Showing posts with label Dave Foley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Foley. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2013

Monsters University (2013) - Prequel Arriving June 21, 2013

Monsters University, Prequel to Monsters, Inc.

Gateway Monsters University 2013 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Monsters University (2013) is the upcoming animated Disney/Pixar prequel to "Monsters, Inc." (2001). John Goodman,, Billy Crystal, Steve Buscemi, Frank Oz, Dan Gerson, Dave Foley, Jennifer Tilly, Julia Sweeney, Peter Sohn, Joel Murray, Ken Jeong, Rob Riggle, J. B. Smoove, and John Ratzenberger (of course) are all slated to voice Monsters University characters. Kelsey Grammer replaces James Coburn as Henry J. Watermoose, Chairman of Monsters, Inc.
Mike Wazowski Monsters University 2013 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Mike has arrived! Let the party begin!
"Monsters University" is being produced by Pixar and will be distributed by Pixar's parent company, Walt Disney Pictures. Once again, Goodman voices James P. Sullivan, Crystal is Mike Wazowski, Steve Buscemi is Randall Boggs, Jennifer Tilly is Celia Mae, Frank Oz voices Jeff Fungus, and John Ratzenberger is hte Abominable Snowman.
Studying Monsters University 2013 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Reading on the green
Details about the plot remain secret. The film will be set about ten years prior to "Monsters, Inc. Sulley and Mike meet, become rivals, then join the same college fraternity and at some point settle their differences. According to Pixar:
"Mike Wazowski and James P. Sullivan are an inseparable pair, but that wasn’t always the case. From the moment these two mismatched monsters met they couldn’t stand each other. Monsters University unlocks the door to how Mike and Sulley overcame their differences and became the best of friends. Screaming with laughter and fun, Monsters University stars the vocal talents of Billy Crystal, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, Dave Foley, Julia Sweeney, Joel Murray and Peter Sohn and is directed by Dan Scanlon and produced by Kori Rae."
Student Monsters University 2013 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Studious students at Monster University
The narrator of a television commercial says, promoting the "Monsters University" college:

"Your future is knocking. Open the door."

The spot was actually shown during California’s New Year Rose Bowl Parade, which takes place in Pasadena, north of Los Angeles.
Frat Boy Monsters University 2013 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Rowdy Frat monster
Georgian Progressive Metal band Mastodon have stated that they are contributing a song. Randy Newman is preparing the score.
Mike Sulley Monsters University 2013 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Mike and Sulley get down
"Monsters University" will be accompanied by the short "Umbrella." Television commercials already are airing, and you may visit the Monsters University website. "Monsters University" will be in 3D computer animation. Dan Scanlon directs, Kori Rae is producing.

Below is the official trailer, and below that a television spot that began airing early in 2013:









2013

Sunday, November 25, 2012

A Bug's Life (1998) - A Bug-fest for Disney/Pixar

A Bug's Life: Pixar's Most Underappreciated Gem

DVD Cover for A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com

Looking to follow up the epic "Toy Story," Disney and Pixar dreamed up this inventive tale about insects called "A Bug's Life" (1998).  Coincidentally, Dreamworks also came out with a tale centered around bugs that year, so it was an antenna-to-antenna battle to see who would come out on top in the bug wars.  While opinions certainly differ on the quality question, financially it was no contest: "A Bug's Life" grossed almost twice as much as "Antz," despite the fact that it was loaded with TV actors as opposed to top movie stars like Woody Allen and Gene Hackman in "Antz."

Some bugs in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Some bugs just hangin' around

Directed by Pixar veterans John Lasseter and Andrew Stanton, "A Bug's Life" introduces us to Flik (Dave Foley).  He is an ant who likes to invent things.  Despite being very creative, he is unliked by the other ants.


Dave Foley as Flik in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Dave Foley and his character, Flik

Flik endangers the entire ant colony by managing to ruin an event that routinely goes off without a hitch. Grasshoppers visit Flik's anthill ("Ant Island") every spring to eat all of the food the ants have collected in an event called "The Gathering." It is a protection racket that nobody questions. Flik, however, loses that year's offering in the river, and head grasshopper Hopper (Kevin Spacey) gets upset. He gives the ants until the fall to gather more seeds for his gang as food or he will kill the ants and eat them instead.


