Posts Tagged ‘pixar’

Saying Goodbye: Toy Story 3 – Part One

Wednesday, November 24th, 2010
This article is part of the series Saying Goodbye – Toy Story 3. To jump to any other article in the series, please use the following links.
Part OnePart TwoPart ThreePart FourPart Five

Andy choosing between Woody and Buzz

The success of Toy Story 3 should not have been a surprise to anyone. It was preceded by two very popular movies and created by a studio with an excellent track record for producing films that won the praise of critics and the dollars of audiences. As with Toy Story 2, it would have been easy for the Pixar filmmakers to churn out an easy, unambitious film and count on the audience’s fond memories of these characters to bring them into theaters. Instead, Pixar crafted what might be their riskiest film yet and as we now know, it was a risk that paid off. Now that the movie is out on DVD, we can take the time to examine each shot and scene and figure out why this film would have been a winner even if it had not been the third and final Toy Story film.

The beginning of the end, after the cut

Brenda Chapman No Longer Directing “Brave”

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010

As you may already know, Pixar’s upcoming film Brave has undergone a big change. Originally titled “The Bear and the Bow,” Brave has garnered attention for being Pixar’s first film to visit the world of knights and princesses that was once Disney’s turf, for being the first Pixar film with a female main character, and for its director, Brenda Champan. Chapman has an impressive animation resume, including story work on films such as The Little Mermaid, Beuaty and the Beast, The Lion King, Chicken Run, and Cars and a turn in the director’s chair on DreamWorks’ Prince of Egypt. In fact, I was just admiring her lovely storyboarding when I was reading Tale As Old As Time. But what was really drawing attention to Brenda Champman’s role as director of Brave was that she was the first woman to direct a Pixar film. Or she would have been, had she not been replaced as director by story artist Mark Andrews, a move that reportedly became official sometime in the last two weeks.

Thoughts on Pixar\’s decision under the cut

Toy Story 3 on NPR

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

National Public Radio’s arts program Fresh Air just did an interview with director Lee Unkrich and screenwriter Michael Arndt of Toy Story 3. Go listen to it, watch some clips, and then check out the various related stories about other Pixar people. You won’t be disappointed.

Thoughts on “Toy Story 3″

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Toy Story 3 poster

The following article discusses a new film currently in theaters. While I will try avoid revealing too much of the movie’s plot, there are going to be some spoilers. If you would prefer to avoid spoilers, see the movie first, then read the article. Otherwise, you’ve been warned.

I knew I wanted to see Toy Story 3 from the moment I knew there was going to be a Toy Story 3. (More accurately, from the moment I knew there was going to be a Pixar-helmed Toy Story 3. The eventually scrapped sequel that Disney’s now defunct Circle 7 Animation was less of a sure thing.) After all, this film would be the third in a series that included the first of Pixar’s animated features and one of my favorite movies of all time. So as the film’s debut grew nearer, I tried to learn as little about it as possible. I did see a trailer or two and ran into a couple of details here and there – some inadvertently. But I stayed away from books, news segments, “making of” information, and reviews. Even with this lack of new information, my expectations for the film were high, so high that my one fear was that no movie – no matter how good – could possibly live up to them.

Leaving the theater on Friday, I was not disappointed.

More on the toys\’ third film under the cut.

Joe Ranft Tribute

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Saturday, March 13, would have been the 50th birthday of accomplished story artist Joe Ranft. Ranft worked on Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King among other DIsney features, and all of the Pixar films up to Cars in 2006. He also occasionally left the drawing board for the microphone, providing voices for characters like Heimlich the caterpillar in A Bug’s Life and Wheezy the squeaky toy penguin from Toy Story 2. Tragically, Joe Ranft lost his life in a car accident five years ago. The above video – a story reel, appropriately enough – was created by Disney director John Musker and originally shown at the memorial service for Joe Ranft. If you can watch all the way through and not end up with a lump in your throat, you’re made of sterner stuff than I am.

Animation Oscars Wrap-Up

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

The first Oscar Night since I started the Ink and Pixel Club has come and gone. Though enjoy watching the festivities (for as long as I can stay awake), I try not to take the Academy Awards too seriously. I realize that an Oscar can be a great boost to an individual or film. But these awards are not chosen by the almighty drama gods or FilmCriticBot 3000. They’re picked by people. Smart, talented, qualified people, yes, but people nonetheless. Academy voters don’t get sequestered away from the world for a year so that they can judge films solely on their inherent merits. They have their own tastes, prejudices, and biases. So while winning the Oscar may be a great honor, it isn’t factual confirmation that one person’s film, performance, or behind-the-scenes work is better than anyone else’s in the past year. I try to keep the role film industry politics plays in mind as the prized statuettes go off to their new homes.

