Showing posts with label Monsters University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monsters University. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2015

More Photos of the Magic of Disney Animation at Disney Hollywood Studios

As promised, darthmaz314 brings you more photos from the now closed Magic of Disney Animation attraction at Disney Hollywood Studios. 

In the section adjacent to the Animation Academy and meet and greet areas, there was always artwork from the upcoming or current Disney/Pixar release. It is fun to look back now at concept art for films that not yet been released at the time, but have now been cemented in Disney storytelling lore.

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Concept Art from Wreck It Ralph at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com

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Concept Art from Wreck It Ralph at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com

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Concept Art from Wreck It Ralph at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com

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Concept Art from Monsters University at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com

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Concept Art from Monsters University at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com


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Concept Art from Monsters University at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com


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Concept Art from Monsters University at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com


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Mike & Sully Maquettes from Monsters University at The Magic of Disney Animation - courtesy darthmaz314.com



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Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Disney Announces "The Incredibles 2" and "Cars 3" at Annual Shareholders Meeting

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Big News from Disney CEO Bob Iger

Last Tuesday, during a shareholder’s meeting, Disney CEO Bob Iger announced that sequels to two of Pixar’s heaviest hitters are planned for the future. After ten years, a sequel to The Incredibles 2 has been greenlit, bringing the superhero family back to the big screen.  Also announced by Iger was the return of the Radiator Springs crew in a third installment of Cars. Should The Incredibles tread the thin ice of the sequel world? Do we need a third Cars film? darthmaz314 weighs in.

The Incredibles is a shining example of Pixar’s masterful
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model for storytelling in the modern world. This model has at its core, the creation of a great story, which acts as the foundation for all that follows in the development of the film. Pixar attempts to create a story that engages people; not just young people or parents, or people who buy toys, or people who like animation. All of the best Pixar films are driven by stories that allow the audience to relate to real-life situations. The Incredibles does this in so many ways, although you may not recognize it because, as a viewer, you are having too much fun following the story, or enjoying the great dialog, or the actors’ fine voice performances, or the amazing way that Pixar artists have recreated life in stunning detail from a collection of millions of triangular pixels in a computer.

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One Big, Happy, Incredible Family

On the surface, The Incredibles is very entertaining film. But it is also much more than this. The Incredibles is an animated superhero film that deals with the issues of mid-life crisis, a married couple’s struggle to keep their relationship afloat amidst stagnation and doubt, a child’s rejection by a larger than life role model and the damage that does not only to the child, but to the world, and our society’s obsession with tearing down heros…just to mention a few. Are you kidding me? How many live action films manage to tackle all that emotional baggage and not come off as a preachy piece that tugs way too hard at your heartstrings in search of Oscar votes? 

The Incredibles takes it all on, while telling an animated action-adventure tale, which is ultimately marketed for children. Do I want to see a sequel? Absolutely, but only if the sequel can come close to the original in terms of story, character development, and the ability to connect to the audience. That may be a tall order, but if anyone can do it, Pixar can. They did is last year.

Aside from the Toy Story trilogy, in which each sequel
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"Cars 3, really?"
actually trumped its predecessor, Monsters University is the best example of Pixar successfully bringing back the magic of one of its blockbusters in a sequel. Initially, I was not wildly impressed by Monsters University. The first film had earned such a special place in my heart, that any sequel would almost definitely be a letdown. In fact, I considered the sequel just that after I had seen it in the theater. However, after seeing it a few more times on Blu-ray, I came to appreciate it more and more. It was then that I began to appreciate how this story, perhaps even more than the original, had taken fictitious monsters made of computer pixels and infused them with more emotion and humanity than most of the characters portrayed by human beings in live action films. This coupled with the stunning recreation of reality displayed in the visuals of the film catapulted near the top of my Pixar list.  

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Incredibles sequel? Bring it on. Another Cars? I am not so sure. I loved Cars as much as the next Disney fan. It too is one of my favorite Pixar films. However, the sequel is the one misstep in what has otherwise been a truly phenomenal run by the animation giant. Is Cars 2 a complete disaster devoid of any entertainment value? Not by any means. Does it stand toe to toe with some of the other classic titles Pixar has produced? Not by any means.

