I just watched it and the first 10 minutes of the movie just had me. I can't be the only one.
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No you're not the only one. The first 10 minutes are the best thing Pixar's ever done.I just watched it and the first 10 minutes of the movie just had me. I can't be the only one.
Furi-Kun
I just watched it and the first 10 minutes of the movie just had me. I can't be the only one.
Furi-Kun
it grossed almost $400 MIL, i doubt you are the only one:P
i love it too:)
I certainly feel in love with it in less than 10 minutes. Pixar is just amazing with the way they convey emotions. They are truly magicians. Also, I picked it up on Blu-Ray, and my god... It's the prettiest one I own thus far. I wish I had the money to replace all my other Pixar DVDs with Blu-Ray, because in instances like these, I deem it worthwhile.JustPlainLucasDid you score that $15 Target deal for Up and Monsters Inc? I paid way too much for mine as the only deal I could get up here was $10 off when I bought both and a dinky little $4 coupon I had. I'm trying to find a cheap copy of Ratatouille but I'm not having much luck. And I can't wait for The Incredibles to hit Blu-ray.
It was a combination of coupons people could use at Target - a $10 Target coupon, a $10 manufacturer coupon and (I think) price matching if you really wanted to be a jerk. If not it was about $20 or something for Monsters Inc and Up on Blu-ray. Nothing like that in Canada, though.Whoa, whoa, whoa, $15.00 for WHAT????!! :cry:
Furi-Kun
[QUOTE="Furi-Kun"]It was a combination of coupons people could use at Target - a $10 Target coupon, a $10 manufacturer coupon and (I think) price matching if you really wanted to be a jerk. If not it was about $20 or something for Monsters Inc and Up on Blu-ray. Nothing like that in Canada, though.Whoa, whoa, whoa, $15.00 for WHAT????!! :cry:
DJ_Lae
Oh darn. :evil:
I'll be watching that when I can find the DVD. I wanna see it really badly. Toriko42same here.. im looking forward to it..
In what has been a pretty limp year - apart from some Oscar winners released in Australia late - Up was a great film and this is from someone who doesn't watch a lot of animated stuff. More emotionally rewarding than Wall-E. biggest_loserRight, wall-e was fantastic, but it didnt seem to do for me what it was doing for other people, i much perfer up.
[QUOTE="TreeMoBMoney"][QUOTE="ZookGuy"]I loved it (but than again I love everything Pixar).ZookGuypixar can do no wrong. True, true, I just hope Disneys commercialism never gets to them and than they make about three films a year. Pft, andy birds the chairman of disney now, hopefully the entire company some good.
I just watched it today with my girlfriend. Never had I said awh so many times... haha i got laughed at :P
Did you score that $15 Target deal for Up and Monsters Inc? I paid way too much for mine as the only deal I could get up here was $10 off when I bought both and a dinky little $4 coupon I had. I'm trying to find a cheap copy of Ratatouille but I'm not having much luck. And I can't wait for The Incredibles to hit Blu-ray.DJ_LaeDamn, I didn't know about that deal...
Its similar to Wall-E in how it starts great, but loses momentum by it's second half. It looked great, and Christopher Plummer was great and Charles Muntz, but after a while it fell into the predictable pixar format. It looked great and it shows signs of Pixar maturing, but they really have to learn how to do a better second act. They never manage to sustain greatness in their films. Wall-E was amazing for the first 20 or so minutes, but then it got painfully predictable and the part with the humans had a very forced message. I don't care about the humans and any comment on society pixar makes since it has been done before and better. Still though I think they may soon make a great film, I hope they do because they have tons of potential they just dont know how to use yet. Animation wise they are amazing, but story and commenting on society wise they need some work. Even though a lot of japanese animation is crap, some manages to have a great story with much worse animation. If pixar could mix their animation with the storytelling of some of the best japanese animation they could achieve greatness. Some day maybe, but not yet.
Up is complete win. And the only reason the movie declined after the first 10 minutes is because that 10 minutes is the best pixar scene ever.
