Big Hero 6

Posted on November 6, 2014 at 5:59 pm

B+
Lowest Recommended Age: Kindergarten - 3rd Grade
MPAA Rating: Rated PG for action and peril, some rude humor, and thematic elements
Profanity: None
Alcohol/ Drugs: None
Violence/ Scariness: Cartoon-style peril and violence, sad death, grieving parent becomes destructive
Diversity Issues: Diverse characters
Date Released to Theaters: November 7, 2014
Date Released to DVD: February 23, 2015
Amazon.com ASIN: B00O4ZC57
Copyright 2014 Walt Disney Studios
Copyright 2014 Walt Disney Studios

Hiro (Ryan Potter) is a super-smart kid who likes to hustle underground robot fighters with his deceptively cute-looking little bot.  He has no interest in going to school until the older brother he adores (Daniel Henney as Tadashi) brings him to the robot lab at the university he attends.  When Hiro sees all of the lovable nerds (and one non-nerdy slacker named Fred who dresses as the school mascot) making awesomely cool creations, he gets very excited about joining them.  He has to invent something spectacular to get admitted, and so he gets to work and comes up with something extraordinary, a system of tiny bots who can form themselves into almost anything.

But then Tadeshi is killed trying to rescue his professor from a fire.  Hiro is devastated.  The brothers were orphans.  While their aunt (Maya Rudolph) does her best, Hiro and Tadeshi were all that was left of their family, and now Hiro is devastated at being alone.  He refuses to go anywhere or talk to anyone.

But Tadeshi left someone behind.  It turns out he was working on developing a robot called Baymax, designed to be a kind, reassuring, gentle healer.  Baymax is equipped with extensive diagnostic and treatment capacity but his look is intended to be non-threatening.  He looks like a big, white balloon, or, as one character says, like a marshmallow man.  He is as far from a weapon or fighter as it is possible to be.  But when Hiro and the robotics nerds find out that Hiro’s invention has been stolen and will be used for destructive purposes, they get together to use their skills, their courage, and, most of all, their sense of what is right to save the day.

The film, loosely inspired by Marvel’s comic book, is filled with engaging characters and imaginative touches.   The setting is “San Fransokyo,” a California/Japan mash-up that seems familiar and real but also intriguingly foreign.  It is a pleasure to see Disney’s most diverse set of protagonists ever, race, gender, and even economic. The bending of stereotypes is done with an effortless flair. And it is great to see a movie for the family that acknowledges the fun and excitement of being smart and working hard.  We get a lot of movies for kids about the importance of friends and family, following your dreams, and being yourself, and all of that is here, too.  But we don’t get many about solving problems through study and experimentation.  It’s very nice to see a film that recognizes that it is cool to be smart.

NOTE: Please stay all the way through the credits for an extra scene that is a lot of fun, especially if you are a Marvel fan.  And be sure to get there on time as the Oscar-nominated pre-feature short film “Feast,” about a hungry puppy, is completely charming, hilarious, and sweet.

Parents should know that this film includes cartoon-style action, peril, and violence, very sad sibling death (off-camera), other characters apparently killed, grieving parent who becomes destructive, and brief potty humor.

Family discussion: What kind of robot would you like to build? Which of the characters is most like you?

If you like this, try: “The Iron Giant,” “Wreck-It Ralph,” and “Bolt”

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3D Animation Comic book/Comic Strip/Graphic Novel DVD/Blu-Ray Pick of the Week Scene After the Credits

Exclusive Clip! See Jim Davis Drawing Garfield the Cat in Garfield’s Holiday Collection

Posted on November 5, 2014 at 3:41 pm

We are delighted to have an exclusive peek at a behind-the-scenes bonus clip from Garfield’s Holiday Collection. You can see Jim Davis drawing Garfield, star of the most widely syndicated comic strip in the world.

