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Monday, June 23, 2014

Review #53 | Princess Mononoke

It has come time to review the epic Ghibli film, Princess Mononoke. With exotic location and mythical creatures, Princess Mononoke is indeed something unique for the animation world.

Princess Mononoke, 1997
This $20 million animated adventure/fantasy quickly became the highest grossing Japanese film in Japanese film history (making $150 million in Japan during its first seven months). Set in the 14th century, the ecology-themed epic was directed by Hayao Miyazaki whose previous films were acquired by Disney for U.S. distribution plus other territories. Princess Mononoke depicts a mystical battle between Animal Gods of the forest and humans during Japan's Muromachi Period. Young Ashitaka receives a fatal infection after a demonic wild boar attacks his northern village. Seeking a cure, he sets out to locate the deer-like god Shishigami. Along the way, he sees the rape of the Earth by a mining village. The constant plundering by the village has brought the wrath of the Wolf God, Moro, who attacks the village along with San, a human who was raised by the wolf god. She communicates with the nature spirits -- which is why she is called Princess Mononoke ("spirits of things"). Ashitaka wants these opposing forces to co-exist, and he hopes to bring peace between San and the ironworks owner, Lady Eboshi. However, he is thwarted as higher powers, intent on killing the Shishigama, intrude, and a battle erupts over the future of all nature.
Studio Ghibli introduces us the new kind of animation that has some seriousness into it. Princess Mononoke is an epic film that deals with war and conflict between nature and humans and because it deals with big themes it might lack some human love and affection.

I've enjoyed the film but I thought it took so much time for an animated film. It is long. The movie is so creative and imaginative. This is the movies strong side. Some of the effects animation is stunning.

What I didn't find satisfying was the ending. It ended somewhat warm. It did not have a strong ending or a satisfying one. It is an epic film but I doubt I’ll watch it again at my own will.

Inside Outside Rating: 70%

Saturday, June 21, 2014

First Official Trailer for 'The BoxTrolls'

We had seen three teaser trailers for The BoxTrolls but never really seen the official trailer until a few weeks ago. Check out the funny trailer for The BoxTrolls.


I'd loved to see how it will turn out to be, are you?

Inside Sony Pictures Animation - Character Designer Patrick Mate

Patrick Mate shares his story of how he came to work for Sony Pictures Animation.


It was really informative while watching this video, keep posting them! We love to hear about it.

Pixar Announces New Short 'LAVA'

Lava is to be the first musical love story short that is to take place over millions of years. It will be attached to Inside Out next year.

Lava, 2015
Are you excited for a Pixar take on a musical?

Teaser Trailer for 'Penguins of Madagascar'

Our beloved side characters from Madagascar are having their own movie. Check them out on the teaser trailer for Penguins of Madagascar.



Penguins of Madagascar comes out this November. While I am still in doubt how this movie will appeal to young adults, I'm sure kids are all in for the penguins.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Review #52 | How to Train Your Dragon

Since everyone in the U.S. have been enjoying watching How to Train Your Dragon 2, I thought it would be nice to watch How to Train Your Dragon again and write my thoughts about this film.

How to Train Your Dragon, 2010
Long ago up North on the Island of Berk, the young Viking, Hiccup, wants to join his town's fight against the dragons that continually raid their town. However, his macho father and village leader, Stoik the Vast, will not allow his small, clumsy, but inventive son to do so. Regardless, Hiccup ventures out into battle and downs a mysterious Night Fury dragon with his invention, but can't bring himself to kill it. Instead, Hiccup and the dragon, whom he dubs Toothless, begin a friendship that would open up both their worlds as the observant boy learns that his people have misjudged the species. But even as the two each take flight in their own way, they find that they must fight the destructive ignorance plaguing their world.
From the title ‘How to Train Your Dragon’ to its wonderful storytelling through visuals, this movie is something special and worth talking about. This movie stands on its own. It has its good points and bad points. First let me talk about the good.

The animation used here is beautiful. From the flying scenes to the organic feel of the atmosphere, it feels like a real world of Vikings. The next good thing was the telling of a relationship with boy and a dragon visually was stunning. Even though Hiccup and Toothless don’t say much we can see how deep their relationship becomes to be.

