第2个回答 2009-10-18
UP, Pixar's latest animated feature, is just delightful. But how do you go about extolling the movie's virtues without giving away its surprises? Like the kid at the beginning of the movie, you don't try to conquer the immovable force; you work around it.
The one clue I can give away – because it's the movie's heavily hyped premise – is that Carl Fredrickson, a gruffy old widower (voiced with gruffy old charm by Ed Asner), miraculously inflates enough balloons to use his house as an aircraft. Soon, he finds himself reluctantly sharing his ride with a short-attention-spanned kid named Russell.
I'll also mention a couple of other items that can gauge your potential interest in the movie. One is a gag that is a take-off on a famous painting – perhaps too inside of an inside joke, but typical of Pixar's cheery attempts to appeal to viewers of all ages.
Also, part of the plot involves Carl's long-held wish to meet a Lindbergh-type adventurer named Charles Muntz (Christopher Plummer!). This is another in-joke that's even vaguer than the first one. Cartoon historians know that Walt Disney started in the cartoon biz by creating Oswald the Rabbit for producer Charles Mintz, who then greedily stole the rights to Disney's creation. This gives you a pretty good idea where the ostensible hero Muntz stands in the scheme of things.
Beyond that, I can only offer you some enticing clues about the characters. There's a dog who's the leader of his pack and in menacing beyond measure, until he opens his mouth and gets one of the movie's biggest laughs. There's a huge, awkward bird that is a big laugh-getter at first. Then she becomes a real enough character that – at least in the audience I was in – when she's injured, she elicits screams of fright worthy of Bambi's late mother.
There's surprising, heartfelt emotion, vivid imagery (you can almost touch the landscapes and skies), and a music score by Michael Giacchino that's practically a character in the movie – particularly in a thoughtful montage that takes Carl from childhood to widowhood.
There aren't many (or at least not enough) live-action movies that are engrossing as this cartoon. Pixar Studios has gotten to be one of those movie icons that shouldn't even have to deliver a premise to get funded anymore. The moneymen should just shut up, hand over the money, and trust they'll get a product that will appeal to everyone.
UP is only the second Pixar feature to get a PG rating, only for mildly intense imagery and action – nothing off-color in the least. Again, if you can handle "Bambi," this film should be a breeze.
第3个回答 2020-02-13
A
feisty
septuagenarian
teams
with
a
fearless
wilderness
ranger
to
do
battle
with
a
vicious
band
of
beasts
and
villains
in
this
computer-animated
adventure
scripted
by
Pixar
veteran
Bob
Peterson
and
co-directed
by
Peterson
and
Monsters,
Inc.
director
Peter
Docter.
Carl
Fredricksen
is
a
78-year-old
balloon
salesman.
His
entire
life,
Carl
has
longed
to
wander
the
wilds
of
South
Africa.
Then,
one
day,
the
irascible
senior
citizen
shocked
his
neighbors
by
tying
thousands
of
balloons
to
his
home
and
finally
taking
flight.
But
Carl
isn't
alone
on
his
once-in-a-lifetime
journey,
because
stowed
away
on
his
front
porch
is
an
excitable
eight-year-old
Wilderness
Explorer
named
Russell.
Later,
as
the
house
touches
down
on
the
world's
second
largest
continent,
Carl
and
his
unlikely
traveling
companion
step
outside
to
discover
that
not
only
is
their
new
front
lawn
considerably
larger,
but
that
the
predators
therein
are
much
more
ferocious
than
anything
they
ever
faced
back
home。