel fear and so I think for me playing this character and showing that in this beloved character, he can also be in a really bad mood. It helped me to integrate those things and make them more accessible in my own behavior and understand that there is no feeling that is not allowed.
It’s only a process of how you regulate your behavior when you’re interacting and Marcel is trying to do that as well. It’s just been really nice to spend so much time playing the character because it actually helps set an example. It was aspirational for me. This is actually what I think a cool person looks like. I think Marcel is a cool person, how can I be following in his tiny little footsteps?
I like this example of Marcel of how to be because he’s just not thinking about it and it works out for him but the way that Marcel’s story ends up working out isn’t just like, “Well, I persevered and so I got there.” It was more, I took these risks and within these risks, I suffered some profound losses. I gained back what I had asked for. It was a different fit than I thought it would be and now my new process is dealing with the ultimate thing, which is how it feels to be a consistent person going through a series of changes.
What do you hope people get out of the movie?
I hope that they feel cared for. I hope people feel cared for by the movie and I hope that they feel entertained. I hope that they’re reminded of a feeling of hope and reinvigorated with the type of stamina that they can’t quite define but feels like a worthwhile way to be.
Marcel the Shell With Shoes On is now in theaters.