I can't say I agree they lost momentum by the third act. The story, while took an unexpected turn at one point, really stayed true to itself in the end. One thing I especially like about this movie over WALL-E, was that all the characters actually had a point. There weren't any filler characters that were just there for the sake of being there. In WALL-E, I still wonder why M-O was in the movie at all other than just to look cute, among other robot characters. In Up, All the characters, including Russell, Dug and Kevin, all had a point for being there and were well-developed in the end.Its similar to Wall-E in how it starts great, but loses momentum by it's second half. It looked great, and Christopher Plummer was great and Charles Muntz, but after a while it fell into the predictable pixar format. It looked great and it shows signs of Pixar maturing, but they really have to learn how to do a better second act. They never manage to sustain greatness in their films. Wall-E was amazing for the first 20 or so minutes, but then it got painfully predictable and the part with the humans had a very forced message. I don't care about the humans and any comment on society pixar makes since it has been done before and better. Still though I think they may soon make a great film, I hope they do because they have tons of potential they just dont know how to use yet. Animation wise they are amazing, but story and commenting on society wise they need some work. Even though a lot of japanese animation is crap, some manages to have a great story with much worse animation. If pixar could mix their animation with the storytelling of some of the best japanese animation they could achieve greatness. Some day maybe, but not yet.
Film-Guy
[QUOTE="Film-Guy"]I can't say I agree they lost momentum by the third act. The story, while took an unexpected turn at one point, really stayed true to itself in the end. One thing I especially like about this movie over WALL-E, was that all the characters actually had a point. There weren't any filler characters that were just there for the sake of being there. In WALL-E, I still wonder why M-O was in the movie at all other than just to look cute, among other robot characters. In Up, All the characters, including Russell, Dug and Kevin, all had a point for being there and were well-developed in the end. I also don't agree that the message was forced in Wall-E. It was a very powerful, timely and important message, presented in a clever and humerous way that makes it accessible for BOTH children and adults. These aren't the same as adult movies. They are still kids movies and have to have the action etc. But to intertwine that with the themes is what makes these films successful.Its similar to Wall-E in how it starts great, but loses momentum by it's second half. It looked great, and Christopher Plummer was great and Charles Muntz, but after a while it fell into the predictable pixar format. It looked great and it shows signs of Pixar maturing, but they really have to learn how to do a better second act. They never manage to sustain greatness in their films. Wall-E was amazing for the first 20 or so minutes, but then it got painfully predictable and the part with the humans had a very forced message. I don't care about the humans and any comment on society pixar makes since it has been done before and better. Still though I think they may soon make a great film, I hope they do because they have tons of potential they just dont know how to use yet. Animation wise they are amazing, but story and commenting on society wise they need some work. Even though a lot of japanese animation is crap, some manages to have a great story with much worse animation. If pixar could mix their animation with the storytelling of some of the best japanese animation they could achieve greatness. Some day maybe, but not yet.
Nerd_Man
[QUOTE="Film-Guy"]I can't say I agree they lost momentum by the third act. The story, while took an unexpected turn at one point, really stayed true to itself in the end. One thing I especially like about this movie over WALL-E, was that all the characters actually had a point. There weren't any filler characters that were just there for the sake of being there. In WALL-E, I still wonder why M-O was in the movie at all other than just to look cute, among other robot characters. In Up, All the characters, including Russell, Dug and Kevin, all had a point for being there and were well-developed in the end.Its similar to Wall-E in how it starts great, but loses momentum by it's second half. It looked great, and Christopher Plummer was great and Charles Muntz, but after a while it fell into the predictable pixar format. It looked great and it shows signs of Pixar maturing, but they really have to learn how to do a better second act. They never manage to sustain greatness in their films. Wall-E was amazing for the first 20 or so minutes, but then it got painfully predictable and the part with the humans had a very forced message. I don't care about the humans and any comment on society pixar makes since it has been done before and better. Still though I think they may soon make a great film, I hope they do because they have tons of potential they just dont know how to use yet. Animation wise they are amazing, but story and commenting on society wise they need some work. Even though a lot of japanese animation is crap, some manages to have a great story with much worse animation. If pixar could mix their animation with the storytelling of some of the best japanese animation they could achieve greatness. Some day maybe, but not yet.
