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First reviews for MONSTERS UNIVERSITY rolling in.

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their streak of quality movies was impossible to sustain, just didn't thing they'd have a string of mediocre films


they're no Undertaker at Wrestlemania
 
I will say one thing though: Brave was severly underrated. Probably their best since Wall E.

Preach.

Brave was a fully realized epic. The art direction and voicework is top shelf Pixar, and the story line, while ultimately predictable, was still executed exceptionally well. Pixar took a seemingly kids-only allegory and made it accessible to any age group. That's an ability that they exclusively hold. They pulled that off perfectly with Brave.

Here's how I would rank their work:

GOD TIER:

1) Wall-E
2) Ratatouille
3) The Incredibles
4) Finding Nemo

AMAZING TIER:

5) Brave
6) Toy Story 3
7) Up
8) Toy Story

VERY REALLY DAMN GOOD TIER:

9) Monsters Inc.
10) Toy Story 2
11) A Bugs Life

DREAMWORKS TIER:

12) Cars
13) Cars 2


He is? Well that's a relief.

Stanton co-wrote TS1 & TS2, was on the planning board for TS3, wrote the screenplay for Monsters, Inc., co-wrote and directed Finding Nemo, and wrote and directed Wall-E, so I have faith that he can still bring some of the magic back to Pixar.

Right now I'm praying that Pixar corporate won't mess with his vision for Finding Dory. I don't know how I'll be able to take it if that movie becomes another soulless waste-of-time.

Damn what a resume.

I'm expecting really good things from Finding Dory. Nemo as a film holds a special place for people; it isn't as frivolous as Monsters Inc. but leans more toward Toy Story in terms of cultural impact. I think there's more on the line for Pixar to do well with a Nemo sequel than a Monsters prequel, and with Stanton on board I'm sure it'll be top-shelf. I can't see them fucking up Finding Dory.
 
I'm surprised at all the backlash against Brave, I thought it was beloved?
I like it, not their best, but very nice coming of age story.
Cars 2 on the other hand, deserves to be called a money grubbing, cash-in, pandering POS
 
their streak of quality movies was impossible to sustain, just didn't thing they'd have a string of mediocre films


they're no Undertaker at Wrestlemania

The issue is that instead of relying on Pixar greats like Pete Docter, Brad Bird, Lee Unkrich and Andrew Stanton, Disney/Pixar started hiring a bunch of nobodies to work on their films.

First we had Lasseter go completely off his rocker with the soulless Cars 2, then we had Mark Andrews & Brenda Chapman come to Pixar to work on Brave, and now we have Dan Scanlon for Monsters University.

I can understand Lasseter going crazy (the man has an extraordinarily busy life), but I just don't get why Pixar keeps bringing in untested talent to senior roles. It's really taking a toll on their reputation.
 
Preach.

Brave was a fully realized epic. The art direction and voicework is top shelf Pixar, and the story line, while ultimately predictable, was still executed exceptionally well. Pixar took a seemingly kids-only allegory and made it accessible to any age group. That's an ability that they exclusively hold. They pulled that off perfectly with Brave.

Here's how I would rank their work:

GOD TIER:

1) Wall-E
2) Ratatouille
3) The Incredibles
4) Finding Nemo

AMAZING TIER:

5) Brave
6) Toy Story 3
7) Up
8) Toy Story

VERY REALLY DAMN GOOD TIER:

9) Monsters Inc.
10) Toy Story 2
11) A Bugs Life

DREAMWORKS TIER:

12) Cars
13) Cars 2

Swap A Bug's Life and Ratatouille and Toy Story with Wall-E and we're good.
 
Preach.

Brave was a fully realized epic. The art direction and voicework is top shelf Pixar, and the story line, while ultimately predictable, was still executed exceptionally well. Pixar took a seemingly kids-only allegory and made it accessible to any age group. That's an ability that they exclusively hold. They pulled that off perfectly with Brave.

Here's how I would rank their work:

GOD TIER:

1) Wall-E
2) Ratatouille
3) The Incredibles
4) Finding Nemo

AMAZING TIER:

5) Brave
6) Toy Story 3
7) Up
8) Toy Story

VERY REALLY DAMN GOOD TIER:

9) Monsters Inc.
10) Toy Story 2
11) A Bugs Life

DREAMWORKS TIER:

12) Cars
13) Cars 2

I never really got into the whole "Cars 2 sucks" train, but I always considered the first Cars to be superior to it. It had a really great story with a great ending.

800px-Hudson_Hornet_51.jpg
 
Brave was far from conventional. It just focused on something (mother/daughter relationship) that people didn't want. :/
 
Brave had no idea what it wanted to be.

I think it had a better handle of itself and its universe than Up did.

What held Up back from being Pixar's best film is the second half. It suddenly remembered that it was a cartoon and resorted to its gimmicks. The first half of Up is probably tied with Wall-E's first half as the best material from Pixar.
 
"Finding Nemo" in a "God tier" level? What is happening in this thread?

As for Monsters University, the trailers just seemed so bland. You could tell it was going to be mediocre.
 
"Finding Nemo" in a "God tier" level? What is happening in this thread?

As for Monsters University, the trailers just seemed so bland. You could tell it was going to be mediocre.

Finding Nemo is an exceptional film. Very well-structured, well cast, funny, heartwarming and smart. What don't you like about it?
 
I thought the whole plot point of mom-turns-into-bear wasn't enough to carry the movie. It's as if the film was making excuses to go on, after it wrapped up the whole conflict with the tribes rather quickly.
 
