Movies

"Up"

By May 27, 2009No Comments

06

Movie review­ers tend, at least in private, to get ever-so-slightly blasé about the out­put of Pixar, Disney’s com­puter anim­a­tion arm. From Toy Story to A Bug’s Life to The Incredibles to Ratatouille to, well, you get the idea, the stuff func­tions on such a high level of qual­ity, from a cer­tain per­spect­ive, it gets a little bor­ing to write about. It’s always so ima­gin­at­ive, so funny, so full of real heart, so visu­ally and tech­no­lo­gic­ally innov­at­ive, one almost gets flum­moxed. (Then there’s the integ­rity thing—that hardly every Pixar pic­ture func­tions as a pre­text to cre­ate lots and lots of expens­ive ancil­lary mer­chand­ise.) One could almost hear a col­lect­ive crit­ic­al sigh of some­thing like relief when Cars turned out to be just okay—albeit just okay on a very high level. 

I’m almost reminded—and this is gonna sound weird, but bear with me—of a cer­tain peri­od in the career of the reli­ably dys­peptic post-punk band The Fall, whose run of albums from the early ’80s to 1990 was so stag­ger­ing that by, say, 1985’s This Nation’s Saving Grace, one ceased to be quite so staggered. “Ho-hum, anoth­er great Fall album,” one would say. Which isn’t to say one was ungrate­ful. Anyhow, not to go off on a tan­gent, as The Fall and Disney/Pixar really have little in com­mon (although Fall front­man Mark E. Smith did pen a lyr­ic entitled “Disney’s Dream Debased,” about [I think] an ill-fated trip to Disneyland, back before Pixar even exis­ted). But still. 

So it’s not likely that I’m going to sur­prise any­one by say­ing that Up,dir­ec­ted by Pete Docter and Bob Peterson, is ter­rif­ic, but I will cop to that fact that the film—you’ll excuse the phrase—had me at “hello,” and for reas­ons that are largely extra-critical. As you prob­ably know from the trail­er, Up is about Carl, a grumpy old fel­low who escapes from a worse-than-humdrum exist­ence by mak­ing a fly­ing ship out of his house, with the assist­ance of a shit­load of heli­um bal­loons. His unwanted com­pan­ion on the trek is an eager-beaver of a sim­u­lated Boy Scout named Nelson Russell, who only lacks an “Assisting the Elderly” badge to com­plete his vast array of such awards. 

But the movie begins with Carl as any­thing but a grumpy old fel­low; it depicts him as an adventure-obsessed (but shy) little boy who finds the ideal play­mate, and even­tu­ally soul­mate, in an equally adventure-obsessed (and not shy) little girl named Ellie. One of the most affect­ing scenes in the film, and one of the most bril­liant things Pixar’s ever done, is a word­less mont­age depict­ing the great ordin­ary love story of these two souls. And I have to admit it gave my heart more than a little tug that the adult Ellie—seen with Carl in the above still—reminded me an awful lot of My Lovely Wife. Who aside from being as smart and lively and beau­ti­ful as the cine­mat­ic Ellie, also has a sim­il­arly adven­tur­ous streak—while I was grilling basil, tomato, and moz­zarella saus­ages this last week­end, she was off in Belize, snorkel­ing, cave-tubing, and zip-lining. (I would have joined her on the trip, which also included a wed­ding, save for a sched­ule con­flict. But I sure as hell would­n’t have gone zip-lining.) Carl and Ellie’s story ends sadly—hence Carl’s grumpiness—but then, thanks to a won­der­ful reveal at the end of the movie, an end is shown as a poten­tial new begin­ning, as Carl is rein­ves­ted with the couple’s sense of adven­ture and…well, I don’t want to reveal much more. But the mov­ing stuff here is rich in sen­ti­ment as opposed to mere sen­ti­ment­al­ity, and it works like a charm.