Nerd_Man
I agree that the characters felt more fleshed out, I also liked how it didn't have a forced message. It was what it was and it stayed true to it's intentions, for better or worse. I just didn't find the story very compelling after a while, and even though I am a big Christopher Plummer fan and I liked his voice work I didn't think Charlez Muntz was a very good character. The story started great, but after a while it became more and more predictable and silly. I did like it though and I would give it a solid 7.5, maybe an 8. Don't think I hate it, heck the story had potential but I dont think Pixar can handle a more mature story yet. They will soon though, and I look forward to that. They still have a while to go though before they become favorites of mine, to give you an idea of what my favorite animated films are here is yet another quick list.
Triplets of Belleville- The dog in this film worked better than Dug imo:P
Waltz with bashir
Watership down- Animation is more primative, but I grew up on this film and i still love it.
Plague Dogs
Renaissance- I loved the look and the mix of film noir and animation. Some say the story sucks, but I thought it fit.
Fantastic planet
Princess Mononoke
Metropolis
Millennium Actress
Paprika
Time masters
A Scanner Darkly- I am a big Phillip k. Dick fan so this film worked perfectly to me. I know some dont consider it animated though, so i'm not sure if it counts.
Pixar are masters of animation, that is undeniable. Storywise though i think they need some work.
[QUOTE="Nerd_Man"][QUOTE="Film-Guy"]I can't say I agree they lost momentum by the third act. The story, while took an unexpected turn at one point, really stayed true to itself in the end. One thing I especially like about this movie over WALL-E, was that all the characters actually had a point. There weren't any filler characters that were just there for the sake of being there. In WALL-E, I still wonder why M-O was in the movie at all other than just to look cute, among other robot characters. In Up, All the characters, including Russell, Dug and Kevin, all had a point for being there and were well-developed in the end. I also don't agree that the message was forced in Wall-E. It was a very powerful, timely and important message, presented in a clever and humerous way that makes it accessible for BOTH children and adults. These aren't the same as adult movies. They are still kids movies and have to have the action etc. But to intertwine that with the themes is what makes these films successful.Its similar to Wall-E in how it starts great, but loses momentum by it's second half. It looked great, and Christopher Plummer was great and Charles Muntz, but after a while it fell into the predictable pixar format. It looked great and it shows signs of Pixar maturing, but they really have to learn how to do a better second act. They never manage to sustain greatness in their films. Wall-E was amazing for the first 20 or so minutes, but then it got painfully predictable and the part with the humans had a very forced message. I don't care about the humans and any comment on society pixar makes since it has been done before and better. Still though I think they may soon make a great film, I hope they do because they have tons of potential they just dont know how to use yet. Animation wise they are amazing, but story and commenting on society wise they need some work. Even though a lot of japanese animation is crap, some manages to have a great story with much worse animation. If pixar could mix their animation with the storytelling of some of the best japanese animation they could achieve greatness. Some day maybe, but not yet.
biggest_loser
As a kids film the message kinda works, and it fits with the theme of the story and the start of the film on earth. It still didn't feel very compelling once they got into space though, and I hate it when they throw in random cute robots who seem to serve to purpose other than looking cute or moving around as if pixar is showing off their animation without much point. Up worked better than Wall-E because everything had a point and the characters were all fleshed out in their own ways, I may not have liked all of them but they still worked much better than Wall-E's characters for the most part.
I agree that the characters felt more fleshed out, I also liked how it didn't have a forced message. It was what it was and it stayed true to it's intentions, for better or worse. I just didn't find the story very compelling after a while, and even though I am a big Christopher Plummer fan and I liked his voice work I didn't think Charlez Muntz was a very good character. The story started great, but after a while it became more and more predictable and silly. I did like it though and I would give it a solid 7.5, maybe an 8. Don't think I hate it, heck the story had potential but I dont think Pixar can handle a more mature story yet. They will soon though, and I look forward to that. They still have a while to go though before they become favorites of mine, to give you an idea of what my favorite animated films are here is yet another quick list.
Film-Guy
I think Up is an incredibly mature film in some parts. As everyone here has mentioned the opening is particularly emotional and those themes about life ambitions are carried throughout. Then there's things like the kids backstory which are hinted at.