I've never regarded Pixar movies quite as highly as most other people. They've made some very good ones but they're so overrated.

The most annoying phrase of the past 5 years has been, "Pixar has done it again!"

Now they're mostly doing sequels. Meh.
 
AMAZING TIER:


6) Toy Story 2
7) Up
8) Toy Story 3

VERY REALLY DAMN GOOD TIER:

9) Monsters Inc.
10) Toy Story 1
11) A Bugs Life

DREAMWORKS TIER:

12) Cars
5) Brave
13) Cars 2

Fixed.

Brave was mediocre bland and generic, at low tier Disney straight to video level, it was so by the book I couldn't believe it was a Pixar movie.
 
Among its ADD with wanting be a historical, medieval, mystical, coming-of-age story, sure. Also, bears!


Please. Any idea it had it failed to execute all that well.

You know that's not true.

It's not a perfect film by any stretch of the imagination, but the most common complaint I hear irl is from guys saying: "I couldn't relate/care because it was about a girl and her mum." In any case, I have to wonder if people calling it generic know the meaning of the word.
 
It's not a perfect film by any stretch of the imagination, but the most common complaint I hear irl is from guys saying: "I couldn't relate/care because it was about a girl and her mum." In any case, I have to wonder if people calling it generic know the meaning of the word.
Find better boy friends.
 
I'm not interested in it at all but then again, I'm not a huge fan of Monsters, Inc. Definitely looks like a rental at best to me. I'm hopeful that The Good Dinosaur and Inside Out get them back on track. Brave was about an 8 at best sadly (not a bad flick by any stretch, but not nearly as good as I'd expect from Pixar despite its lovely visuals).
 
I didn't know Brave was so hated. I enjoyed it much more than I did UP for instance.
The setting, music, characters were awesome. Story was really cool too, I wasn't spoiled by trailers or any other media so the
mother transforming into a bear and what happened after that
caught me by surprise

UP started to get boring as soon as they reach Paradise Falls. At that point I wanted it to end and I hear often that is one of their universally praised movies, beats me.

Anyway it's sad Pixar are losing their touch. I think all of the sequels are not necessary (for the public, I get they are necessary for them to make money or so it seems) and I'd rather see any of those canceled projects like Newt.
 
I think all of the sequels are not necessary (for the public, I get they are necessary for them to make money or so it seems) and I'd rather see any of those canceled projects like Newt.

I'm not so sure it's about money (as in box-office), I suspect it's much more about merchandising. If you establish a cast of characters that essentially become Pixar mascots, you can design toys/clothes/attractions/rides/etc that have more hooks than if you're constantly dropping 1-offs.

Just my assumption, as all the Pixar movies were doing incredibly well financially prior to the sequels showing up in force.
 
Well if it's any consolation I think the upcoming run of films with The Good Dinosaur --> Finding Dory --> Inside Out might put them back on the winning streak again.

Just no more Cars.
 
What is going on at Pixar? What has changed in the last few years there? Anything?

The original brain trust and brad bird is mostly gone or have other responsibilities. Maybe their talent pool is diluted by sharing with disney as well. Sequels aside, Docter's Inside Out and The Good Dinosaur might be interesting.

All studios have this problem though, for all the praise ghibli gets, I'd say they have it worst, relying on two directors that are past retirement age. Dreamworks is more hit of miss depending on the directors they can get their hands on.
 
Finding Nemo is an exceptional film. Very well-structured, well cast, funny, heartwarming and smart. What don't you like about it?

Much of the humor falls completely flat. Dory's shtick gets old about 15 minutes into the film. Albert Brooks is incredibly irritating as the father fish. It's the one Pixar film where I just don't get why people like it as much as they do.
 
The thing about the dropoff is that you could see it in studio for years now, with production schedules of 4-6 years. John new job title being 6 year's old now. They don't have the quality control any more and the studio is saturated with large crew and lots of turnover rate.
 
The dreamworks tier thing is whack because while they've made a good amount of shit they've also made some pretty damned great things as well, especially their early 2D animated movies like the prince of egypt.
 
I'm a blind Pixar fanboy, really don't care for some bad reviews. Except for Cars 2 I like every film they did so far and some more than others obviously. Can't wait to see Monsters University :D
 
Ratatouille, Wall-E, and Up were a fantastic streak. Toy Story 3 was very good but moreso as a conclusion to that trilogy rather than as a great stand-alone film.
 
How the mighty have fallen. It's kind of hilarious that Disney Ainmation has now returned to making top tier original projects while Pixar is going through half baked sequelitis. Tangled > all Pixar since Ratatoullie and I'm looking forward to Frozen a lot more than any of Pixar's upcoming stuff.

TS3 and Up were too maudlin for my tastes. And Up completely falls apart as it goes.

As long as we can all agree that The Incredibles is Pixar's best work............

A bro after my own dick.
 
The dreamworks tier thing is whack because while they've made a good amount of shit they've also made some pretty damned great things as well, especially their early 2D animated movies like the prince of egypt.
Yup, How to Train your Dragon and Kung Fu Panda were better than the last 2 Pixar films.
 
It just seems Pixar has really dropped the ball since Up.

I grew up with Toy Story and while I loved 3, that thing was a drama more then a kids movie.

I grabbed my head and shook it in disappointment after seeing cars 2, I really loved the first one and find all the hate unwarranted. Brave was just all over the place and just came off as very generic, Mum is a bear and it just rolled with that, mediocre film. I have high hopes for the next two films since they're going to be original works.
 
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