Sunday, May 31, 2009

Up!


Pixar has always set the bar high for itself and, like many of the studio’s devoted fans, I’m always worried that they’ll make a movie where their ambitions exceed what they actually achieve. In the case of the studio’s latest venture, Up, all of the early images and trailers that I saw left me baffled as to what the movie would actually be about. I must have said numerous times in the last month "What is this movie even about? I don't get these trailers." Some old guy attaches a bunch of balloons to his house and flies into the sky?  Was the studio responsible for such modern cartoon classics as Toy Story and Finding Nemo about to lose their shit? 

Up isn’t just a good movie—it’s fucking great and certainly the best to come along so far this year and one of Pixar’s greatest achievements to date.  And having now seen the film, I also understand why the studio resisted showing us what happens after the film’s star Carl (voiced by TV legend Edward Asner) straps those balloons to his two-story home and lifts off into the sky.  

In a beautiful and brilliantly executed 15-minute prologue, co-directors Pete Docter and Bob Peterson (who also wrote the screenplay) guide us through the nearly 80-year adventure Carl experienced before he embarked on his current aerial escapade.  As a kid, he was fascinated by explorers, particularly the dashing Charles Muntz (Christopher Plummer), who vanished into the jungles of South America in pursuit of a rare creature.  Heading home from an afternoon matinee at the local movie theater, Carl meets fellow adventure enthusiast Ellie, a young girl with big dreams and a fearless spirit.  That chance encounter leads to a decades-long love story, as Carl and Ellie grow up, marry and experience life’s many pleasures and disappointments together until her death.  Told without dialogue, this single sequence provides an entire movie’s worth of laughs and tears.  It also lends the fantastical events that follow a hefty dramatic and emotional weight.  After Ellie’s death, Carl withdraws from the world, closing himself off to the very possibility of adventure.  Even when he takes off into the sky, he’s not looking to start anew—he’s preparing for his final act.

If I’m making Up sound almost unbearably sad—particularly for an animated feature—that’s because, at times, it is.  But it’s a good kind of sad, a sadness that feels honest and true instead of forced on the audience by plot crap.  It’s also balanced by scenes of genuine comedy and eye-popping action, including a climactic chase set atop…no wait, I’ve said too much already.  Carl may not be looking for an adventure, but adventure finds him in a big way and forces him to move forward instead of standing still.  

And that’s why Up is such a marvel.  At it's core, only Pixar could take a simple adventure story and turn it into a profound statement about life’s infinite possibilities. And if you think I'm being over-the-top and cliche, go see this movie right now. I dare you to disagree. It's pure magic.
A

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Songs In My Head

Jacks Mannequin- The Mixed Tape
Nsync- Bye Bye Bye
Keith Urban- Kiss a Girl

Friday, May 29, 2009

Dream Emmy Ballot

I know I have no say in anything...but I should. If the Emmy voters had any sense of talent they'd nominate the following in a few weeks when they get the chance.


Supporting Actress In a Comedy Series
Vanessa Wiliams- Ugly Betty
Kristen Wiig- Saturday Night Live
Jenna Fischer- The Office
Jane Krakowski- 30 Rock
Alyson Hannigan- How I Met Your Mother
Becki Newton- Ugly Betty

Supporting Actor In a Comedy Series
Jack McBrayer- 30 Rock
Tracy Morgan- 30 Rock
Rainn Wilson- The Office
Michael Urie- Ugly Betty
Ed Helms- The Office

Supporting Actress In a Drama Series
Elizabeth Mitchell- Lost
Yunjin Kim- Lost
Rachel Griffiths- Brother's and Sisters
Tricia Helfer- Battlestar Gallactica
Katee Sackhoff- Battlestar Gallactica
Callie Thorne- Rescue Me

Supporting Actor In a Drama Series
Michael Emerson- Lost
Terry O Quinn- Lost
Henry Ian Cusick- Lost

Lead Actress In a Comedy Series
America Ferrara- Ugly Betty
Tina Fey- 30 Rock
Julia Louis Dreyfus- The New Adventures of Old Christine
Sarah Silveran- The Sarah Silverman Show
Amy Poehler- Parks and Recreation
Mary Louise Parker- Weeds

Lead Actor In a Comedy Series
Steve Carell- The Office
Alec Baldwin- 30 Rock

Lead Actress In a Drama Series
Sally Field- Brothers and Sisters
Glenn Close- Damages
Mary McDonnell- Battlstar Gallactica

Lead Actor In a Drama Series
Denis Leary- Rescue Me

Best Comedy
The Office
30 Rock
The Sarah Silverman Show
How I Met Your Mother
Ugly Betty
Desperate Housewives (the first half of the season)

Best Drama
Lost
Battlestar Galactica
Rescue Me
Brothers and Sisters

Best Host For a Reality Competition
Cat Deely- So You Think You Can Dance

Best Reality Show
Kathy Griffin's My Life On The D List
The Hills

Best Competition Reality Show
Big Brother
So You Think You Can Dance
American Idol
Ninja Warrior
The Amazing Race
Charm School



Songs In My Head Today

These wont always be songs I like...it's just whatever is stuck in my head.

Beyonce- Halo
Heart- These Dreams
1-800 Safe Auto
Keri Hilson- Knock You Down

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Friends!

Roommates friends visiting...A

Roommates cleaning the entire fucking house inch by inch because of those friends visiting, leaving me with less work...A fucking plus.

New Pilots Premiering Next TV Season

Looking Forward To: Glee, V, Flash Forward, Community, Day One, Parenthood

On the fence: A Beautiful Life, The Good Wife, Cougartown, The Deep End, The Cleveland Show

I Promise This Show Will Suck: Melrose Place, The Vampire Diaries, Accidentally On Purpose, Three Rivers, Eastwick, Hank, Happy Town, Arranged Marriage, The Bridge, Miami Trauma, NCIS Los Angeles, Undercover Boss, Brothers, Human Target, Past Life, Sons of Tucson, 100 Questions, Trauma, The Jay Leno Show, Mercy


Tight Parking Spaces

The way miss Erin Sanborn attempts at pulling out of tight parking spaces...usually I'll assume its at least a B+...but now she's been bumped to a D-