As for the rest of the pic­ture, well, I don’t want to give away too much of that either, except to say that as Pixar stuff goes it’s a lot more overtly car­toony than many of its pri­or fea­tures. Which, car­toon nut that I am, is cause to cel­eb­rate. Once Carl and Russell leave the U.S., they find a realm of high cliffs and funny anim­als, two staples of the genre. The sight of our duo and a couple of their guests being pur­sued by a pack of dogs whose alpha has an amus­ing glitch will no doubt remind fel­low anim­a­tion afi­cion­ados of the 1947 Looney Tunes gem, A Hare Grows In Manhattan, in which Bugs Bunny is chased by a sim­il­arly goofy group of canines. And the action set pieces have the same com­bin­a­tion of cre­at­ive lun­acy and metic­u­lous tim­ing that dis­tin­guished the can-you-top-this? toy train sequence in Nick Park’s latter-day Wallace and Gromit clas­sic, The Wrong Trousers

In short, great stuff. And noth­ing to be blasé about. 

UPDATE: A read­er in com­ments asked if I had seen the pic­ture in 3‑D. Yes, I had, and was pretty impressed. The tech­no­logy is used in a pretty subtle and nuanced way, more in the planes-and-depth vein of Hitchcock’s Dial “M” For Murder than like the comin’-at-ya! pyro­tech­nics of Zemeckis’ Beowulf. Is it essen­tial to see the film in that format? No, but I’d say it’s desirable. 

No Comments

  • Great to hear Up does­n’t dis­ap­point! Would it be fair to put Pixar as a com­pany in the same sen­tence as Chaplin, Hitchcock, Godard, etc. in terms of icon­ic influ­ence? I won­der if crit­ics are ready to make that leap.

  • Benjamin Strong says:

    Wow, hats off for work­ing in mus­ings on The Fall (aka the best band ever) into a Pixar review. Actually, Carl and MES have a lot in com­mon, cur­mudgeon wise. To quote MES from the most recent Fall album: “I’m a 50 year old man-uh, whadda you gonna do about it-uh?!”
    And yeah, UP is wonderful.

  • It is get­ting to the point where the annu­al Pixar film is one of the 2 or 3 summmer movies I have any desire to see. Despite con­stantly being tagged as chil­dren’s movies or car­toons, their films speak just as much to adults, moreso than the arres­ted devel­op­ment of the sequels and fran­chise reboots that are clut­ter­ing the theat­ers out there.
    I def­in­itely feel they should be noted for their icon­ic influ­ence, as Match Cuts Glenn men­tions. I think their films have stood the test of time so far and have some of the best visu­al storytelling of the last 15 years.

  • JC says:

    Did you see it in 3D, Glenn? I was going to indulge that format with my nieces on Friday, my first 3D film ever in a con­ven­tion­al movie theater…

  • Ctrl-Alt says:

    Makes me want to re-read Elkin’s The Magic Kingdom.

  • Brian says:

    The Fall? Really? Such pre­ten­tious, tune­less garbage.

  • Glenn – that 4th para­graph is killer. Thanks.

  • Ctrl-Alt says:

    The Fall aren’t pre­ten­tious. But the people who don’t like them are.

  • Christian says:

    Never liked The Fall for son­ic reas­ons. Tho I see why people would. UP looks great and Pixar should be a hal­lowed name at this point, the qual­ity of their stuff is so stag­ger­ingly unique and heartfelt.

  • lazarus says:

    Doesn’t “Ellie” look EXACTLY like the cow­girl in Toy Story 2? Just sayin’.
    Also, I remem­ber read­ing about that cave-tubing excur­sion when plan­ning my trip to Belize. It looked like a hell of a lot of fun, and I’m bummed out I passed it up, but I think it involved hav­ing to take a small plane to that area, which is pretty high up on my list of Things Not To Do.

  • JC says:

    You could also argue that Ellie sort of resembles Elastigirl from The Incredibles…but cer­tainly Jessie The Cowgirl from Toy Story 2, minus the hat.