But like I said, its a kids movie. There are limitations as to what you can put in to make it a mature story because a lot of LITTLE kids are going to see this, so there has to be a balance and I think the balance is about as good as you'll get in Up.
I think if you're expecting Pixar to make the next Waltz with bashir then you'll be waiting a while.
They know their market. Compared to other kids animated stuff like Alvin and the chipmunks, Raining with a chance of meatballs and Astro boy, Up and Wall-E are gold.
I can't say I agree they lost momentum by the third act. The story, while took an unexpected turn at one point, really stayed true to itself in the end. One thing I especially like about this movie over WALL-E, was that all the characters actually had a point. There weren't any filler characters that were just there for the sake of being there. In WALL-E, I still wonder why M-O was in the movie at all other than just to look cute, among other robot characters. In Up, All the characters, including Russell, Dug and Kevin, all had a point for being there and were well-developed in the end.[QUOTE="Nerd_Man"][QUOTE="Film-Guy"]
Its similar to Wall-E in how it starts great, but loses momentum by it's second half. It looked great, and Christopher Plummer was great and Charles Muntz, but after a while it fell into the predictable pixar format. It looked great and it shows signs of Pixar maturing, but they really have to learn how to do a better second act. They never manage to sustain greatness in their films. Wall-E was amazing for the first 20 or so minutes, but then it got painfully predictable and the part with the humans had a very forced message. I don't care about the humans and any comment on society pixar makes since it has been done before and better. Still though I think they may soon make a great film, I hope they do because they have tons of potential they just dont know how to use yet. Animation wise they are amazing, but story and commenting on society wise they need some work. Even though a lot of japanese animation is crap, some manages to have a great story with much worse animation. If pixar could mix their animation with the storytelling of some of the best japanese animation they could achieve greatness. Some day maybe, but not yet.
Film-Guy
I agree that the characters felt more fleshed out, I also liked how it didn't have a forced message. It was what it was and it stayed true to it's intentions, for better or worse. I just didn't find the story very compelling after a while, and even though I am a big Christopher Plummer fan and I liked his voice work I didn't think Charlez Muntz was a very good character. The story started great, but after a while it became more and more predictable and silly. I did like it though and I would give it a solid 7.5, maybe an 8. Don't think I hate it, heck the story had potential but I dont think Pixar can handle a more mature story yet. They will soon though, and I look forward to that. They still have a while to go though before they become favorites of mine, to give you an idea of what my favorite animated films are here is yet another quick list.
Triplets of Belleville- The dog in this film worked better than Dug imo:P
Waltz with bashir
Watership down- Animation is more primative, but I grew up on this film and i still love it.
Plague Dogs
Renaissance- I loved the look and the mix of film noir and animation. Some say the story sucks, but I thought it fit.
Fantastic planet
Princess Mononoke
Metropolis
Millennium Actress
Paprika
Time masters
A Scanner Darkly- I am a big Phillip k. Dick fan so this film worked perfectly to me. I know some dont consider it animated though, so i'm not sure if it counts.
Pixar are masters of animation, that is undeniable. Storywise though i think they need some work.
What didn't you like about Charles Muntz? He's actually one of my favorite Pixar villains now next to Hopper and Syndrome.
I think Pixar definitely can handle a mature film. I think they've proven that they're master storytellers and that they definitely have it in them to create something amazing (It's not just the animation that makes them the most respected animation studio of our day - it's the stories they've told that truly makes them stand out from the crowd). They're just trying to appeal to everyone - not just one set crowd. I guess it really depends how mature you want Pixar to go, but if it's really something out of the PG window, I really don't know what the chances will then be. Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo and WALL-E director), is currently working on his next film (John Carter of Mars) and it's not going to be released under the Pixar label. I question if that will mean it will be a more mature film like the ones you're asking for - but I think that's just something to keep in mind. Pixar is going to stay Pixar, but I think if the team is going to work on maturer projects, they'll probably release them under different labels.
