RyMickey
Disney Freak
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2000
- Messages
- 3,264
Working at a movie theater has its perks, I must say. Granted, staying up until 4:00am and then having to go to class at 8:00am isn't so much fun, but in certain cases, it's worth it.
"The Incredibles" is, well, simply incredible. I'm not a big superhero movie fan. Sure, "Superman" is an okay movie. "Batman" is overrated. "Spiderman 1" was excellent, while "Spidey 2" was one of the worst movies ever in my opinion (I know that I'm probably alone on that one).
Nevertheless, I was looking forward to "The Incredibles" immensely. I loved director Brad Bird's previous animation flick "The Iron Giant" (it's a shame this didn't find an audience in theaters). I tried to downplay my excitement for "Incredibles," though, because I was psyched for "Finding Nemo" and, although visually stunning, I thought it was one of Pixar's weakest flicks (once again, I know I'm probably alone on this one).
Okay, so enough babble....what about the movie, right? I really don't want to say much about the plot. Everything unfolds so naturally and it works so darn good.
Voice acting: Superb.
*Craig T. Nelson (gotta love "Coach"!) was perfect - definite machismo, but also incredibly caring and touching.
*Samuel L. Jackson - His character, Frozone, isn't incredibly prevalent in the film, but the animators have mimicked his mannerisms so incredibly well.
*Jason Lee - The bad guy - Syndrome - Excellent. Comedic, but bitter (for reasons I won't explain here)
*Brad Bird as Edna Mole - Absolutely hilarious. Made me laugh everytime she was onscreen.
*The kids - Whoever played Dash was great. Violet, however, was a little too mellow for me. Sometimes, I couldn't even hear what she said. No fault of the actor, I just thought she was depicted as a little too much of a dreary teen (although this is my only qualm with the film)
The best, however, is Holly Hunter as the mom. Just perfect. Absolutely perfect. Touching, sweet, and quite the kick-butt mom.
Music by Michael Giachionni (spelling?) is great. Plays off of James Bond and the like, but it is definitely its own thing. This is his first movie score (although he scores one of my favorite shows, "Alias") and he did a great job.
The look is great. I have to say that the people don't look as "real" as in "The Polar Express" trailers that I have seen, but I don't go to see an animated flick for realism - "The Polar Express" people kinda freak me out. They looked great.
All this being said (which I know isn't a whole lot, because I don't want to give much away), this movie, while absolutely amazing, is not going to do well. What? What do you mean?
It will have a stellar opening weekend. However, this is not a kid's film. Guns are ablazing, people are dying. There's even a sexual reference made by Syndrome which made me laugh out loud...and then I said to myself, "That was kinda dirty." These reasons are why I loved this film. Brad Bird wasn't afraid to take risks. Little kids aren't going to like this movie.
That being said, if teens and adults can look past the fact that it's animation and go see this one, it could take on "Spidey"-like proportions. Unfortunately, I don't see it topping Shrek 2's total this year (which sickens me, really, that dreck like Shrek can make boatloads of money).
BTW, the cartoon before the flick, "Boundin'" is really good, too. But the trailer for "Cars" -- looks like Pixar could have their first clunker on the way. It looks really, really bad.
RyMickey
"The Incredibles" is, well, simply incredible. I'm not a big superhero movie fan. Sure, "Superman" is an okay movie. "Batman" is overrated. "Spiderman 1" was excellent, while "Spidey 2" was one of the worst movies ever in my opinion (I know that I'm probably alone on that one).
Nevertheless, I was looking forward to "The Incredibles" immensely. I loved director Brad Bird's previous animation flick "The Iron Giant" (it's a shame this didn't find an audience in theaters). I tried to downplay my excitement for "Incredibles," though, because I was psyched for "Finding Nemo" and, although visually stunning, I thought it was one of Pixar's weakest flicks (once again, I know I'm probably alone on this one).
Okay, so enough babble....what about the movie, right? I really don't want to say much about the plot. Everything unfolds so naturally and it works so darn good.
Voice acting: Superb.
*Craig T. Nelson (gotta love "Coach"!) was perfect - definite machismo, but also incredibly caring and touching.
*Samuel L. Jackson - His character, Frozone, isn't incredibly prevalent in the film, but the animators have mimicked his mannerisms so incredibly well.
*Jason Lee - The bad guy - Syndrome - Excellent. Comedic, but bitter (for reasons I won't explain here)
*Brad Bird as Edna Mole - Absolutely hilarious. Made me laugh everytime she was onscreen.
*The kids - Whoever played Dash was great. Violet, however, was a little too mellow for me. Sometimes, I couldn't even hear what she said. No fault of the actor, I just thought she was depicted as a little too much of a dreary teen (although this is my only qualm with the film)
The best, however, is Holly Hunter as the mom. Just perfect. Absolutely perfect. Touching, sweet, and quite the kick-butt mom.
Music by Michael Giachionni (spelling?) is great. Plays off of James Bond and the like, but it is definitely its own thing. This is his first movie score (although he scores one of my favorite shows, "Alias") and he did a great job.
The look is great. I have to say that the people don't look as "real" as in "The Polar Express" trailers that I have seen, but I don't go to see an animated flick for realism - "The Polar Express" people kinda freak me out. They looked great.
All this being said (which I know isn't a whole lot, because I don't want to give much away), this movie, while absolutely amazing, is not going to do well. What? What do you mean?
It will have a stellar opening weekend. However, this is not a kid's film. Guns are ablazing, people are dying. There's even a sexual reference made by Syndrome which made me laugh out loud...and then I said to myself, "That was kinda dirty." These reasons are why I loved this film. Brad Bird wasn't afraid to take risks. Little kids aren't going to like this movie.
That being said, if teens and adults can look past the fact that it's animation and go see this one, it could take on "Spidey"-like proportions. Unfortunately, I don't see it topping Shrek 2's total this year (which sickens me, really, that dreck like Shrek can make boatloads of money).
BTW, the cartoon before the flick, "Boundin'" is really good, too. But the trailer for "Cars" -- looks like Pixar could have their first clunker on the way. It looks really, really bad.
RyMickey