  • swhitty says:

    I loved the film too, Glenn, and had the same Nick Park thought, although I haven’t enjoyed Pixar con­sist­ently enough to have got­ten blasé quite yet – did­n’t rave over Ratatouille and Cars left me in neut­ral, if I can des­cend into Shalit-approved Blurbese.
    But as to the the sim­il­ar­it­ies of Ellie to oth­er Pixar femmes – could it be pos­sible that someone high up at the stu­dio has a fix­a­tion? Not a full-blown, Quentin T, oh-my-god-can-I-take-some-more-pictures-of-your-size-11s fix­a­tion, but just a strong fond­ness for a cer­tain, tom-boyish type?
    It’s not unheard of. I mean, there are the Hitchcock blondes, of course. And I think of Tim Burton’s films in which the heroine – wheth­er it’s Winona, Christina, Helena, or that stop-motion ghoul in “Nightmare” – almost invari­ably has a high domed fore­head, pale com­plex­ion, huge eyes and curls.
    My guess? He saw Elsa Lanchester in “Bride of Frankenstein” at an early, impres­sion­able, and highly sexed age and nev­er quite got over it.
    Could be the same with our cowgirl/Incredible/Ellie prototype…

  • How full of crap is Armond White? Trick question.

  • Paul Johnson says:

    As someone who rather dis­liked A Bug’s Life, Monsters Inc, The Incredibles and Ratatouille, I think it would be rather nice to see someone not named Armond White attempt a prob­ing, thought­ful and suit­ably mean take down of Pixar. But as someone who liked or loved Toy Story, Toy Story 2, Finding Nemo and Wall‑E, I’m not espe­cially inclined to do so myself. All I will say is they haven’t pro­duced a work as beau­ti­ful or poet­ic as the early Disney fea­tures (Snow White through Bambi), although had Wall-E’s second half matched its first, they would have. Also, their short films, clev­er though they are, don’t come close to match­ing the anarch­ic bril­liance of the best of Fleischer, Avery, or Jones. So in oth­er words, I’m not quite ready to rank them amongst the immor­tals, but that’s not to say that won’t change in the near future, espe­cially if they ever man­age a work that sus­tains the intens­ity of the best parts of Wall‑E.
    All of which also pretty much sums up my feel­ings about the Fall. Just change out the film titles with vari­ous Fall albums (in par­tic­u­lar, change Wall‑E to This Nation’s Saving Grace) and in place of ref­er­ences to oth­er anim­at­ors put vari­ous Punk bands. The only dif­fer­ence being that I don’t have much hope Mark E. Smith has a bona fide mas­ter­piece in him at this late date.

  • Max says:

    Okay, this is com­pletely not the right place to com­ment on this, but I need to get this off my back and feel like you’re the right man to talk to.
    Have you seen Rex Reed’s review of Pontypool, Bruce McDonald’s new excel­lent hor­ror film? Looking past the fact that some people won’t like it (it’s at a 70% on Tomatometer, but Lisa Schwartzbaum nailed it with her ‘A’ review), is there any­one who dis­likes things with more unearned arrog­ance and hate­ful­ness than Reed? Up to this point I felt every­one had their right to an opin­ion but I really feel as though Reed’s should have his taken away.
    Beyond the dis­missive way he con­demns the plot, he first writes “The act­ing is so abom­in­able that the cast is bet­ter off unmen­tioned.” The sup­port­ing work may not be the strongest, but Stephen McHattie is pos­it­ively tour-de-force in this movie. It’s worth seek­ing out to see him (and great to see him, albeit briefly, in Watchmen as Hollis Mason).
    But also, the way he trashes all Canadian film in one fell swoop is quite awe-inspiring. Well, a FEW fell swoops.
    “The title … means “something’s gonna hap­pen.” Nothing ever does (it’s a Canadian movie, after all).”
    “Like most Canadian movies (this is a rude gen­er­al­iz­a­tion that I have learned, through time and exper­i­ence, is worth mak­ing), it has no ten­sion, meter or struc­ture, and is utterly pointless. ”
    Even for Reed, this is too fuck­ing much. Isn’t this the kind of shit that had his Oldboy review taken off the site? Okay, I guess he does­n’t mock Canada as a nation, just our film. And I know the out­put isn’t that strong, but to con­demn ALL Canadian work, like the work of Cronenberg, Atom Egoyan, Francois Girard Denys Arcard, the recent films C.R.A.Z.Y and the excel­lent doc RiP!: A Remix Manifesto, and so matter-of-factly just makes you a piece of shit.
    Fuck Rex Reed.
    Sorry for this exceed­ingly long rant in such an inap­pro­pri­ate loc­a­tion. Just won­der­ing if you’ve read the art­icle, or seen Pontypool (I think it’d be up your alley). I think Up looks great, and enjoyed your review (espe­cially your acknow­ledg­ment of the fact that it seems bor­ing to praise Pixar, and the con­tra­dic­tion because they really ARE that good).