One problem with evaluating Cars 2 stems from the fact that the film is held to an undeniably high standard.  Pixar set the bar so high and really never had to lower it. The Pixar audience grew so used to excellence and came to expect it year after year. Cars 2 is no worse than Turbo or How to Train Your Dragon, but when you hold it up against the original Cars, Finding Nemo, and The Incredibles, it pales in comparison.


It is even difficult to pinpoint why I did not enjoy Cars 2 was much as the original. It did have elements of humor and sentimentality and it was entertaining enough to keep your interest. Yet the story was not up to par with the usual Pixar film. Cars 2 seems to skim the surface rather than dig in deep and force the audience to invest in the story. As an adult, it made you feel that you were too old to be watching it, whereas with other Pixar films, you almost feel bad that the kids don't get the more mature references and jokes.

My opinion aside, (because who really reads this anyway?)
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Cars 2 also failed to garner much critical acclaim. It is widely regarded as a sub-par Pixar film, although it did gross more at the world box office than its predecessor ($560 million compared to $462 for Cars.) Considering the box office numbers, it is easy to see why Disney would greenlight another Cars film. Couple this with the fact that Carsland in Anaheim’s Disney California Adventure park has been a huge success, revitalizing that park and prompting rumors that an east coast version is destined for Walt Disney World. In addition, the merchandising of the Cars brand has been a virtual printing press of cash for Disney. For all these reasons, Cars 3 makes perfect sense. We will all have to place our faith that Pixar can bring back the magic and charm of the original in the second sequel. 

darthmaz314 always welcomes your comments and shamelessly asks you to share this and all our posts with your friends (or enemies) if you like what you see. Also, please visit, follow, and like our facebook page...






Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Monsters University: Does It Make the Grade? - A darthmaz314 Re-post


To celebrate the Monsters University release to Blu-ray and DVD, darthmaz314 brings you a re-post of our June review of Pixar's latest offering...

It is hard to name another creative team that has repeatedly hit the mark as many times as Pixar. Each and every year, this animation studio rolls out another film that not only rivals any animated film released to compete with it, but has the cinematic credibility to stand toe to toe with most live action films as well. Disney/Pixar's latest offering is a sequel to the hugely successful Monsters Inc. Pixar proved that they could produce a successful sequel with Toy Story 2 and then proved that they could deliver on a third installment with the cinematic gem Toy Story 3, which was nominated for Best Picture. And while Cars 2 may not have had the chops to ride with its full throttle predecessor, Monsters University,more than makes the grade.


Creating great cinema is easy. Easy for me to say. Yet, there is one element that every great film has, regardless of it's budget, its box office take, or how many Oscars it wins...a great story filled with characters that the audience can connect with and embrace. Monsters University has both. Of course, the character part was already prefabricated in the original film, so it was easy for Pixar to mail this one in, right? It may have been easy, but as they have consistently proven in the past, Pixar never mails it in.

In Monsters University, the first Pixar prequel, we are introduced to the lovable Mike Wozowski and James P. Sullivan back in their college days, when they were not yet scarers and not yet even friends. In fact, when they meet, and for the first half of the movie, the two can barely stand one another. This movie shows us how the duo became friends and how they overcame all the odds to become Monsters Incorporated's best scaring team ever.


Monsters University paints the portrait of Mike Wozowski as the hardest working scare program student in the monster world, who dreamed of becoming a scarer ever since an elementary school class trip to the Monsters Inc. factory. Everyone counted little Mike out and no one ever took him seriously. But his boundless enthusiasm and hard work landed him a spot in the scare program at Monsters University, where Mike was determined to make a name for himself as the best candidate the program had ever seen.  He never fit in with the "cool kids" and may not have ever really been very scary, but he worked harder and longer than anyone at honing the craft of scaring.

Enter Jimmy Sullivan, a hulking mass of pure bred scarer, whose family name was steeped in the great tradition of scaring. With his snarling and menacing visage and his blood-curdling roar, Sully could scare a kid straight out his pajamas. But with his cocky attitude and a lack of interest in learning the theory and techniques that make a truly great scarer, Sully soon finds out that his family name and his ability to belt out a good roar may not be enough to make it through the scare program.

