Great News About What’s Coming from Pixar, Kristin Wiig, and The Magic Schoolbus

Posted on June 17, 2014 at 8:00 am

inside out pixarGreat news about three upcoming projects!

* Pixar has announced that its summer 2015 release will be “Inside Out,” which takes place inside the mind of an 11 year old girl.  Her emotions will be the characters: Anger (Lewis Black), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Joy (Amy Poehler), Fear (Bill Hader), and Disgust (Mindy Kaling).  It sounds a lot like the old Cranium Command attraction at Epcot, which I remember fondly.  With Pete Docter of “Up” as director and a terrific cast, this sounds like it could be one of Pixar’s best.

Variety reports that Docter made an hour-long presentation about the film, explaining that he was inspired by watching his daughter grow up but relied on the latest research about brain development in creating the storyline.

“It’s based on a strong emotional experience I had watching my daughter grow up,” says the “Up” director, who noticed that when his daughter Elie turned 12, much of her childhood joy disappeared, and she became more moody and withdrawn. “There is something that is lost when you grow up” — and the film became a way to explore that change on an emotional level.

The film centers on a young girl named Riley Anderson, “one of those kids who seems like she was born happy,” Docter says. “In truth, Riley is not our main character; she is our setting.” To demonstrate what he meant, Docter screened the first five minutes of the movie, a good segment of which was still in a pencil-drawn storyboard state. (The finished film will open June 19, 2015.) Sure enough, “Inside Out” takes place in Riley’s subconscious, where a crew of anthropomorphized emotions manage how the girl feels at any given moment from a control panel that looks something like the flight deck of the Starship Enterprise.

* According to the New York Times, Kristin Wiig and her “Bridesmaids” co-screenwriter Annie Mumolo are working on a new project.  This time, Wiig will direct as well.  TriStar Productions says that the film  is about “best friends who find themselves in over their heads and out of their depths, which were, perhaps, not too deep to begin with.”

* And an old friend is coming back, via Netflix, which has announced that Ms. Frizzle and the Magic School Bus will be back with new adventures for a new generation!

And more: “9 to 5” co-stars Jane Fonda and Lili Tomlin are reuniting in a series for Netflix.  Can we hope that Dolly Parton shows up to guest star?

 

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Behind the Scenes Trailers, Previews, and Clips

Superb Essay on the Objects in “All that Heaven Allows”

Posted on June 16, 2014 at 3:59 pm

Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman starred in two films directed by Douglas Sirk in the 1950’s, All That Heaven Allows and Magnificent Obsession.  When they were released, they were considered glossy, if soapy, romantic dramas without much insight or artistic aspiration.  But now both are highly respected, with Criterion editions and scholarly appreciations as thoughtful commentary on post-WWII re-definitions of class and culture.  In All That Heaven Allows, Wyman plays a widow quietly being smothered by the constrictions of her suburban life.  Her children want her to spend the rest of her life alone, urging her to get a television so she can be entertained at home and occasionally attend events at the country club.  But she is drawn to her handsome young gardener (Hudson), a man of the natural world.

The Dissolve has an excellent essay by Noel Murray about the film, focusing on the meaning of objects like a Christmas tree, a television, two servings of bread, and a sawhorse.  If you’ve seen the movie, you will see it more deeply.  If you have not seen the movie, it will make you want to see it, and it will help you see all movies more deeply.

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For Your Netflix Queue Understanding Media and Pop Culture

EW Explains the Inside Jokes from “22 Jump Street”

Posted on June 16, 2014 at 8:00 am

I got most of these, and especially enjoyed the “Benjamin Hill Center for Film Studies,” glimpsed during the silly chase scene.  But I didn’t know anything about this one.

Lord and Miller treated fans with another Easter egg when they included a familiar dolphin sound in the opening set-up’s exotic animal truck chase. Dolphin references are one of Lord and Miller’s signatures; you can find them in every episode of the pair’s cult favorite TV series Clone High.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9nr27rOrL0
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Understanding Media and Pop Culture

Tribute: Casey Kasem

Posted on June 15, 2014 at 1:08 pm

Casey Kasem, whose Top 40 Countdown was the most popular radio program in history, died today at age 82. People turned in for his long distance dedications, his commentary about the artists and songs, and above all his warm, confiding voice. It was undeniably corny, but enormously appealing. Before MTV, he created a nation-wide space for teen culture. And he always urged us to reach for the stars. May his memory be a blessing.

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Tribute
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