  • Dan Coyle says:

    Rex Reed is still review­ing movies?
    Fuck, Rex Reed is still ALIVE?
    John Nolte, who’s known to hold his grudges (he threw a tem­per tan­trum over Wall‑E), just gave the Up a huge blow job over at big Hollywood. Even said Asner deserves an Oscar nomination.
    John Nolte. Said Ed Asner. Deserves an Oscar Nominaton.
    This thing’s GOT to be as good as they say.

  • JC says:

    So right now it’s just Armond White and Joe Morgenstern giv­ing Up neg­at­ive reviews? I fig­ure it’ll get around elev­en in total.

  • Owain Wilson says:

    I seem to be one of the few movie­go­ers who does not love Pixar. For me, the prob­lem is that every one of their films is exactly the same, with the excep­tion of The Incredibles and maybe Ratatouille (which I haven’t seen).
    There’s a funny little soci­ety oper­at­ing right under our noses, and we aren’t even aware of it. One day, a spunky mem­ber of this soci­ety finds them­selves out in the real world so their little pals bust out on a res­cue mission.
    Which Pixar film am I talk­ing about? It could be Toy Story, Toy Story 2, A Bug’s Life, Monsters Inc. or Finding Nemo, and to a slightly less­er extent Cars and Wall‑E.
    It’s the same every time, and it’s bor­ing. I know those wacky Pixar guys with their humour­ous Hawaiian shirts and day-glo work spaces are extremely clev­er and pro­duce beau­ti­fully craf­ted movies, but the acclaim heaped upon their ima­gin­a­tions is a little over the top.
    But that’s just me.

  • Jason M. says:

    Ironically, one of the cri­ti­cisms that White levels against UP is that:
    “artist­ic stand­ards get trumped by a spe­cial fea­ture: sentimentality.”
    Seems like a strange cri­tique for a guy who seems to wor­ship Spielberg, most of whose movies could be summed up by that very cri­tique. But per­haps I am expect­ing con­sist­ency where I have no right to…

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    Armond White’s review of “Up” is an apt demon­stra­tion of the old adage “There’s no prick like a stu­pid prick.” Well played, as they say.

  • Pete Segall says:

    Are the lack of spaces between White’s seri­al com­mas his own syn­tact­ic lazi­ness or a fur­ther symp­tom of the Press’s gen­er­ally sham­bol­ic oper­a­tion? I mean, the site as a whole looks like some­thing some­body slapped togeth­er on a Geocities tem­plate around 3:30 this morn­ing, but at the same time White reads like someone whose idea(s?) just kind of seeped out of him, half-formed and tur­gid but as refined as it’ll ever get. It’s a genu­ine puzzler.

  • @ Owain Wilson – By pla­cing all of the Pixar films under one umbrella gen­er­al­iz­a­tion, I think you’re miss­ing the nuances of these beau­ti­ful films. Sure, they have com­mon­al­it­ies, but the geni­us of Pixar lies in the subtle details of the char­ac­ters, time and place, all very dif­fer­ent from each oth­er. Of all the Pixar films, Cars is by far the worst, and Ratatouille suf­fers from a ter­rible middle act, but oth­er than that they are mostly pure gold. And these films are everything but boring.