In this film, Mike and Sully are the furthest from friends that they could be after they meet one another. They develop a bitter rivalry that eventually escalates in their both being thrown out of the scare program by the head of the School of Scaring, Dean Hardscrabble, voiced by Helen Mirren. The boys eventually team up with a band of misfit
students and enter an MU competition called the Scare Games, the winner of which is granted entrance into the scare program. Mike and Sully must learn to work together with their team and with each other if they are to prove Dean Hardscrabble and everyone else on campus, that they are wrong about their chances of making it as scarers.

What make Monsters University a good movie is that it takes millions of little dots on a computer screen and infuses them with more humanity and emotion than many live action films can muster even in their best scenes. The story, the animation, and the vocal performances all combine to bring computer generated characters to life in a way that is hard to imagine is possible. These characters are believable because they are real. They are flawed. They make mistakes and they don't always save the day. True, the endings are usually happy, but Pixar blends human weakness and fallibility into their characters, creating a complexity and a reality that makes them transcend their computer generated limitations and brings them to life in that uniquely Pixar fashion.


The result it that we can all see a glimpse of ourselves in these characters. Whether it was Mike's inability to be accepted as the smallest guy in the room, or Sully's in-crowd disregard for the rules and refusal to put in the time to make the grade, these are characters you have met. They are the pimply-faced kid who was pushed into the urinal. They are the jerk wagon jock who thought he descended from the divine. Their flesh and blood counterparts may not have had one enormous eye or been covered in electric blue polka-dotted fur, but you know these characters. Some may even see the shadows of these characters every day when they look in the mirror.

Like nearly all the other Pixar films, we become invested in the characters. We have seen them in action at a later stage in life in Monsters Inc. Now we see how the meld into the characters that we fell in love with more than a decade ago. As usual, the message is a positive one in this film. Hard work, dedication, perseverance, and true friendship, are what eventually land Mike and Sully at the door to Monsters Inc. In fact, it is refreshing that this story does not tie everything into a neat little bow for our
heroes within five minutes of the ending credits. Mike and Sully earn their spot as the top scarers and never have anything handed to them on a silver platter. It may be cliché, but even the most cynical of us has to love a story like that.

In a world that seems to value cutthroat tactics and making your way by stepping on the backs of others to get ahead, darthmaz314 applauds Pixar for telling a story about how being a decent person (or in this case, a decent monster) pays off in the end. With competition infused into nearly every form of entertainment, overwhelming us at every turn, it is important to take a step back and question what it is that we are all competing for. Monsters University reminds us all that it is our relationships that are the true rewards in life. Mike and Sully make be the most unlikely duo at a glance, but it is who they are inside and how they grow and work together that make them an unstoppable force in the world of scaring.


Monsters University has plenty of laughs, some for the kiddies and some only the adults will be able to catch. It has stunning visuals that will make you wonder how a computer can recreate life so vividly and crisply. It has the endearing characters we love from the original, and a few new ones that make for a solid supporting cast. It delivers on the Disney/Pixar track record of good family entertainment and it has the previously referenced positive message. What more could you want for your family entertainment dollar?  

darthmaz314 always welcomes your comments and shamelessly asks you to share this and all our posts with your friends (or enemies) if you like what you see. Also, please visit, follow, and like our facebook page...

  
 

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Monsters University: Does it Make the Grade?


It is hard to name another creative team that has repeatedly hit the mark as many times as Pixar. Each and every year, this animation studio rolls out another film that not only rivals any animated film released to compete with it, but has the cinematic credibility to stand toe to toe with most live action films as well. Disney/Pixar's latest offering is a sequel to the hugely successful Monsters Inc. Pixar proved that they could produce a successful sequel with Toy Story 2 and then proved that they could deliver on a third installment with the cinematic gem Toy Story 3, which was nominated for Best Picture. And while Cars 2 may not have had the chops to ride with its full throttle predecessor, Monsters University,more than makes the grade.


Creating great cinema is easy. Easy for me to say. Yet, there is one element that every great film has, regardless of it's budget, its box office take, or how many Oscars it wins...a great story filled with characters that the audience can connect with and embrace. Monsters University has both. Of course, the character part was already prefabricated in the original film, so it was easy for Pixar to mail this one in, right? It may have been easy, but as they have consistently proven in the past, Pixar never mails it in.

In Monsters University, the first Pixar prequel, we are introduced to the lovable Mike Wozowski and James P. Sullivan back in their college days, when they were not yet scarers and not yet even friends. In fact, when they meet, and for the first half of the movie, the two can barely stand one another. This movie shows us how the duo became friends and how they overcame all the odds to become Monsters Incorporated's best scaring team ever.