David Hyde Pierce as Slim in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
David Hyde Pierce as Slim

The ants hurry to comply with Hopper's ultimatum. In order to redeem himself and impress his love interest, Princess Atta (Julia Louis Dreyfuss), Flik decides to try and rid the ants of the grasshopper threat once and for all. Atta allows him to venture out to recruit mercenaries to fight the grasshoppers so that he won't be around to mess up the next offering to Hopper.   Through a series of misunderstandings, instead of warriors, Flik winds up with a group of unhappy bugs who have just been fired from a flea circus.  It then comes down to Flik and these decidedly non-warrior actors to figure out a way to fight off the dreaded grasshopper gang.


Denis Leary as Francis in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Denis Leary as Francis

There is good character development, with the circus bugs having wacky idiosyncracies: a caterpillar who can't wait to be a butterfly, a ladybird who gets mistaken as a girl, a pair of woodlouse who can't speak any English, praying mantis Manny (Jonathan Harris from "Lost in Space"), and so on.

Dot hugging a plant in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Dot looking scared

Flick has a number of very funny lines that everyone can enjoy, but the film is aimed at a younger audience than "Toy Story."  Even so, Hopper is a very scary character, and some scenes, such as one at the locust hangout, may frighten some children in the audience.

Jonathan Harris as Manny in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Jonathan Harris as Manny

The voice actors are, for the most part, comic character actors from shows such as "Frasier" and the like, with the occasional screen legend and promising newcomer thrown in for good measure: Hayden Panettiere as Princess Atta's little sister Dot, Phyllis Diller as the Queen, Richard Kind as Molt, David Hyde Pierce as Slim, Joe Ranft as Heimlich, Dennis Leary as Francis, Madeline Kahn as the Gypsy Moth, Bonnie Hunt as Rosie, Brad Garrett as Dim, and the ubiquitous John Ratzenberger as P.T. Flea.

Julia Louis Dreyfus as Princess Atta in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Julia Louis Dreyfuss as Princess Atta

Dave Foley is likeable enough as the lead character, but his voice may put some off as being rather high-pitched.  The story is very straightforward and the pace a bit slow at the beginning, while some might see the overall plot as fairly predictable and bland.

Kevin Spacey as Hopper in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Kevin Spacey as the evil Hopper

To claim that the story is a take-off on Akira Kurosawa's "Seven Samurai" may be accurate, but it puts this simple animation film in fast company with which it really doesn't belong.  Repeat viewings, though, might improve your opinion of the film, which really is quite clever.

Phyllis Diller as the Queen in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Phyllis Diller as the Queen

The critics did not particularly like this film, and there have been no sequels or plans to revisit Ant Island. It thus is easy to label this film a failure, but that is far from the truth. The animation is superb, as you would expect from Pixar. There is a lot of creativity put up on the screen, such as the end credits which have humorous "out-takes" (and which are probably no more phony than out-takes you will see elsewhere). Great care is taken to show how normal and seemingly inconsequential aspects of nature, such as raindrops, may seem vastly different to ants and other bugs than they do to us.

A frustrated Princess Atta in A Bug's Life disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Princess Atta having a bad day

While critics say that that this does not measure up to "The Incredibles" and "Toy Story," the truth is that very few films do.  The misfortune of "A Bug's Life" is that it has gotten lost in the aftermath of Pixar's string of blockbuster animation pictures. Think of "A Bug's Life" as an overlooked gem. Many will find it very funny, and it is a must-see for fans of animation.  




2012

Monday, November 5, 2012

South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut (1999) - Scattershot Potshots at Modern Ways

South Park: Bigger Longer and Uncut - Blame Canada!