  • Owain Wilson says:

    @Match Cuts Glenn – I’m not really pla­cing them under one umbrella gen­er­al­iz­a­tion, but that was my main point about them and all I had time to write!
    I don’t find them all bor­ing, but when film after film is basic­ally the same as the last one – nuances not­with­stand­ing – it’s hard to feel enthu­si­ast­ic about them.
    But I totally under­stand why every­one loves them. I’m crazy about James Bond which makes me a total hypo­crite when it comes to com­plain­ing about repetition.

  • Ctrl-Alt says:

    I think some of you are for­get­ting that Pixar movies are made with chil­dren in mind. I think it would be funny to hear some of you try and explain to my 4 year old daugh­ter why Monsters, Inc. isn’t really as good as she thinks it is. Seriously, some of you need to light­en up.

  • Ryan Kelly says:

    So because they’re ‘chil­dren’s’ films they deserve to be taken less ser­i­ously? That’s not only a dubi­ous line of thought, it’s insult­ing to children.

  • LondonLee says:

    Oddly enough, the sup­posedly weak Cars is my two-year-olds favor­ite Pixar movie (she’s seen them all). She saw it for the first time the oth­er week and was spellbound.

  • Ctrl-Alt says:

    Dude, why are you so bel­li­ger­ent all the time? How am I being insult­ing to chil­dren? All I’m say­ing is that if you have ever seen the joy a child gets out of watch­ing all of these movies then I don’t think you would be so apt to call them over­rated. And I am refer­ring to the col­lect­ive you that thinks these movies are not as good as every­one says they are, not YOU, RYAN KELLY. I mean, what are you talk­ing about? Go have a drink or some­thing. Get over your­self. Go take as many things ser­i­ously as you want. No one is stop­ping you.

  • vadim says:

    From Rex Reed’s review of WHAT GOES UP in the same PONTYPOOL débâcle: “What Goes Up fea­tures a sub-mental script and para­lyt­ic dir­ec­tion (both by Jonathan Glatzer, a name to erase forever from your Facebook).”
    What I want to know is, does Rex always friend the people who make the movies he reviews before see­ing the movie?

  • Ryan Kelly says:

    Sorry, don’t mean to be bel­li­ger­ent. Text only con­veys so much. If I’ve been a jerk to you now or before, or if it came off that way, I’m sorry.
    But the idea that we should hold chil­dren’s films to a lower stand­ard is one that genu­inely plotzes me. And it’s exactly why so many chil­dren’s films are crap. We should nev­er settle for less. If any­thing, they should be held to a high­er stand­ard. During Disney’s early years, Walt nev­er would have half-assed a movie because it was sup­posed to be for kids.
    And I nev­er said that I don’t like Pixar. I do think they’re kind of sell-outs, and their last two fea­tures (not count­ing “Up”) I found most dis­ap­point­ing. But “Toy Story” is eas­ily among the stu­di­o’s best, I think. But in no way should they be above cri­ti­cism. And I’ve taken my little broth­er to just about every Pixar movie and will do the same for “Up”, albeit begrudgingly. But sud­denly I or any­one else can­’t have an opin­ion on it? Dare I say, that’s exactly part of the back­lash against Pixar— any com­plaints or cri­ti­cism about the movie’s they make is met with responses of “Oh, you’re a crank, it’s just for kids”.
    Now, as for the drink, that’s not such a bad idea!

  • Owain Wilson says:

    So the adults who love them are tak­ing them too ser­i­ously, and the adults who don’t like them are tak­ing them too seriously … ?

  • Jason M. says:

    It’s a no win situ­ation, Owain.

  • Max says:

    @vadim: Probably. I’m just extremely sur­prised that Rex Reed’s able to use Facebook, not to men­tion that his coffin can sup­port inter­net connection.

