Re: *** Official UP Discussion Thread
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Originally Posted by PaulDA
I suspect the "cold feet" came from Disney--"coming home" is a staple of "kid movies" (and Pixar films are "kid movies" first and foremost). Pinocchio comes to mind (I've recently watched the BD with my children). There are many others. In a sense, I think the kind of films you think WALL*E and Up could have been (and I would have liked) would probably have had a better shot at being made if Pixar had gone the independent route. Pure speculation, of course, on my part but I think it is plausible.
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Certainly makes sense.
I picked up the Pinocchio BD when that came out and watched it recently -- I realized at some point that it had been twenty years since I had seen it, and that might have been the first time I had thought to myself it had been twenty years since anything, funny how that works. Anyway, I loved it just as much as I did when I was a kid, if not more. A really beautiful and well done film, top notch all around. If I ever end up with kids of my own, I'm going to enjoy watching it with them.
Are Pixar films really "kids" films? I suppose they're marketed as such, but I'd like to think the reason the old school Disney stuff was so good was because Walt wasn't trying to make stuff just for kids, he was aiming to make entertainment that the whole family could enjoy. For the most part, I'd say that Wall-E and Up fall into that category, more all-ages appropriate than merely made for a kids-only audience.
Anyway, it's not that I have a problem with the "coming home" theme in general (OK, actually, it's not my favorite storyline, but it's not a dealbreaker for me on principle), but there's really nothing in Up that suggests that would be the logical destination point for the story. I mean, the first third of the movie is all about Carl trying to get away, and then the second third is about him trying to move his house to exactly where he wants it in the new location -- at no point in the film is anyone trying to get home, because Carl's exactly where he wants to be. Going home was never a motivating factor for the characters, until the plot demands that it be one -- one gets the sense that perhaps the filmmakers didn't know how to end it.
I know I'm nitpicking here and probably in danger of repeating myself (sorry!), and I definitely don't want it to be lost that I really did enjoy these films, they're easily my favorite Pixar films.
One thing I haven't seen mentioned in this thread was how wonderful the short "Partly Cloudy" was -- it played before Up at the theater I saw it in. I'd love to see the team at Pixar that makes the shorts be given a chance to do a feature. They excel at original storytelling, aren't afraid to go without dialogue or conventional characters, and perhaps they'd be a good candidate to take an idea all the way to feature length without grafting a traditional plot structure to it.