Re: From Pixar in 2007: Ratatouille
Quote:
| Did anyone notice that thing in the end credits about how "no motion capture" was used in the making of this film? |
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| Did anyone notice that thing in the end credits about how "no motion capture" was used in the making of this film? |
| I wonder if that's pointed at any specific competition, or just a general thing. |
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Originally Posted by MikeRS
Chuck,
There's no other animation studio I would want Brad Bird to collaborate with right now (And with Pixar controlling all of Disney, I'm sure Bird will get back to hand drawn animation pretty soon. I'm just pointing out that as much as I admire Pixar (Toy Story 2 and Finding Nemo being my favorites of their non-Brad Bird features), Brad Bird is a very unique talent. I have a very personal connection with his work - the same way I would have with any great live action filmmaker I admire. |
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Originally Posted by Bob Turnbull
I thought I heard that initial numbers for opening weekend were along the lines of $33 million which was framed as "somewhat disappointing". I don't usually care that much about the box office numbers, but I'd hate to have any of those whiners at Disney get any satisfaction...Assuming of course that the "insider" quotes are accurate about the complaints. |
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Originally Posted by Allen Hirsch
I think word of mouth on this should really give it some serious box-office legs. It's definitely in Toy Story/Incredibles territory as to quality of story and overall animation.
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| the Fantasia-like display of taste |
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Originally Posted by Adam_S
I loved that part.
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Originally Posted by Chuck Mayer
I have heard that Bird will be directing a live action film about the 1906 earthquake. Whatever he does, I'll be there.
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Originally Posted by DaveF
I got to Ratatouille last night and found it thoroughly enjoyable. Score-wise I'd give it a B or B+, comparing to other Pixar movies. It was a solid story, great animation, and fantastic last third. But it lacked the through-and-through magic of Nemo or Toy Story 2, for me.
Technically, it felt that lighting was the goal for this film. There were many scenes using softer lighting, mist, fog, or such that had the "new" feeling to it. Similar to how Monsters was about hair, Nemo about water, and Incredibles about people. The best scenes to me were the en masse rat events: The colony escaping the old lady's house and then the rats running the kitchen -- particular, as noted, the steam cleaning of the rats. Great fun! The weaknesses, seemed a slightly unfocused telling of the story. The head-thumping explanations in particular: why Remy walks on two legs; the Fantasia-like display of taste; repeatedly reminding us that Gusteau is just Remy's imagination; "that was strangely involuntary" wink to the audience when Remy begins to control Linguine. Also, the romance came from nowhere. Two days in the kitchen, and Linguine loves the female chef? It felt awkward. Regardless, it was a good movie. And I look forward to a second viewing on DVD. |