  • Owain Wilson says:

    I go and see Pixar films at the cinema but I do not par­tic­u­larly enjoy them, and I say as much on this board because it offers a dif­fer­ent point of view to the oth­er users who like them very much.
    Nothing to get upset over, is it?
    This Ctrl-Alt fella seems to think I pace around my house mut­ter­ing about Pixar’s good reviews. I’m not that inter­ested in them, really.

  • jbryant says:

    The visu­al daz­zle­ments of Ratatouille make up for any middle act prob­lems (at least I GUESS that’s why I did­n’t notice them). Pixar is sort of a col­lect­ive auteur, right? We don’t gen­er­ally bitch at indi­vidu­al film­makers who work and re-work their pet themes, do we? Well, depends on the themes I guess. Okay, it’s late and I’m answer­ing my own ques­tions. Time for bed.

  • Dan says:

    @Owain
    While you’re entitled to your opin­ion, and see your point to some degree…at the same time, I con­fess I’m com­pletely baffled as to why that’s a deal­break­er for you, since there just aren’t that many plots on the macro level we’re work­ing with here. We’re on “Boy meets girl, boy loses girl” and “A bunch of guys team up to defend some help­less people” turf here, and I hon­estly think that’s just not fair to any movie, even a lousy one.
    Out of curi­os­ity, what do you think of their shorts?

  • Owain Wilson says:

    @Dan
    Believe me, it’s not like I made a decision to dis­like Pixar’s movies because the stor­ies are sim­il­ar. I just always end up dis­ap­poin­ted in them and it’s usu­ally for that reason.
    I actu­ally really enjoyed the first Toy Story and thought Monsters Inc. was crack­ing enter­tain­ment. I even find myself rather look­ing for­ward to whatever new one is com­ing up because they always look ter­rif­ic. The Wall‑E trail­ers were amaz­ing, but watch­ing the movie on open­ing day I thought it just ground to a halt when he left Earth, turn­ing into one very long, very repet­it­ive, and very bor­ing chase scene.
    It’s like Pixar are the world’s biggest rock band with an eagerly awaited new album out every year or so. The songs are new, but really they sound the same as all the old ones. You either like the band and there­fore the songs, or you don’t. With Pixar, on the whole, I don’t.
    As for the shorts, I’ve seen them once each and can­’t really remem­ber them to be hon­est, but I think I enjoyed most of them – par­tic­u­larly the one with the magician.

  • partisan says:

    And in the latest news, John Podhoretz thinks Pixar is increas­ingly over­rated: http://weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/016/578yzghu.asp

  • YND says:

