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April 8, 2014 Eimear Fallon
Watched: Frozen
This was fun! I wasn’t aware that the film had been the subject of any damning criticism (apparently it has), and I don’t really want to engage with that, so instead let me tell you what I liked about this movie: it had g…

Watched: Frozen

This was fun! I wasn’t aware that the film had been the subject of any damning criticism (apparently it has), and I don’t really want to engage with that, so instead let me tell you what I liked about this movie: it had good songs, a silly talking snowman and a resolution that put sororal (and what a lovely word that is) love front and center. And, yes, there were no non-white people. I understand that. I really do. But there’s a talking snowman. Please. Just look at the talking snowman. Isn’t he cute? Anybody?

The musical numbers in this were great, too, and definitely merit a better sound system than the one we were using - Idina Menzel’s Elsa is the obvious standout, but Kristen Bell definitely gives her a run for her money, and the more overtly comedic songs (see: Josh Gad’s snowman hamming it up in a song about the joys of summer) are funny without laying it on too thick.

One of the things that really sticks out in animation like this is how it’s progressed to a point where nuance can be used to get comedic points across. It’s furiously kinetic at points, but always very deliberate; in terms of making its characters expressive, this is a new high, and definitely gives Pixar a run for its money. It makes for a film that feels altogether more human, and heartwarming, and brilliantly-executed throughout.

I dunno. This was fun. I laughed a lot, and got a lump in my throat at all the right times. It doesn’t hold up under political scrutiny, but not much does.

Tags frozen, film, disney
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September 2, 2013 Eimear Fallon
Watched: Ratatouille

This was so adorable.
OK, but here’s the thing: lately, I’ve been watching a lot of films that could labour under the accusation that they’re simple, and this is definitely one of them; however, whenever Pixar…

Watched: Ratatouille

  • This was so adorable.
  • OK, but here’s the thing: lately, I’ve been watching a lot of films that could labour under the accusation that they’re simple, and this is definitely one of them; however, whenever Pixar do simplicity, it’s perfectly calculated rather than lazy. Characters don’t just fall back on dull tropes. Women aren’t treated like garbage. There’s slapstick, sure, but never from a cynical angle - there’s always something more important going on. I loved this.
  • Peter O'Toole made me cry. Again. Fucking dick.
  • I love how Pixar films actually address hubris but still provide hopeful messages. It’s a hard thing to execute well, and they’re incredibly good at it.
  • Call me a child, but I’d take this over Blazing Saddles any day.

Tags ratatouille, film, pixar, brad bird, patton oswalt, disney, All The Films I Watched In 2013
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February 19, 2013 Eimear Fallon
Watched: Wreck-it Ralph

Observations:

Anyone notice that there’s a massive tonal shift about 40 minutes into this? It’s a good one - if we were still getting cheeky nods to other video games during the emotional climax, it would have b…

Watched: Wreck-it Ralph

Observations:

  • Anyone notice that there’s a massive tonal shift about 40 minutes into this? It’s a good one - if we were still getting cheeky nods to other video games during the emotional climax, it would have been shitty - but it’s really noticeable.
  • The casting in this was fantastic. John C. Reilly has the everyman thing down by now (despite looking like no other man on the planet), Jane Lynch is brilliant and plays every single G-rated pun straight (“like fun you are”, honestly), Sarah Silverman manages to be like a more human version of the kid from Despicable Me really well (less of a surprise given that I actually like Silverman; but that’s an argument for another day), and Jack McBrayer’s great.
  • The one thing that made this feel really distinct from a Pixar movie (aside from the incessant branding - on the one hand, a world made of candy is cute, but lingering shots of a Subway soda cup aren’t) is the music. Some of it was great (AKB48 in the closing credits, Skrillex as the soundtrack to war) and some of it less so (I couldn’t really get on board with Shut Up And Drive as the background music for a training montage), but it definitely kept things exciting. I just worry that it might seem a little dated in a decade (animation style aside, Toy Story really doesn’t).
  • I honestly thought this film wasn’t going to make me cry, and then it sucker-punched me for the last fifteen minutes, over and over again. Prepare to get your shit wrecked.
  • Stick around until the end of the credits.

Tags wreck-it ralph, film, All The Films I Watched In 2013, movies, animation, disney, john c reilly, sarah silverman
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