That doesn’t mean I don’t get disappointed when I think the Academy has made a bad call.

2010 Best Animated Feature Up

Up winning Best Animated Feature Film was not a disappointment. Admittedly, I’m a big fan of the older styles of animation, so part of me was a little sad to see the Oscar go to the one computer animated film nominated. But even that part of me recognizes that Up is a very good movie that does push some boundaries for animation. Pixar always delivers films that are top notch visually, but the story of Up is equally groundbreaking, if not more so. I’ve watched Pixar gently nudge mainstream audiences towards the idea that animated films don’t have to be all about kids or kid-relatable characters and their problems. Up represents a big step in that direction. This is a film that stars an elderly man and starts off by taking us through the decades he spent with his beloved wife up until her death. At least one analyst predicted that the firm would not be commercially viable. How many studios would have caved in to panicked marketing execs and dumped the whole opening, or made Russell the main character and altered him to make him more “aspirational” for a young audience? In his acceptance speech, director Pete Docter thanked Disney and Pixar for backing such an “oddball” film, something that not every studio would do.

The outcome of this particular race was considered a foregone conclusion by many critics and fans. As I mentioned in my earlier article about the Oscar nominees, Up was the only film in contention for Best Animated Feature to also be nominated one of the best films of the year overall. Going purely on logic, that would indicate that the Academy sees Up as the best animated film of the year. But Pixar’s film was up against some stiff competition. The past year was a very good one for animated features, as evidenced by the fact that there were five worthy nominees this year instead of the usual three. Up is a worthy winner and Pixar should feel even happier about bringing home the award because of the high quality of the film’s competitors for that honor.

The Best Animated Short Film category generally gets ignored by everyone but animation fans. Critics usually skip it when making their predictions for the winners. The general public has seldom seen more than one of the nominated films. This was not always true. Back in the days when moviegoers could expect to see one or more short films before the feature presentation, shorts were widely seen and some became incredibly popular and well-known. But the cost of producing shorts, the arrival of television, and other factors led studios to abandon the format. In recent years, some of the major animation studios have started producing shorts again, recognizing their potential for experimentation and telling different kinds of stories. These studio shorts are usually run before a new animated film and often included on the DVD release, meaning that a large number of people sees them. But studio animated shorts are still far less common than they were in the heyday of the short film format. Most creators of animated short films – particularly the ones that get nominated for Best Animated Short – are independent animators, toiling in relative obscurity and known only to those fans who seek out the animation festivals where their work plays.

Because of this, I have a soft spot for the independent animators who usually nab the bulk of the Best Animated Short nominations. These are people who don’t get recognized for their work very much outside of the animation community, so it’s good to see them get their fifteen minutes – or thirty seconds. I am sure that Nicolas Schmerkin and the rest of the crew of this year’s winner Logorama worked very hard in the six years it took them to make their film and that the Oscar will help them to gain broader recognition from people who can fund their next project.

That said, I absolutely hated Logorama.

I didn’t feel like there was a real stand-out in this year’s Animated Short nominees. My prediction was that the Academy would hand the Oscar to A Matter of Loaf and Death, based on their past fondness for Aardman’s work. I love Wallace and Gromit and the film is solid, but neither the story nor the animation felt like anything new or groundbreaking for the series. Either French Roast or The Lady and the Reaper would have been a fine choice. Like the Wallace and Gromit film, they aren’t terribly innovative, but both are stylish and fun. Granny O’Grimm’s Sleeping Beauty has a fun premise, but doesn’t explore it enough and features some weak character design. But Logorama was the one short I never wanted nor expected to win.