[QUOTE="Film-Guy"]
I agree that the characters felt more fleshed out, I also liked how it didn't have a forced message. It was what it was and it stayed true to it's intentions, for better or worse. I just didn't find the story very compelling after a while, and even though I am a big Christopher Plummer fan and I liked his voice work I didn't think Charlez Muntz was a very good character. The story started great, but after a while it became more and more predictable and silly. I did like it though and I would give it a solid 7.5, maybe an 8. Don't think I hate it, heck the story had potential but I dont think Pixar can handle a more mature story yet. They will soon though, and I look forward to that. They still have a while to go though before they become favorites of mine, to give you an idea of what my favorite animated films are here is yet another quick list.
biggest_loser
I think Up is an incredibly mature film in some parts. As everyone here has mentioned the opening is particularly emotional and those themes about life ambitions are carried throughout. Then there's things like the kids backstory which are hinted at.
But like I said, its a kids movie. There are limitations as to what you can put in to make it a mature story because a lot of LITTLE kids are going to see this, so there has to be a balance and I think the balance is about as good as you'll get in Up.
I agree they did the best they could have done, I think the kid's film format was a tad limiting in a way. The opening scene was beautiful, I swear I almost cried and I am not afraid to admit that. The rest though, despite the consistant themes, was a bit too predictable and cliche once the villain was introduced. Also I liked the kid, I thought he was just going to be used as a cute kid who did nothing but I think he worked pretty well for the most part.
[QUOTE="Film-Guy"]
[QUOTE="Nerd_Man"] I can't say I agree they lost momentum by the third act. The story, while took an unexpected turn at one point, really stayed true to itself in the end. One thing I especially like about this movie over WALL-E, was that all the characters actually had a point. There weren't any filler characters that were just there for the sake of being there. In WALL-E, I still wonder why M-O was in the movie at all other than just to look cute, among other robot characters. In Up, All the characters, including Russell, Dug and Kevin, all had a point for being there and were well-developed in the end.Nerd_Man
I agree that the characters felt more fleshed out, I also liked how it didn't have a forced message. It was what it was and it stayed true to it's intentions, for better or worse. I just didn't find the story very compelling after a while, and even though I am a big Christopher Plummer fan and I liked his voice work I didn't think Charlez Muntz was a very good character. The story started great, but after a while it became more and more predictable and silly. I did like it though and I would give it a solid 7.5, maybe an 8. Don't think I hate it, heck the story had potential but I dont think Pixar can handle a more mature story yet. They will soon though, and I look forward to that. They still have a while to go though before they become favorites of mine, to give you an idea of what my favorite animated films are here is yet another quick list.
Triplets of Belleville- The dog in this film worked better than Dug imo:P
Waltz with bashir
Watership down- Animation is more primative, but I grew up on this film and i still love it.
Plague Dogs
Renaissance- I loved the look and the mix of film noir and animation. Some say the story sucks, but I thought it fit.
Fantastic planet
Princess Mononoke
Metropolis
Millennium Actress
Paprika
Time masters
A Scanner Darkly- I am a big Phillip k. Dick fan so this film worked perfectly to me. I know some dont consider it animated though, so i'm not sure if it counts.
Pixar are masters of animation, that is undeniable. Storywise though i think they need some work.
What didn't you like about Charles Muntz? He's actually one of my favorite Pixar villains now next to Hopper and Syndrome.
I think Pixar definitely can handle a mature film. I think they've proven that they're master storytellers and that they definitely have it in them to create something amazing (It's not just the animation that makes them the most respected animation studio of our day - it's the stories they've told that truly makes them stand out from the crowd). They're just trying to appeal to everyone - not just one set crowd. I guess it really depends how mature you want Pixar to go, but if it's really something out of the PG window, I really don't know what the chances will then be. Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo and WALL-E director), is currently working on his next film (John Carter of Mars) and it's not going to be released under the Pixar label. I question if that will mean it will be a more mature film like the ones you're asking for - but I think that's just something to keep in mind. Pixar is going to stay Pixar, but I think if the team is going to work on maturer projects, they'll probably release them under different labels.
Its not that I didn't like Charles Muntz, its more the idea of him. I think the film didn't need a villain, the life themes almost felt like background once the villain was thrown in. He still worked as a villain, and I know kids films need a villain for the most part, but some part of me was hoping the film didn't have a villain since it didn't need once. I realize it is a kid's film though, so in that case the villain worked despite how he was a bit cliche. I look forward to John Carter of mars, it sounds interesting. I cant remember if Pixar did this, but another kid's film I really liked was The Iron Giant. Was that Pixar or someone else?
