A high flying bird-of-paradise, this brilliant movie enters the Pixar pantheon by delivering equal measures of LOL comedy, enlightened human insight (canine too), and strong moral values. Movies get no better.
Up’s cowriters and codirectors aren’t newcomers to this kind of lighthearted tour de force. Pete Doctor wrote Toy Story, Toy Story 2, WALL·E and additionally directed Monsters, Inc., while Bob Peterson demonstrated his animal-loving chops by writing Ratatouille and Finding Nemo. A triple threat, Peterson even voices Up’s Dug the Dog, shown here in the Cone of Shame.
An animated movie about a crotchety old man, an overweight Asian-American boy, a flightless bird-of-paradise and a pack of woebegone dogs wouldn’t seem to be the recipe for a Hollywood blockbuster. But Pixar’s magic is deep and so is this movie.
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This being a Pixar Animation movie, we get a short ahead of the feature. Perhaps the most lighthearted film ever, Partly Cloudy adroitly combines rib-tickling humor with lump-in-the-throat emotion. Bravo.
Ed Asner and newcomer Jordan Nagai perfectly capture the odd couple at the center of the movie. Asner’s a past master at playing lovably gruff, never better than here as Carl Fredricksen, while young Nagai nails the impetuosity and guilelessness of 8 year old Russell.
Notable minor contributions come from the always classic Christopher Plummer, the always fierce Delroy Lindo, not to mention writer-director Bob Peterson as the perfect dog. “Squirrel!!”
Intended for children of all ages, the film initially focuses on Carl and Ellie, a couple of crazy kids who meet cute1 in a fresh and memorable way. Following Carl from boyhood to widowhood, the film humanizes him in a deep and moving way, one that should make even the most hard-hearted kid empathize with the old man who occupies most of the movie. To wit, the origin story establishes Ellie as the talkative one, making Carl’s later reticence entirely characteristic.
Equally brilliant are the dogs – Alpha, Beta, Gamma and the sweetest of them all, Dug. Their obsession with squirrels, the strict hierarchy within the pack, their devotion to a master, and the importance they place on posturing all ring deeply true. Dog lovers will love this movie as much as any dog movie ever.
More subtly, media amplified hero worship gets cleverly built up and then torn down. The movie is as subversive in this regard as was Unforgiven. High praise indeed.
Last but not least, the film includes perhaps the Greatest Snipe Hunt in the history of the movies.
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1 As required by the laws of Romantic Comedies.
The movie’s Paradise Falls are based on a UN World Heritage site in Venezuela, described in the Bay Area Science article The real world behind Up’s Paradise Falls.