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Animation Behind the Scenes Comic book/Comic Strip/Graphic Novel Talking animals

An Interview With Planes: Fire & Rescue Stars Erik Estrada and Fred Willard

Posted on November 3, 2014 at 8:00 am

Copyright Disney 2014
Copyright Disney 2014

Erik Estrada and Fred Willard provide two of the most distinctive voices in Disney’s Planes Fire and Rescue, and it was a great treat to hear those voices through my telephone, as both actors called me to talk about their roles.  The DVD/Blu-Ray is available November 4, 2014

Estrada plays a version of himself, or at least himself as a helicopter inspired by his most iconic character, Ponch from the television series CHiPs. “They told me that they were doing a TV show within the movie,” he said.  “One of the lead characters actually played a helicopter officer, because you know we are all machines now.  They wanted to give him a partner but they wanted to do it in a way that it was called CHoPs in parallel to CHiPs.  So that they could bring two characters on and explain why hewas a racer and then became a firefighter. And so they said, ‘We want to do the Ponch character but we want to do him as a helicopter,’ and I said ‘Okay!’ It is Disney and I love Disney and I raised my children on Disney and I practically live in Disneyland and Disney World.  I have always had a wonderful experience with Disney and it was great to be hired by them and work for them.” So we did it and it turned out to be really cute, it is really, really cute, the character is funny and it just gave me flashbacks.”

Estrada got to see a picture of his character before he recorded the voice.  But it was not hard for him to get back into Ponch mode.  “I didn’t have to psyche too much because I am Ponch. Originally when I auditioned for Ponch, he was an Italian American cop, very aggressive, very gung-ho, very gregarious and I have a lot of that in my personal attitude but when I got them I made him a Latin American.  I just drew on my background and drew on my insides and basically Ponch was me and I was Ponch.  My character in this movie is a bit aggressive, too.  He’d call a car ‘punk’ and of course my partner says, ‘Calm down, calm down,’  just like Larry Wilcox would have done on our show.”  Estrada especially enjoyed attending the premiere of the film, with a special dinner for the performers, because it was the first chance he had to be with the other actors.  “It was great to see all the other planes and trucks, all the characters, it was great. “I got to see everybody I had not seen in a long time. People that I knew, like  Stacey Keach who, I had done The New Centurions with back in ‘71, and Ed Harris who has done an episode of CHiPS and he didn’t know how to ride a bike and I gave him a real quick know-how. That was kind of nice seeing him again.” Estrada says he knows why everyone loves stories about cars and planes and trains: “Because we all started out in strollers. We started out in strollers, and the first thing we notice is the wheel.  They see that first before they see anything else. And so we relate to it and we liked them little cars, we liked the colours, we liked to make noise and we like them – and if you see them in a movie, then you really want to get them.”

Fred Willard’s character is an important government official, an SUV who is the Secretary of the Interior.  “Very political, yes. Very, very political,” he said,  “He’s kind of conservative, concerned with his responsibility. I kind of went for the generic official, with the grey suit you see in all these shots of Congress and the Senate, always making very well pre-planned statements and being very aware of his public image and not suffering any stupidity from underlings. He just kind of considered John Michael Higgins’ character as kind of an annoyance. He had to handle him diplomatically but still feeling a little superior to him. I was always fascinated with those kinds of people. I worked in an office in New York for three years when I first started and I had a lot of bosses who were very stuffy, with nonsensical rules and I was always coming in late in the morning and I had to look at these directives about punctuality, and I was kind of secretly amused by some of those characters.”

Willard said, “I like to do voice things because when you see what you portray on the screen, it is not me so I am relaxed, I don’t say ‘how do I look like that at that day, what did I do with my hair, why was I standing this way,’ anything like that. So I usually enjoy that more than seeing myself live on screen.  You have to depend a hundred per cent on your voice, so it is a lot easier in some ways and it is more of a challenge, too. Sometimes they put all those electrodes on you and as you move they film your movement, and I’ve done it where they filmed your face and that is strange too, but you still don’t look like yourself.”  He recorded alone at first, but then they had him come back to record with his frequent co-star in the Christopher Guest films, John Michael Higgins. “They wanted us to get together to do our lines, maybe come up with some new lines or some interplay. ”  Working on the film reminded him of the toys he loves as a kid. “I just kind of think back to my own childhood. I had little toy trucks and cars, and I was into little toy soldiers, I remember, but I was very fascinated with airplanes.  When we went into the studio and I saw the little models of all the planes. I just wanted to grab a couple and stick them in my pocket and bring them home. It was fascinating.  But here it is pocket size and you’re kind of in charge of it and that gives you a feeling of power.”

I asked him for the best advice he ever got about acting.  “To know your lines – not just know your lines but be on top of them so they come second nature. And then step into whatever character you are. And if you’re improvising, just try to stay in the scene and move the scene forward.”

Both Willard and Estrada said they’re hoping for a third “Planes” movie. If so, I hope I get to talk to them again.

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