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	<title>Harry-Go-Round &#187; Up</title>
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		<title>Bolt and Up</title>
		<link>http://harrymccracken.com/blog/2008/07/27/bolt-and-up/</link>
		<comments>http://harrymccracken.com/blog/2008/07/27/bolt-and-up/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Jul 2008 19:02:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Harry</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bolt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Disney]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pixar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Up]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>I almost didn&#8217;t go to the Disney animation preview at the San Diego Comic-Con. It was in Hall H, and anything in Hall H is there because thousands of people are going to show up. I didn&#8217;t wanted to wait in line for eons; I didn&#8217;t want to get trampled; I didn&#8217;t want to be [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I almost didn&#8217;t go to the Disney animation preview at the San Diego Comic-Con. It was in Hall H, and anything in Hall H is there because thousands of people are going to show up. I didn&#8217;t wanted to wait in line for eons; I didn&#8217;t want to get trampled; I didn&#8217;t want to be let into the room when the event was halfway over.</p>
<p>But I decided to try my chances, and while thousands of folks did indeed show up, getting in wasn&#8217;t too hard. And the wait to see glimpses of Disney&#8217;s<em> Bolt</em> and Pixar&#8217;s <em>Up </em>was worth it.</p>
<p><img src='http://www.harrymccracken.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/bolt-con.jpg' alt='bolt-con.jpg' /></p>
<p>Until now, I didn&#8217;t know much about Bolt other than that it had <a href="http://zone.aintitcool.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&#038;t=53454">originally been <em>Chris Sanders&#8217; American Dog</em>, until Disney Animation management (ie, John Lassiter and Ed Catmull) replaced Sanders with Chris Williams and Byron Howard</a>. Nobody likes to see an artist&#8217;s baby taken away from him, and Sanders&#8217; <em>Lilo and Stitch</em> was easily the best cartoon that Disney released during its pre-Lassiter decline and fall. I also saw the<a href="http://disney.go.com/disneypictures/bolt/"> trailer</a> tacked onto the front of <em>Wall-E</em>, which showed that Sanders&#8217; quirky vision left the film when he did. So my instinct was to be wary.</p>
<p>Williams and Howard showed about twenty minutes of <em>Bolt</em> in rough form&#8211;a surprisingly substantial percentage of the movie. And it looked&#8230;potentially okay. Disney is in such a period of rebuilding that I sometimes almost forget it makes animated features other than the Pixar ones. (<em>Chicken Little</em> was hyperactive and disposable; <em>Meet the Robinsons</em> couldn&#8217;t overcome the liability of being based on a book without a plot.) <em>Bolt</em> looks like it may at the very least be a step forward, even if it&#8217;s clearly a decidedly Disneyesque mass-market film rather than an oddball departure.</p>
<p><em>Bolt </em>is about a dog who stars in a TV show in which he has superpowers, and the first chunk of the film we saw was a long scene from his show, rife with stunts, explosions, and cars driving off of things. It was nicely staged, but lacking in soul, but I&#8217;m hoping that&#8217;s kind of the point, since the story&#8217;s springboard involves Bolt thinking he really is a superhero, and having trouble adjusting to life in the real world. It also felt overly long. We&#8217;ll see.</p>
<p>The second chunk we saw involved Bolt&#8217;s real-world adventures. They involved some Disney/modern animation cliches&#8211;a cute-but-manic sidekick, a crisis of confidence on the part of the hero, etc.&#8211;but I liked the surprisingly low-key feel. (John Travolta as a dog sounds like stunt casting, but it works.) And I laughed more than once. So I&#8217;m hopeful.</p>
<p>Williams and Howard talked about the film using new technology to provide a look that&#8217;s painterly rather than photorealistic. I love the idea&#8211;I&#8217;ve brooded about computer animation&#8217;s fixation on photorealism for years&#8211;but the clips we saw didn&#8217;t look dramatically different from other recent CGI films. (In one scene, you can see every one of Bolt&#8217;s hairs, all beautifully rendered; I don&#8217;t know if I&#8217;ve ever seen <em>one</em> of Pluto&#8217;s hairs.) I&#8217;m hoping the finished product will show more of the painterly look.</p>
<p><img src='http://www.harrymccracken.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/up-con.jpg' alt='up-con.jpg' /></p>
<p>After the <em>Bolt</em> preview, Pete Docter talked about <em>Up</em> and shared a clip&#8211;the first time one&#8217;s been shown in public. We learned that the movie stars a 78-year-old man (voiced by Ed Asner!) who attaches balloons to his little house and takes flight to a spectacularly exotic part of Venezuela, with a stowaway boy scout in tow. They have adventures there, although Docter didn&#8217;t talk much about the nature of those adventures.</p>
<p>Everyone&#8217;s comparing<em> Up</em> to a Miyazaki film&#8211;granted, without knowing all that much about it&#8211;and Docter seemed pleased by the comparison. I like the fact that the movie stars a cranky human senior citizen; I like the look of what we saw; I think that if nothing else, people who thought that <em>Wall-E</em>&#8217;s robots represented a backwards step for the ambition of Pixar&#8217;s character animation may be relieved. (The image above is from the film&#8217;s <a href="http://www.disney.com/up">online teaser</a>, not from the movie itself.) I can&#8217;t imagine any major studio other than Pixar deciding to do <em>Up</em>&#8211;including the rest of Disney.</p>
<p>(Over at Cartoon Brew, Amid linked to an <a href="http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2008/07/comic-con-disne.html?xid=rss-popwatch-20080726-Comic-Con">Entertainment Weekly report on the Con preview</a> that spoke of fanboys liking<em> Bolt</em> but fleeing from <em>Up</em>. I confess that I left a bit early myself and therefore can&#8217;t judge how the exodus from the hall went, but I had a good excuse: I was racing off to see Ray Bradbury. In any event, I like the fact that Pixar is willing to make a film that might cause animation fanboys to flee, and which stars a character who&#8217;d clearly not designed to look good as a plush doll or an action figure.)</p>
<p>I liked the look of what we saw of <em>Up</em>; it wasn&#8217;t the least bit photorealistic. On the other hand, it may not have been fully rendered, either, and the opportunities for hyper-realism probably lie in the Venezuelan scenes, not the brief snippet we saw.</p>
<p>These days, I don&#8217;t get out to new animated features unless my heart is in it&#8211;for instance, I haven&#8217;t seen <em>Kung Fu Panda</em> yet. It&#8217;s no surprise that I was already assuming that <em>Up</em> would be worth the effort, but I now know that I&#8217;ll see <em>Bolt</em>, too. That&#8217;s something.</p>
<p>And hey, does anyone know what Chris Sanders is working on at the moment?</p>
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