Wall-E Supervising Animator Tells His Story
Denofgeek wrote in to tell us about their story where "Pixar's supervising animator Angus MacLane gives an interesting interview about the technical challenges in bringing Wall-E to the screen. Plus he squeezes in a bit on his love of Lego, too..."
I will admit - I don't watch too many movies. However, I am extremely glad I spent the money to see Wall-E and I will be buying it on DVD when it is released.
The animation of this movie is amazing. Using almost no words (two?), the animation team captures a wide range of emotion: love, sadness, fear, humor and anger. What's even better is that they capture these emotions in the form of robots - something that typically is not associated with emotion. The storyline itself is fantastic. Not only is it simplistic enough that even a child can understand it and enjoy it, there is a definite adult theme throughout the entire movie which emphasizes taking care of this planet that we live on.
Additionally, this movie starts up with a great short (haha...that rabbit is awesome), the ending credits are absolutely beautiful and genius (how many different art styles can you spot?) and the soundtrack is great.
I would highly recommend that everybody check this movie out in the theater. It's definitely worth it.
Well maybe not best movie EVER, but close to it. And I'm someone who's always found Pixar's stuff way overrated.
"The Incredibles" opened with "Boundin'".
Nice animation, but a little too saccharine for me.
Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
It was "Cars".
And, in case you haven't seen: they're all here.
Misery loves company. Online misery loves unsuspecting random strangers.
The most important message wasn't taking care of the planet, but individualism and personal responsibility. Notice that all the people were dependent on the corporation (or it could have been government) for their every need. They all had the same clothes and ate the same food and lived in the same size rooms and had communal access to same facilities. The only individuals (and heroes) were the robots and the captain, plus John and Mary that broke out of the sameness. It's the theme of most Pixar movies: Incredibles - Exceptionalism should be rewarded, Cars - taking a different path is a good thing, Nemo - importance of family and not being afraid of life, Bug's Life - break out the the commune and use new ideas, Toy Story - freindship, loyalty and service. They may have thought they were making an environmental movie, but underlying Pixar theme of individual rights and personal responsibility shone through.
"70mm Panasonic cameras"
um, I think you probably mean Panavision there...
I think you mean Panavision.
Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
Andrew Stanton explained the use of live action in this USA Today article. For some things like Hello, Dolly there was no real alternative than using the real footage from the film.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
A list of Pixar movies paired with Pixar short:
Toy Story x Tin Toy
A Bug's Life x Geri's Game
Toy Story 2 x Luxo Jr.
Monsters, Inc. x For the Birds
Finding Nemo x Knick Knack
The Incredibles x Boundin'
Cars x One Man Band
Ratatouille x Lifted
WALL-E x Presto