    Okay… saw the film today and loved it as I’ve loved all Pixar’s films (with the excep­tion of BUG’S LIFE and CARS, both of which I still quite like). But once I got done pro­cessing my ador­a­tion, here’s what really hit me: set­ting aside the (admit­tedly argu­able) qual­ity of Pixar’s out­put… is there anoth­er big budget “cre­at­ive” entity oper­at­ing in Hollywood that so evinces a sense of integ­rity and near-disregard for the bottom-line?
    I’ve been doing the spec-scripts-and-development-meetings cir­cuit out here for 5 years now and it’s damned soul-killing to real­ize how few people/companies have any interest in pro­du­cing good films. It’s simply not a pri­or­ity. Films aren’t films, they’re ATMs. When I star­ted out, I thought I was being real­ist­ic in expect­ing some­thing like a 75/25 split between those who make movies exclus­ively for profit and those who, to some extent, make films because they believe in the pos­sib­il­it­ies of the medi­um. I was wrong. It’s closer to 95/5. On a good day. Give a pro­duc­tion com­pany the choice between mak­ing THERE WILL BE BLOOD (domest­ic gross: $40M) and WHITE CHICKS (domest­ic gross: $70M)… nearly all of them will beg for a Wayans broth­er. Replace THERE WILL BE BLOOD with ZODIAC (domest­ic gross: $33M) and you can omit the “nearly”. And yet, time and again, Pixar makes films that they truly love and believe in, des­pite the fact that they’d be guar­an­teed to make more money with safer pro­jects. A “kids movie” about a rat who wants to be a gour­met chef? In France? One with a dialogue-free first act about a robot and a cock­roach in a posta­po­ca­lyptic land­scape? One that pos­its a dour, eld­erly man as its main char­ac­ter? None of these ideas would get through the door at any oth­er stu­dio in town as either anim­ated or live-action pro­jects that depend largely on a young audi­ence for tick­et sales. But Pixar bets on them every time and trusts that audi­ences will seek out a good film wheth­er or not it fits into safe, well-established parameters.
    As much as I’m look­ing for­ward to TOY STORY 3 next sum­mer, I was a little dis­ap­poin­ted to see it announced as their next ven­ture simply because I’ve grown to love fol­low­ing them in new dir­ec­tions every year. I’ll still be out for it on open­ing day and I have no reas­on to doubt that the film will be up to their high stand­ards, but I’m more excited to see what ori­gin­al, chal­len­ging, risky pro­jects they have in store fur­ther down the line.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    @Partisan: That J‑Pod review is a doozy. Don’t you love when con­ser­vat­ive com­ment­at­ors go on about how oppressed they are? “A cul­tur­al ortho­doxy has been imposed upon us.” Oh no! Who’s doing the impos­ing? I’ll bet it’s those FUCKING ALL-POWERFUL MSM LIBERALS. In which case, who’s “us?” I sup­pose John Podhoretz and William Kristol and some of their friends. I don’t know if J‑Pod noticed it, but as it hap­pens, no less a fuck­ing all-powerful MSM lib­er­al than Manohla Dargis found some fault with “Up.” So much for that schlemiel philo­sophy of his.
    Anyhow, I thought maybe J‑Pod was gonna go the full White with his Pixar dis, but then he goes and cites Spielberg as anoth­er example of his dreaded “Object of Cultural Piety” syn­drome. Better watch out, John—as Armond him­self says, you don’t know who you’re deal­ing with.

  • bbrown says:

    I’m almost reminded—and this is gonna sound weird, but bear with me—of a cer­tain peri­od in the career of the reli­ably dys­peptic post-punk band The Fall, whose run of albums from the early ’80s to 1990 was so stag­ger­ing that by, say, 1985’s This Nation’s Saving Grace, one ceased to be quite so staggered. “Ho-hum, anoth­er great Fall album,” one would say.”
    It does­n’t sound weird. In fact, I may have heard it before http://somecamerunning.typepad.com/some_came_running/2008/05/cannes-competit.html
    🙂

  • Ryan Kelly says:

    God bless Dargis for speak­ing her mind on the pic­ture. It shows you can be crit­ic­al without being nasty or even totally neg­at­ive of a ‘chil­dren’s movie’. Of course, the com­ments on her review are read­ing “Up with the movie, down with Dargis!” and things like that, because God for­bid a major news­pa­per crit­ic thought of it as any­thing less than total per­fec­tion (might lower the tomat­o­met­er score, and we can­’t have that, as we most have uni­form­ity of opin­ion in this mod­ern age). I give her cred­it for being crit­ic­al of the film in the same news­pa­per that ran an ‘art­icle’ on the film recently that was just a bloated advert­ise­ment mas­quer­ad­ing as a news-story. Which is just shame­ful, IMO.

  • Jeremy says:

    This movie was ter­rible. I took 4 kids (2 boys 3yrs old and two girls 6&7) we all hated it and it was a waste of $75. Don’t waste your time and go rent some­thing enjoyable.

  • Glenn Kenny says:

    And we have a thread-killer!!!
    Comments such as the above leave one with a cer­tain ambi­val­ence. Sure, they indic­ate the blog gets more vis­its, but also that the vis­its are from indi­vidu­als who really don’t have much of an idea of what the blog is about. ‘Tis a puz­zle­ment, as Rodgers and Hammerstein said via Yul Brynner.

  • Dan says:

    @Owain
    Fair enough. Just try­ing to get into your head a bit, as it were. 🙂
    The short you’re think­ing of is “Presto”, by the way. Probably the most Looney-Tunesque of their shorts. 🙂