Inside Out
Girlfriend is a huge Pixar fan, so we went to see this on Friday afternoon. Theater was packed with unruly children, mostly under 10 with the vast majority of them younger than 5.
THIS IS NOT A MOVIE FOR KIDS. IT IS A MOVIE ABOUT A KID.
The bright colors and goofball visualizations of complex emotional/memory concepts kept the little bastards mostly entertained, but they obviously couldn't grasp the overall meaning of the story.
It was a very good movie about the maturation of a young girl and the complex evolution of emotional responses and personality traits as we age.
Just don't go to the 12:55pm showing...shit will be a daycare zoo.
Watched this last night. We were the only people in the theater with the exception of a lone woman in her 20s-30s sitting against the wall on the left who began quietly weeping about the time the volcano started singing and sniffled and chuffed until the movie credits rolled.
Disney/Pixar does as good a job as any at navigating that fine line between kid-friendly fare and grown-up entertainment. This movie was no exception even though it meandered through some of the same coming of age sappiness that Toy Story peddled so well.
Toy Story was great. Seriously great. This movie was merely good.
The film was beautifully rendered when it came to the interaction between the lead character and her family (aka the real world). The brief clip of the family driving through the west was particularly stunning to me, having actually been there just the day before. I was struck by just how realistic the animation was.
I think the animation was lacking in the portrayals of the competing emotions in her brain. I wasn't impressed with the look of Joy or Sadness. It didn't meet the high bar set by films like Toy Story or Nemo or even Rango.
The voices were uniformly good. Amy Poehler as Joy was fantastic. So was Phyllis from The Office as Sadness. Lewis Black's Anger was pretty good too. Didn't care as much for Bill Hader's Fear.
The story was very similar to Toy Story except here the character doesn't grow apart from toys, but has to learn to deal with competing emotions as she ages.
The realization that the world is more than just joy is a heartbreaking one for kids. It's a terrible thing to learn that there is fear, anger, sadness, regret, hate and all the other swirl of emotions that make us human. It's awful to take the rose colored glasses off and step outside that cocoon of safety and security that parents provide.
This movie does an outstanding job of portraying that even the best memories are tinged with sadness and nostalgia.
Yeah, it lays it on a little thick and tries a touch too hard to yank at the heartstrings, but the emotions rang true enough. What's the purpose of a movie? First, to entertain. This one did that easily. If it can go beyond and inform and make you think, then it's elevated itself. This one did that too.
I wish I'd seen this movie when my own daughter was eleven. It might have changed the way I dealt with some of the emotional mazes she wandered through.