Movie review: “Up” takes 3-D animation to new heights
DISNEY PIXAR
The richness of the characters will engage you and make you forget that ‘Up’ is a cartoon.
Published: May 28, 2009
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Movie review: UP Cast: Voiced by Ed Asner, Christopher Plummer Jordan Nagai At: Carmike, Commonwealth, Crossings, Short Pump, Southpark, Virginia Center, Westchester, West Towerû FYI: Running time: 1:30. Rated PG (peril, action). |
Up." The title is deceptively simple, which is fitting, because the latest achievement from Disney/Pixar Animation is deeper and more complex on every level than it would initially appear.
It's a classic B-movie exotic adventure, the kind that inspired Steven Spielberg and George Lucas to make "Raiders of the Lost Ark," but it's told through the most high-tech, gorgeous 3-D animation.
It's a mismatched buddy comedy, the kind we've seen countless times, but the buddies are a curmudgeonly 78-year-old man and a tubby 8-year-old boy. They wind up together in a flying house, traveling to South America.
And, as with many family films that get pumped out each summer, it has talking dogs. But it's how the dogs talk and what they say that are truly inspired, and oddly realistic.
Pete Docter (Pixar's "Monsters, Inc.") and co-director and writer Bob Peterson turn their imagination this time to human beings, rare creatures in the animated kingdom. But with the richness of the characters, the meatiness of their interaction and the authenticity of the details, it won't take you long to become immersed and forget that "Up" is a cartoon.
We begin some 70 years ago, when Carl Fredricksen was just a boy, worshipping the glamorous explorer Charles F. Muntz (voiced by Christopher Plummer). Even then, Carl moved with the quiet cautiousness of an old man -- that is, until he met the energetic tomboy Ellie, who brought out the fun he never knew he had inside.
"Up" shares their decades-long romance in a lovely, poignant montage. It lasts just a few minutes without a word spoken -- just Michael Giacchino's wistful score to accompany the images -- but it tells a full and satisfying story. Don't bother holding back the tears: They'll come, and deservedly so.
From there, though, there's nowhere to go but up, literally. Now a crusty widower facing eviction and an antiseptic life in a retirement community -- and voiced perfectly by Ed Asner -- the former balloon salesman ties thousands of helium balloons to his house and soars into the clouds. His eventual destination: Paradise Falls in Venezuela, where he and Ellie always promised each other they'd go. (The reflections of the balloons' rainbow hues are wondrous as he floats past streets and buildings.)
But Carl has an unexpected passenger: Russell (endearing newcomer Jordan Nagai), an overeager Junior Wilderness Explorer who had knocked on Carl's door hoping to earn the final badge he needs to become a senior scout: assisting the elderly. They make an unlikely but lovable pair: the rigid Carl (who resembles a latter-day Spencer Tracy with his linear mouth, square-shaped glasses and bushy white hair) and the ebullient Russell. Their bond is sweet, their journey joyous.
Peril lies along the way, too, although "Up" is suitable for the whole family; one of the most striking images is of the small, rickety house drifting toward a wall of ominous thunderclouds. Once they reach Paradise Falls, they find themselves surrounded by a pack of attack dogs. Among them is the lovable Dug (voiced by Peterson), a mutt who's just so darn happy to meet new people, he instantly insists Carl become his master.
Dug, like the other dogs roaming the rain forest, has been outfitted by his mysterious owner with a collar that voices his thoughts. This might be the most ingenious invention ever, and Dug's canine ramblings provide the chief source of consistent comedy in "Up." The other is a rare 13-foot bird -- whom Russell names Kevin -- who's adorably gawky but is being hunted by the other dogs, who aren't nearly so friendly.
We won't tell you the direction "Up" goes from here. We'll just say it's creative and unexpected, like everything that came before it and the other films in the Pixar canon.
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