Up was one of the films I watched on the long (13.5 hours!) flight from Los Angeles to Sydney in mid-February.
When it came out last summer, I was on the fence about seeing Up in the theater. Just being computer animated isn’t enough to make me want to see it; there have been some really crappy films coming out that are computer animated. (And being in 3D is already feeling like just a gimmick intended to suck an extra $5-10 out of my pocket.) It’s from Pixar, so I expected a certain level of acceptable quality, but as an animated film, it holds the expectation of being aimed at kids.
Ultimately, as ticket prices have gone up, my desire to see films in the theater has gone down. Unless it’s a special effects films, I don’t bother. Sorry, but a rom-com is going to work just as well on the home screen, and an animated film won’t have screaming kids in the audience when I watch it at home. So ultimately, Up couldn’t overcome those issues and I didn’t see it in the theater.
(I did see Coraline in 3D last year, and non-3D versions of Avatar, Sherlock Holmes, Brüno, 2012, and a couple other films.)
(Okay, I just broke something in my head, imagining Brüno in 3D.)
Thoughts:
- Due to the computer animated nature of the film, I had to compare it to Avatar. And Avatar comes out wanting. Even in this film, primarily aimed at kids, there are layers and twists to the plot that Avatar can’t even approach.
- I find myself increasingly irritated at the character designs they use for some of these computer animated films. This wasn’t as bad as, say, Hoodwinked!, but I really prefer the classic Disney style where the characters look like stylized humans rather than carved putty.
- The “pull the floating house” stunt would have been more effective if I hadn’t already seen it done in Fables. (But the idea would probably have been in the works before the Fables story came out, so a neat idea is still a neat idea.)
- Doug’s “squirrel” obsession gave me no end of delight last Labor Day weekend (before I even saw the film), when my boyfriend kept seeing Yard Sale signs and would break off conversation in the same way. In fiction, there is sometimes much truth.
- The house being isolated among the newer construction echoes an old Bugs Bunny cartoon, “No Parking Hare” (although that one took it to even more extreme places than floating the house away, if that’s possible).
When I was a teen, I was a member of Cashmere, Washington’s “Gold Troop 1”, said to be the oldest Boy Scout troop west of the Mississippi. A classmate of mine was the scoutmaster’s son. Randy achieved Eagle Scout at like age 15, quickly followed by the various Palm awards and whatever else could be had there. I only got to Life Scout rank (one below Eagle), dropping out when I was 16 or 17. Now, I’m not saying that Randy was like I’m describing Russell, and I’m certainly not saying that he had an easy ride as the Scoutmaster’s son (although I think it would be safe to claim that he did have more ready access than most kids did to resources which enabled him to achieve those awards). I’m just saying that I see in Russell some of what drove me away from Scouting all those years ago, but which other kids thrive on, and I wonder what that thriving gets them, in the long run.
(Incidentally, I had the top GPA in my high school class, and Randy was second. The thrust for achievement is by no means limited to Scouting badges. And my boyfriend was also a Life Scout who dropped before hitting Eagle, like me, and our friend Kent is yet another such former-Life Scout. Odd.)
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