Monsters University paints the portrait of Mike Wozowski as the hardest working scare program student in the monster world, who dreamed of becoming a scarer ever since an elementary school class trip to the Monsters Inc. factory. Everyone counted little Mike out and no one ever took him seriously. But his boundless enthusiasm and hard work landed him a spot in the scare program at Monsters University, where Mike was determined to make a name for himself as the best candidate the program had ever seen.  He never fit in with the "cool kids" and may not have ever really been very scary, but he worked harder and longer than anyone at honing the craft of scaring.

Enter Jimmy Sullivan, a hulking mass of pure bred scarer, whose family name was steeped in the great tradition of scaring. With his snarling and menacing visage and his blood-curdling roar, Sully could scare a kid straight out his pajamas. But with his cocky attitude and a lack of interest in learning the theory and techniques that make a truly great scarer, Sully soon finds out that his family name and his ability to belt out a good roar may not be enough to make it through the scare program.

In this film, Mike and Sully are the furthest from friends that they could be after they meet one another. They develop a bitter rivalry that eventually escalates in their both being thrown out of the scare program by the head of the School of Scaring, Dean Hardscrabble, voiced by Helen Mirren. The boys eventually team up with a band of misfit
students and enter an MU competition called the Scare Games, the winner of which is granted entrance into the scare program. Mike and Sully must learn to work together with their team and with each other if they are to prove Dean Hardscrabble and everyone else on campus, that they are wrong about their chances of making it as scarers.

What make Monsters University a good movie is that it takes millions of little dots on a computer screen and infuses them with more humanity and emotion than many live action films can muster even in their best scenes. The story, the animation, and the vocal performances all combine to bring computer generated characters to life in a way that is hard to imagine is possible. These characters are believable because they are real. They are flawed. They make mistakes and they don't always save the day. True, the endings are usually happy, but Pixar blends human weakness and fallibility into their characters, creating a complexity and a reality that makes them transcend their computer generated limitations and brings them to life in that uniquely Pixar fashion.


The result it that we can all see a glimpse of ourselves in these characters. Whether it was Mike's inability to be accepted as the smallest guy in the room, or Sully's in-crowd disregard for the rules and refusal to put in the time to make the grade, these are characters you have met. They are the pimply-faced kid who was pushed into the urinal. They are the jerk wagon jock who thought he descended from the divine. Their flesh and blood counterparts may not have had one enormous eye or been covered in electric blue polka-dotted fur, but you know these characters. Some may even see the shadows of these characters every day when they look in the mirror.

Like nearly all the other Pixar films, we become invested in the characters. We have seen them in action at a later stage in life in Monsters Inc. Now we see how the meld into the characters that we fell in love with more than a decade ago. As usual, the message is a positive one in this film. Hard work, dedication, perseverance, and true friendship, are what eventually land Mike and Sully at the door to Monsters Inc. In fact, it is refreshing that this story does not tie everything into a neat little bow for our
heroes within five minutes of the ending credits. Mike and Sully earn their spot as the top scarers and never have anything handed to them on a silver platter. It may be cliché, but even the most cynical of us has to love a story like that.

In a world that seems to value cutthroat tactics and making your way by stepping on the backs of others to get ahead, darthmaz314 applauds Pixar for telling a story about how being a decent person (or in this case, a decent monster) pays off in the end. With competition infused into nearly every form of entertainment, overwhelming us at every turn, it is important to take a step back and question what it is that we are all competing for. Monsters University reminds us all that it is our relationships that are the true rewards in life. Mike and Sully make be the most unlikely duo at a glance, but it is who they are inside and how they grow and work together that make them an unstoppable force in the world of scaring.


Monsters University has plenty of laughs, some for the kiddies and some only the adults will be able to catch. It has stunning visuals that will make you wonder how a computer can recreate life so vividly and crisply. It has the endearing characters we love from the original, and a few new ones that make for a solid supporting cast. It delivers on the Disney/Pixar track record of good family entertainment and it has the previously referenced positive message. What more could you want for your family entertainment dollar?  

If you saw “Monsters University” this weekend and would like to share a comment, please do! darthmaz314 welcomes your comments and shamelessly asks you to share this and all our posts with your friends (or enemies) if you like what you see.