Oh my dear boy, I believe you are mistaken. It's Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs. :lol: :PRaining with a chance of meatballs and Astro boy, Up and Wall-E are gold.
biggest_loser
[QUOTE="biggest_loser"]Oh my dear boy, I believe you are mistaken. It's Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs. :lol: :P lol, i had to write that quickly so i just slapped it into google and it came up with Raining! Sequel time already?!!Raining with a chance of meatballs and Astro boy, Up and Wall-E are gold.
JustPlainLucas
[QUOTE="Nerd_Man"]
[QUOTE="Film-Guy"]
I agree that the characters felt more fleshed out, I also liked how it didn't have a forced message. It was what it was and it stayed true to it's intentions, for better or worse. I just didn't find the story very compelling after a while, and even though I am a big Christopher Plummer fan and I liked his voice work I didn't think Charlez Muntz was a very good character. The story started great, but after a while it became more and more predictable and silly. I did like it though and I would give it a solid 7.5, maybe an 8. Don't think I hate it, heck the story had potential but I dont think Pixar can handle a more mature story yet. They will soon though, and I look forward to that. They still have a while to go though before they become favorites of mine, to give you an idea of what my favorite animated films are here is yet another quick list.
Triplets of Belleville- The dog in this film worked better than Dug imo:P
Waltz with bashir
Watership down- Animation is more primative, but I grew up on this film and i still love it.
Plague Dogs
Renaissance- I loved the look and the mix of film noir and animation. Some say the story sucks, but I thought it fit.
Fantastic planet
Princess Mononoke
Metropolis
Millennium Actress
Paprika
Time masters
A Scanner Darkly- I am a big Phillip k. Dick fan so this film worked perfectly to me. I know some dont consider it animated though, so i'm not sure if it counts.
Pixar are masters of animation, that is undeniable. Storywise though i think they need some work.Film-Guy
What didn't you like about Charles Muntz? He's actually one of my favorite Pixar villains now next to Hopper and Syndrome.
I think Pixar definitely can handle a mature film. I think they've proven that they're master storytellers and that they definitely have it in them to create something amazing (It's not just the animation that makes them the most respected animation studio of our day - it's the stories they've told that truly makes them stand out from the crowd). They're just trying to appeal to everyone - not just one set crowd. I guess it really depends how mature you want Pixar to go, but if it's really something out of the PG window, I really don't know what the chances will then be. Andrew Stanton (Finding Nemo and WALL-E director), is currently working on his next film (John Carter of Mars) and it's not going to be released under the Pixar label. I question if that will mean it will be a more mature film like the ones you're asking for - but I think that's just something to keep in mind. Pixar is going to stay Pixar, but I think if the team is going to work on maturer projects, they'll probably release them under different labels.
Its not that I didn't like Charles Muntz, its more the idea of him. I think the film didn't need a villain, the life themes almost felt like background once the villain was thrown in. He still worked as a villain, and I know kids films need a villain for the most part, but some part of me was hoping the film didn't have a villain since it didn't need once. I realize it is a kid's film though, so in that case the villain worked despite how he was a bit cliche. I look forward to John Carter of mars, it sounds interesting. I cant remember if Pixar did this, but another kid's film I really liked was The Iron Giant. Was that Pixar or someone else?
Charles Muntz was almost a mirror of Carl Fredricksen himself. [spoiler] Both characters had a lot of things that were weighing them down. Muntz was stuck up on regaining fame and proving everyone wrong about the discovery of the elusive bird. Fredricksen was stuck up over his wife's death and he wanted to fulfill their dreams. By the end of the film, Carl learned that memories can weigh you down, and that he shouldn't be stuck in the position he was forever over personal belongings. At the same time, Muntz never learned that he should just get over the bird and it ultimately led to his demise. In a way it was kinda a metaphor to how close Carl Fredricksen was to meeting his demise if he wasn't willing to let things go. [/spoiler] The Iron Giant is one of my favorite animated films. It was not made by Pixar, but the film was made by Brad Bird before he came to Pixar and made The Incredibles and Ratatouille. :DPlease Log In to post.
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