Tuesday, January 29, 2013

My Top Ten Animated Features

I was asked recently on Twitter what my favorite animated feature is.  My gut screamed Toy Story but then I doubted myself.  So I put all of my favorite animated films on a spreadsheet to compete with each other in heats.  Yes, I'm a geek.  My gut was right, Toy Story won every heat, but just barely.

Below are my top ten animated features of all time.  And yes they do seem to focus on more modern films.  I am aware of and have watched the most significant (and insignificant) animated features.  Disney does indeed have a great legacy.  But that doesn't mean those classics are beating out the modern films when it comes to quality, art or story.

I tried to rule out "significance" to the genre as a factor in determining what the greatest films are.  Determine for yourself how I fared.


1 Toy Story  1995 Pixar
2 Coraline 2009  Laika
3 Wreck-It Ralph  2012 Disney
4 Fantastic Mr Fox 2009 Fox
5 The Lion King  1994 Disney
6 Ponyo  2008 Ghibli
7 Rango 2011 ILM
8 Akira 1988 TMS
9 Kiki's Delivery Service 1989 Ghibli
10 How to Train Your Dragon  2010 Dreamworks


      

Sunday, January 27, 2013

The Aristocrats (1970)


***spoilers***
The Aristocats is a 1970 animated feature, the last film to be green lighted by Disney himself.  The plot follows the ups and downs of a Paris family of cats, a mother and her three kittens.  Through underhanded means the family is dumped in the French countryside to fend for themselves.  An alley cat takes pity on them and leads the family back to Paris so that they can try to regain their former status.

Aristocats is a gentle film filled with slapstick humor and music.  The characters are believable, if a bit cliché.  The villain isn't intimidating and there is never much doubt that the cats can defeat him.  The animation is standard for its era but looks dated to the modern eye. 

There is no bold social commentary in Aristocats.  The rich are happy in their big houses and the working class cats are happy in their flop houses.  Dump the rich into the country and they will continue to function as the landed elite.  While the cats undertake an arduous journey they are never transformed by it.

At heart Aristocats is a romance full of cute cats that exemplify typical gender roles. Little girls will delight in this film and boys will enjoy the action.     

2/4 stars 
    

Monday, January 14, 2013

Remake the Brave Little Toaster

I had a crazy idea.  Pixar, Disney or DisenyToon should remake The Brave Little Toaster.  The animation has not dated well and it always should have been CG.  Since it was the film that got John Lasseter fired from Disney maybe it's time to square that circle.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Pocahontas (1995 - Disney)



Pocahontas is the 1995 Disney feature centered around the arrival of the first permanent English settlers of North America in 1607.  The story focuses on the  culture clash between the English and the Powhatans, a native tribe.

This was the first Disney feature based on the lives of real people and centered around historical events.  The story of Pocahontas is such an odd story to depict as a children's cartoon.   English colonization of North America is obviously controversial.  And the actual history does not go well for either side. 

Disney decided to handle the native/invader conflict by adopting moral equivalence.  The film shows both the natives and the English to be war like and aggressive.  From a scientific perspective this is oddly sound.  There is a growing amount of evidence that when human groups clash the outcome is not based upon cultural superiority but simply the geographical origin of the groups involved.

From an artistic perspective Pocahontas is always well done but never stunning.  The geography depicted all exists somewhere  in the state of Virginia but certainly not at the coast.  The native females run around in very little clothing and the Englishmen are largely interchangeable.  

***spoilers***
The biggest flaw with the story is the plot.  Pocahontas does indeed save John Smith from being executed, per the historical record.  Although not before her beau is murdered on camera, another Disney first.  Despite the violence, you never feel as if Smith is ever in any real danger. 

Pocahontas and Smith then intervene in the growing conflict between their two peoples and stop war from breaking out.  And in the end the English sail off, leaving the natives in peace.  The result is a film that's anti-climatic and leaves the typical viewer confused.  Because we were all taught in history class that Jamestown was the first permanent English settlement.

And yes, the film is a musical.  And yes, the songs are pretty good, if you're into that.  Although I would state that the earlier songs don't flow too well with the plot.  But they sync up by the grand finale.

From a historical perspective, Pocahontas is a whitewash on all sides.  "So, mommy, what happened to everyone after the movie?" was probably a very popular question after kids saw this film. 

Pocahontas was captured by the English, converted to Christianity and married, wait for it, tobacco farmer John Rolfe.   She traveled to England were she died of disease at the age of 21.  Rolfe and Pocahontas had a son who went on to great success.  Their heirs include two First Ladies.

Governor Radcliffe, far from the bad guy shown in the film, is ambushed on a trading mission and is ritually murdered by the natives.

The Powhatan - after her father died, Pocahontas' uncle took charge of the tribe and lead two wars against the English.  By 1646 the tribe had ceased to exist.

The English - within two years almost all of the colonists and their replacements had died

So Disney picked a moment in time, a very brief moment, when everything could be left all perfect and happy.  Right before everyone dies.  It's too bad they skipped showing the plague.  What song would they have written for that?

1.5/4 stars

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Frankenweenie (2012 - Walt Disney Pictures)


The critics loved this soft-horror flick but audiences didn't flock to see it.  And it's hard to figure out what demographic Disney was shooting for here.  It's visually interesting but, not surprisingly for Tim Burton, it fails on story.  Although it's better than Corpse Bride.

Visually I like the film noir feel and the horror references.  But there were a few times when the puppet movement took me out of the moment.  Frankenweenie just wasn't as slick as other stop-motion out there today.  And certainly not better then ParaNorman which it  is competing against in the Oscars.   

***spoilers***

Frankenweenie mimics the original Frankenstein film.  Only in Frankenweenie  a boy, Victor, brings back to life his dog, Sparky.  And of course there is a dilemma that only the dog can solve.  In the end Victor makes a choice for Sparky that gives the movie the opposite meaning to the original Frankenstein film.  And that's where it clearly fails emotionally. 

In true Tim Burton fashion, only the protagonist of Frankenweenie has good characterization.   Which is a good way to sum up this film.  It lacks a soul.

2/4 stars.