Current mood: drained
Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
Pixar's "Up" is an inevitable tale of the elderly. The first time
we see bloodshed in a family CG film, and we get it from a cute old
person. Not only are they using up all of the social security, they are
looking to kick our ass. Be it with their four-pronged canes or attack
dogs (I'd like to point out that there were no evil [or stupid] cats in
this film), they are out to get their way.
Don't trust anyone over 40 never rang so true.
Hopefully, that drew you into this blog about a cute, family friendly
film about the bond between like minded explorers regardless of age. Not
as daring as "Wall-E" or "Family Guy's" Herbert and Chris relationship, but who needs innovation when you have a well told story...with talking dogs.
Pure bread dogs at that. With the lovable and dimwitted hero pooch Dug,
there is either a hidden message about the need to accept everyone or
that the meek will actually inherit the Earth. Both views can be seen as
optimistic, but I'm hoping its the prior.
But let us get to the elderly conspiracy.
Mr. Fredrickson is a senior citizen who is trying to hold on to what he
has after his wife Ellie passes away regardless of the industrialist
pigs who want to run him out of town for whatever business seems
appropriately placed across from a sushi fast food restaurant. In an
"impulsive" reaction to the dust and inadvertent property damage, he
attacks and injures a construction worker. Being a threat to society, he
is going to have to go to a retirement home and forfeit his house.
Inspired by the dream he and his wife had, he would not go quietly into
the night. Instead, he makes quite a spectacle when he decides to turn
his house into a dirigible with the help of helium and thousands of
party balloons. His quest, to place his house by Paradise Falls in South
America like he and his wife had always planned. And with the help of
an overzealous Wilderness Explorer named Russell it may work. That is,
if they don't inadvertently interfere with the plans of the insane
elderly explorer and his dogs' quest to capture the Monster of Paradise
Falls.
Let me save the readers $3.00. Do not see the 3-D presentation of the
film. Unless you are looking for the effects to make the viewer leave
there seats, they are wasted. It may make a great theme park attraction,
but not a movie going experience.
Besides, do you really want to play 3-D tricks that could leave the
children in the audience (who won't shut up...the worse I remember from
my generation was my li'l bro exclaiming, "the bear fell down" during
the finale of a "The Fox and the Hound" reissue) in a panic.
Pixar can be enjoyed by any audience, don't go out of your way to
alienate those who tell their friends to drag their kids to your flick.
Also, Pixar's style is "cartoonish," so it is like my pseudo niece
shoving a color form closer to my face. At least in her case it's a "Wonder Pet", Nick Jr's Terry Gilliam of their line up. They are supposed to mess with our mind...right?
Now on to the film. I can understand if it seems long at times to the
supposed target audience, because it is really a film about the
relationship of Fredrickson and Russell as opposed to actually achieving
a task. So that's probably why the kid three rows back would not shut
up, and I'm surprise their weren't calls by the wee ones to wee. But for
the parents, the story is always building up to something bigger, so
they should always be interested. Throw in the talking dogs, and you are
rewarded with each step in the rising action of the story.
For me, if you spend this much time on character development, I'd expect
a little more dialogue, but I think the universal experience of
watching a kid that you didn't plan on watching allows any adult to
relate and be frustrated with Fredrickson. And when you are frustrated
like that, you know you can't speak...at least without yelling "ear
muffs" first.
Beyond the story, there is nothing innovative about the film. It's
Pixar's style, and I don't need it changed, so in essence I'm glad it is
not much of a 3-D film. Especially, when I only paid $2.50 to see it.
Which reminds me, is "Cars" worth buying (maybe after getting to it a half decade from the original post)? It has movie cash, so I could see Up for free next time if it does.
Up seems to be
missing a lot of the elements that made Pixar's film so grand (the
soundtrack isn't memorable), but whatever elements it has makes the film
worth anyone's full price admission. If you want a great story and
great characters this is the film to see.
Up doesn't
waste anything it has which is something most blockbusters fail to do,
so at this point, it's the best...well I gotta a soft spot for "Watchmen", film of the year. Terminator Salvation can be your room noise this fall.
If it does not involve pro-wrestling, this is Russ Stevens's effort to create the one stop blog for movies that are cut to the ideal run-time, 90 minutes. This blog may feature films that may range from 71 minutes to 1 hour 40 minutes, but 101 minutes and up are too long. An hour and a half can justify cutting a film into two chapters and a book into three. Hobbits and Katniss have too many ending, consider this an effort to stop that.
Saturday, June 1, 2019
Up: The Emergence Perpendicular Citizens Brigade
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