Rather than character or story, Logorama is constructed around a concept. This does not automatically doom it. I have seen very interesting and entertaining films that focus primarily on concept and the short film format is an ideal way to explore an idea without risking the audience growing bored or confused by the lack of traditional narrative. The concept in Logorama is a world where virtually everything – people, objects, vehicles, buildings, and landscape – is a logo or commercial spokescharacter. The problem is that this idea on its own isn’t enough to sustain a short film – much less a short film that runs sixteen minutes. Logorama doesn’t give the audience anything beyond this initial concept: no compelling characters to follow, no engaging plot thread, no underlying commentary on our advertising-saturated society or anything else. The film presents recognition of these familiar logos as all that is needed to keep us amused. It reminds me of those shorts that ran before the Pokémon movies where the main purpose was to cram as many of the marketable little critters as possible into the allotted time. The humor feels like it might have been sharp and cutting edge ten or more years ago, but comes off stale and tired today. Normally innocuous figures from pop culture out of character has been done before and the short presents nothing more original than Mr. Clean with an effeminate voice. What plot there is jumps around from one event to another without offering much reason to care about any of them. There is a lot of action that should be upping the excitement level, but with nothing to ground it but a pack of characters as one-dimensional as they are when they’re hawking hamburgers and toilet paper, the film merely drags. The animation is nothing new: computer animation made to look more graphic and hand-drawn. The novelty of spotting logos and seeing how they are integrated into the world wears off quickly, leaving the viewer with nothing but a dull, unwieldy waste of time.

I can see how Aardman’s past Oscar wins might have worked against the studio. But if the Academy had wanted to recognize fresh talent rather than rewarding Aardman for doing the same thing well one more time, why not pick any of the other nominated films, all of which are at least superior to Logorama? I found this film incredibly disappointing and the Academy’s choice to award it the Oscar even more so. If Nicolas Schmerkin follows up on his desire to spend the next thirty-six years working on a feature film, I can only hope that he comes up with a better idea than a gun-toting criminal Ronald McDonald.

I’d like to end on a happy note, in honor of the good the Academy has done in recognizing the art of animation this year and in years past. One of my favorite parts of the whole broadcast (or what I stayed up to see) was the characters from the five Best Animated Feature nominees discussing how they felt about being nominated. It was a real treat to see what may be the last new animation of many of these characters. These fun little moments with the animated stars speak to the power of animation to create believable characters who can be just as convincing and beloved as their live-action colleagues.

UP is copyright Disney/Pixar. LOGORAMA is copyright Autour de Minuit. ACADEMY AWARD(S)®, OSCAR(S)®, OSCAR NIGHT® and OSCAR® statuette design mark are the registered trademarks and service marks, and the OSCAR® statuette the copyrighted property, of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. This web site is not affiliated with or otherwise sponsored, endorsed or approved by The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences or Academy Awards®.

Why I Love Animation: Toy Story 2 – Part Five

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Woody's finest hour

Don’t want to start at the end? Read Parts One, Two, Three, and Four.

The Prospector has tightened the screws on the ventilation grate, trapping Woody and the Roundup Gang on one side and Buzz, Deluded Buzz, and Andy’s other toys on the other. Before either group can figure out how to reopen the grate, Al shows up to gather his luggage before heading to the airport. Now the movie is in the same place where the first movie was when Buzz and Woody ran from Sid’s yard to try to catch Andy’s mom’s car. If Woody ends up to that plane to Tokyo, he will never see Andy or his friends again. There are no more reprieves, though there will be roadblocks.

Roadblock #1 after the cut.

Why I Love Animation: Toy Story 2 – Part Four

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Sheriff Woody

Feeling lost? Get caught up with Parts One, Two, and Three.

Now where were we? Oh, right. Woody has just decided to stay with the Roundup Gang and go to the toy museum because he realizes that Andy will eventually grow up and no longer want him. Andy’s other toys are still searching for Woody, unaware of either his decision or the fact that they have the wrong Buzz in their midst. Deluded Buzz still doesn’t know that he’s a toy. And Al is completely unaware of any of this. All he knows is that his valuable Sheriff Woody doll has been fixed and he’s about to close a deal that will make him fabulously wealthy.

Everyone learns more (except Al) under the cut.

Why I Love Animation: Toy Story 2 – Part Three

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Al freaks out

Parts One and Two, for anyone who missed them.

Woody is now fully aware of his situation. The longer he sticks around Al’s apartment, the greater the chances that Al will ship him off to Tokyo where he’ll never see Andy again. All he wants right now is to get back home to Andy. But for the purposes of the story, he can’t leave yet. So what’s stopping him?

Find out after the cut.

NEW “Toy Story 3″ Trailer

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

What excellent timing!


Toy Story 3 Trailer #2 in HD



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