There are more things to praise about this movie but I’ll leave that to you. One or two things that bothered me were the opening/closing narrative and the lack of good humor. It could have been more entertaining in some ways but I don’t complain how the movie turned out to be. It really has something special.

Inside Outside Rating: 88%

Annecy Provide Details for 'Inside Out'

Last week Annecy Film Festival took place in France and has revealed some more details on the upcoming film Inside Out. Variety wrote a nice article about it. Here are some of the highlights.


Inside Out New Logo, Annecy, 2014
“It’s based on a strong emotional experience I had watching my daughter grow up,” says the “Up” director, who noticed that when his daughter Elie turned 12, much of her childhood joy disappeared, and she became more moody and withdrawn. “There is something that is lost when you grow up” — and the film became a way to explore that change on an emotional level.

The film centers on a young girl named Riley Anderson, “one of those kids who seems like she was born happy,” Docter says. “In truth, Riley is not our main character; she is our setting.” To demonstrate what he meant, Docter screened the first five minutes of the movie, a good segment of which was still in a pencil-drawn storyboard state. (The finished film will open June 19, 2015.) Sure enough, “Inside Out” takes place in Riley’s subconscious, where a crew of anthropomorphized emotions manage how the girl feels at any given moment from a control panel that looks something like the flight deck of the Starship Enterprise.

In the team’s research, they found many different scientific theories on how the mind works, including one from expert Robert Plutchik that defined eight primary human emotions, which Docter narrowed down to five: Fear (Bill Hader), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Joy (Amy Poehler), Disgust (Mindy Kaling) and Anger (Lewis Black) — “like our version of Walt Disney’s Seven Dwarfs,” he jokes.

These distinct color-coded characters help Riley to process new experiences and to make memories, which are constantly being recorded within brightly colored orbs that look something like those translucent bath-bubble balls (filed away nightly and then erased in long-term storage by “Forgetters” with a vaguely Minions-like vibe). The inventive opening scene extends from the moment of Riley’ birth and the creation of her first memory to the introduction of its five main characters, ending with an encounter between Joy and Sadness where the former can’t seem to figure out Sadness’ role in the operation. Once the clip ended, Docter explained that Riley and her parents relocate from a quiet rural home to San Francisco at a particularly impressionable age, resulting in a new-school trauma that forces Joy and Sadness out of the control panel and into the far, unfamiliar reaches of her mind.

While Fear, Disgust and Anger awkwardly try to keep things under control — as illustrated in a second clip set around the family dinner table which Pixar unveiled at CinemaCon in March — Joy and Sadness put aside their differences and take audiences through a tour of Riley’s thinking process. This epic road trip entails crossing such areas as Imagination Land (“a giant amusement park full of everything Riley has ever daydreamed about”), a movie studio where nightmares are made, the Train of Thought (a free-ranging locomotive that can go zooming off in any direction) and Abstract Thought — the zone Docter had the most fun translating to the screen.

“I was pretty certain someone must have done an idea like this before,” Docter told Variety after the presentation. And yet, “we’re approaching it from a poetic viewpoint. It’s not even trying to be scientific at all.”

The system depicted in “Inside Out” is both intuitive and slightly retro, recalling such educational filmstrips as “Our Mister Sun,” whose “Gateways to the Mind” installment depicts a little man asleep at the controls. And yet, Docter and his team pushed to find a fresh metaphor that would be totally understandable to all audiences.  “One of the big things in this film has been simplifying and making things ‘gettable,’” he says.

Pete Docter finally adds that, “I thought I was making a film about my daughter, but the truth is, I’m more making a film about myself in relation to my daughter and understanding that. The film is told from a parent’s point of view, and being a parent, I just sort of slipped into that, I guess. It’s definitely made me think again about the way I grew up, my adolescence, and even on a day-to-day basis what I’m doing and why.”

Source: Variety

The Book of Life Trailer

It has been out for weeks but I just wanted to share it anyway. The Book of Life trailer looks gorgeous, beautiful and captivating. Lets just hope that the story lives up to its animation.


How well did you like the trailer? Share your thoughts.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Perfect Poster for 'The Book of Life'

It has been about three weeks since I posted my last post here in this blog. I had to write something when I turned on my computer so I decided to do some catching up. My comeback post will be about the new poster from The Book of Life. Check it out!

The Book of Life, 2014
The poster looks beautiful and I hope the movie is too. For more information check out The Book of Life website.