Archive for the ‘Animation’ Category

Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Review

Imagine a world where it rains food from the sky. Imagine a world where nobody goes hungry. Imagine no more. Flint Lockwood has invented a machine that converts water into food. By accidentally shooting his machine into the sky, he now has the power to make it precipitate in all the glorious food types.

Cloudy with a chance of meat balls is an action packed comedy that will have you laughing and crying with our anti-hero, Flint. Mixing his awkward ways with a dad who can’t express his true feelings has made him the annoyance of the town, until now.

Bill Hader shines as the ditsy nerd struggling to fit in, and make his introverted father (James Caan) happy. Mr. T, however, has to be the standout character in this film. Playing the town’s super cop, he must join forces with Flint to save the day when things predictably go wrong.

Sony Pictures have managed to bring out some beautiful animation in a fun loving story that will have family goers gaga, and leave them rather hungry in the end.

8/10

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Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

Bolt

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Review

It’s refreshing to see that the Pixar team, who have literally taken control of the Animation department at Disney, are having a good influence. Bolt is one of the most refreshing, enjoyable, laugh out load movies Disney’s own studios have created in a long time. And the best news is it’s even better in 3D.

The movie follows BOLT, the star of an action, adventure television program where he has super powers. What he doesn’t know is that it’s all fake. After a tense scene where his beloved owner, Penny, is kidnapped Bolt takes off in search of her only to be accidentally shipped off from his Hollywoodhome to New York City. The movie follows his journey back across the country to save Penny. With two oddball travel buddies the movie is set for some hysterical moments, and it delivers.

The opening sequence to Bolt is mesmerising, showing that Disney’s studio is perfectly capable under the right leadership. His journey is familiar and not exactly original but what makes this movie shine is its unique and entertaining characters. With the voice talents of John Travolta, Miley Cyrus, Sussie Essman and Mark Walton the movie’s characters have a warmth and sparkle to them.

Bolt has now officially sold me on Disney Digital 3-D. Watching the movie in 3D takes your experience to a new level. Ster-Kinekor made a statement when they first released the 3-D movie houses, saying that this is as big a difference as black and white to colour. Although I wouldn’t go that far, it certainly makes any movie that much more enjoyable for both adults and kids. This isn’t 3-D that we’re used to. The picture is crystal clear, no more blurry movies that give you headaches, and the new technology allows for complete comfort. You will still have to wear 3-D glasses, but these are perfectly comfortable and plastic – not cardboard rubbish. In fact they are so comfortable I’ve seen people wearing them as a fashion statement. Needless to say that are definitely not sunglasses but it goes to show how comfortable they are.

Bolt is not the best animated movie ever, but it’s easy to recommend to anybody as a relaxing and entertaining holiday film for the whole family. Don’t miss this one.

8.5/10

Notes

Chris Williams and Byron Howard worked on Disney’s 36th animated feature “Mulan” – Williams was a member of the story team, and Howard was an animator.

The film marks Miley Cyrus’ feature-film debut as an animated character.

Before bringing any pet into your family be sure to learn about the breed and always consider adoption from a reputable shelter or rescue program.

Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

Wall•E

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

Pixar is up to its old tricks again by pulling off the craziest and most daring thing I have ever seen in animation. They have made us believe toys could be real, taken us to worlds of monsters and cars, and made us fall in love with ants, fish and a rat. This year they are taking us into the future and through space with WALL•E.

WALL•E, or Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth-Class, is the last of his kind. Stranded on our earth long after all humans abandoned it due to extreme pollution. He spends his days neatly sorting the trash into giant towers and collecting little tit-bits that interest him as his trusty pet cockroach follows him everywhere. That is until EVE arrives. A slender and many have said iPod looking bot, sent to earth to see if life is sustainable again. Our hero WALL•E immediately falls head over heals for her, but when EVE finds what she is looking for she is called back to the Axiom space station to inform the humans of life on the trash filled earth. WALL•E follows her and his journey through space begins.

Now the really groundbreaking news is that the movie has no dialog besides robotic beeps for the first half an hour of the movie. And even from there the dialog is extremely limited. Although it is pulled off in a spectacular fashion many movie goers may be slightly annoyed by the extreme lack of dialog. Although it provides for a breakthrough in storytelling it may keep a chunk of movie goers at a distance, creating one major movie flaw. As amazing as it is to see movies as art, if the viewer can’t appreciate the art, it has been wasted.

With that in mind, Pixar have managed to pull a beautifully executed love story together, along with adventure, sci-fi, and slap stick comedy. Neatly packaged in the robot whose cute eyes and zest for life will melt even the hardest of hearts. It’s a movie that caters for kids and those who can only see surface deep, but more excitingly it caters for those who see deeper. It challenges our product saturated, over indulging, over polluting ideals. It premieres a love story that grows and blossoms as in the most classic films and takes us into a future that is not only extremely fun but visually amazing.

What worries me, although it’s hard to judge such bold and innovative story telling, is that I don’t know if movie goers are ready for a movie of this calibre, although I may be underestimating how adaptable most movie goers are. If you see this movie for the first time and it just didn’t sit right with you, watch it again there is so much to experience if you just forget about the limited dialog.

8/10

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As a side note, the Pixar short before the movie is one of the most hysterical pieces I have seen. The piece shows a magician and his rabbit that is desperate for his carrot. What follows is fast paced slap stick humour that only Pixar can achieve. It is nothing short of brilliant.