Original poster South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
The modern kind of animation film - that is, the kind aimed at teens and young adults at least as much as children - aims to press as many hot buttons as possible. We're definitely not talking about fair maidens waiting for their prince, or lonely alien robots just looking for a nice young kid to have as a friend. Instead, it is all about knowing bathroom humor and picking relatively safe and defenseless targets to attack. That way, the audience can feel a sense of community in the foulness of their real lives, which are never as pure and pretty as Hollywood would have us believe.
Class South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Colorful Classroom
As usual, Television started breaking down the barriers. The "South Park" (1997) franchise exemplifies this trend, though it began with with the animated "Beavis and Butt-Head" (1993), the live-action "Married with Children" (1987) and even, if you think about it, "All in the Family" (1968). The creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, unleashed a juggernaut of bathroom humor that just keeps rolling.  They are Colorado boys, and their work is loaded with references to their home state (South Park is a plain between mountain ranges in the Rockies).  In the animation world, they are kings, even though as animators they aren't all that special. It is their swagger and hook that keeps 'em coming back. They get top celebrities such as George Clooney and Jennifer Aniston to voice their characters, and as of this writing continue with their flagship animated TV series.
Casualties South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Casualties of war
Parker and Stone made only one major mis-step, and this film isn't it. Their attempt to become live-action stars in their own right failed miserably. In their acting attempts, they look like deer caught in the headlights, self-conscious and awkward. Unfortunately for them, they are not even real-life "Wayne's World" types, however hard they pose as such. Their presence helped cause the 1998  "BASEketball" to tank at the box office. But they learned from their mistake that animators should stay behind the camera, not in front of it, and this film, "South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut" (1999), wisely sticks to animation.  Naturally, like pretty much all their animation efforts, it was another huge  success.
The children South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Kids just causing trouble
The moral of the story is, stick to your own field. If you are a top animator,, stick to animation. Just because you are good at one thing, does not mean you will naturally succeed at something else, even something related.
Satan and Saddam Hussein South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Saddam is quite funny in this
This film is like an extended version of one of their TV episodes, hence the (obvious double entendre) title, but they also make the audacious decision to insert some songs (including the Oscar-nominated "Blame Canada"). When four boys in South Park - Stan, Marsh, Kyle and his stepbrother Ike Broflovski, Eric Cartman, and Kenny McCormick - sneak into an R-rated movie called "Terrance & Phillip: Asses of Fire", which features Canadians, they are pronounced "corrupted." Kyle's mom Sheila and the rest of the parents are outraged, and pressure the United States to declare war against Canada. Stan, Kyle and Cartman then must save Terrence and Phillip before Satan and his lover Saddam Hussein from Hell take over the world.
Saddam and Satan South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Saddam and Satan enjoying the flames
As usual, Trey Parker and Matt Stone hog all the main voices themselves, with celebrities like Clooney, Brent Spiner, Dave Foley, Eric Idle and Minnie Driver sprinkled in for name value here and there.  It's all about pop culture, with the biggest consequence of a war with Canada being an air attack on the Baldwin brothers (who are from Long Island, New York, not Canada, but really, who cares?). There's nothing particularly original about the plot, though a teen audience might think so. Alan Alda and John Candy, in fact, did a take on that very idea just a few years before this film in "Canadian Bacon (1995)." The plot, though, is just an opening through which to throw salvos of brickbats at whatever target suits Stone and Parker, whether it be parenting, the media in general, or America's predilection for invading weaker countries. Clearly, given that they are in the gross-out animation business, one of their targets is the idea that kids can be corrupted by gross-out films.  Perish the thought!
Peace activists South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Blame Canada????
Parker and Stone are experts at poking fun at the audience's insecurities and how "cool" or "uncool" certain figures or concepts are in the popular vernacular. There's the usual "have it both ways" idea of kids being poor little innocent victims of corrupting adults, but at the same time the kids are just as knowing and vulgar and obnoxious themselves, if not actually more so.  You get the typical "hypocrite" line, where obvious inherent contradictions in celebrities' positions are poked at. Some of the humor is topical and won't play as well down the road as it did then. Saddam Hussein is long gone, so having him as the archetype of evil looks almost quaint now, just as Moammar Khaddafy will just be a historical curiosity in fifty years. At the time this film was made, though, Saddam was basically thumbing his nose at the West while coming up with all sorts of unintentionally humorous quotes (hey, he deserves full credit for the "mother of all ___" line). When somebody says idiotic things that get widely publicized, and the person isn't even aware of the banality of their own utterances - instant pop culture target.
Satan and Saddam in South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut 1999 disneyjuniorblog.blogspot.com
Saddam and Satan, together again
But we are not talking about Shakespeare here.  Nobody is going to care about this 400 years from now, or maybe even forty. It is "cutting satire" designed to offend "soccer moms" everywhere.  You will probably find it amusing, but, like all topical humor, it no doubt will tend to fade with age.

Below is a trailer for the film.





2012

 
//PART 2