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Sabtu, 07 November 2015

Featured Disney Pixar Movies 2015-2016

1. The Good Dinosaur 


The Good Dinosaur Picture
The Good Dinosaur Image

An epic journey into the world of dinosaurs where an Apatosaurus named Arlo makes an unlikely human friend. What if the asteroid that forever changed life on Earth missed the planet completely and giant dinosaurs never became extinct? In this epic journey into the world of dinosaurs, an Apatosaurus named Arlo makes an unlikely human friend. While traveling through a harsh and mysterious landscape, Arlo learns the power of confronting his fears and discovers what he is truly capable of. Written by Pixar



Release date 25 November 2015 (USA), more info about release date http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1979388/releaseinfo

2. Zootopia 
Zootopia Picture
Zootopia Image Cover


  • In the animal city of Zootopia, a fast-talking fox who's trying to make it big goes on the run when he's framed for a crime he didn't commit. Zootopia's top cop, a self-righteous rabbit, is hot on his tail, but when both become targets of a conspiracy, they're forced to team up and discover even natural enemies can become best friends. Written by Walt Disney Animation Studios

Release date  4 March 2016 (USA), more info about release date
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2948356/releaseinfo?ref_=tt_ov_inf%20

3. Finding Dory

Finding Dory Picture
Finding Dory images

The friendly-but-forgetful blue tang fish reunites with her loved ones, and everyone learns a few things about the true meaning of family along the way, "Finding Dory" reunites the friendly-but-forgetful blue tang fish with her loved ones, and everyone learns a few things about the true meaning of family along the way. Featuring the voices of Ellen DeGeneres, as Dory, Albert Brooks as Marlin, Diane Keaton as Dory's mom Jenny, Eugene Levy as Dory's dad Charlie and Ty Burrell as Bailey. Written by Pixar



Release date  17 June 2016 (USA), more info about release date

4. Moana


Three thousand years ago, the greatest sailors in the world voyaged across the vast South Pacific, discovering the many islands of Oceania. But then, for a millennium, their voyages stopped — and no one today knows why.
From Walt Disney Animation Studios comes Moana, a sweeping, CG-animated adventure about a spirited teenager who sails out on a daring mission to prove herself a master way finder and fulfill her ancestors’ unfinished quest. During her journey, she meets the once-mighty demi-god Maui (voice of Dwayne Johnson), and together, they traverse the open ocean on an action-packed voyage, encountering enormous fiery creatures and impossible odds.
 Release date  23 November 2016 (USA), more info about release date

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Making Of Inside Out


Watch Behind the Scenes of the Animation / Making of Pixar Inside Out Animated film Directed by Pete Docter.
Inside the Mind The Making of Disney Pixar “Inside Out”
From concept art to a bright and vibrant animated world, in this session Pixar filmmakers describe the process of designing, building, and bringing to life the world inside a young girl’s mind. They discuss the challenges that come with turning emotions into characters and translating the mind into an expansive set where the adventure unfolds.

also read : > Inside Out Review
                > Featured Disney Movie



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Inside Out Review

Reviewed By RICHARD ROEPER






The very best Pixar films aren’t just children’s movies with references and touchstones to keep the adults interested; they’re ambitious, complex, deeply layered movies for grown-ups that happen to be populated with characters, colors and primary stories that appeal to children as well. 
Who chokes up more at certain scenes from the “Toy Story” movies or “Finding Nemo” or “Up” — first-graders, or their parents and grandparents, who can fully relate to and understand what’s happening on all levels?




So it is with “Inside Out,” a bold, gorgeous, sweet, funny, sometimes heartbreakingly sad, candy-colored adventure that deserves an Academy Award nomination for best picture.
Not just in the animated category — in the big-kid section, right there with the top-tier live-action films. It’s one of the best movies of the year, period.
Based on an original idea by Pete Docter (“Up,” “Monsters, Inc.”) and co-directed by Docter and Ronaldo Del Carmen, “Inside Out” does a wonderful job of laying out the groundwork for the story to come in the opening sequences, in which a little girl named Riley (Kaitlyn Dias) is born in Minnesota and experiences the first few years of life.
We see Riley’s world through the emotions in her head — where we’ll be spending the bulk of the movie itself. (The story takes us outside Riley’s mind and into the “real” world just often enough for us to appreciate what she’s going through, and sometimes what her parents are feeling. It’s all done with a deft touch.)

aslo read : Making Of Inside Out
Our narrator and tour guide is Joy (Amy Poehler, perfectly voice-cast and terrific throughout), a sort of a whirling, glowing Emoticon-Tinkerbell hybrid who introduces us to Riley’s other primary emotions, including:
• Sadness (Phyllis Smith from “The Office”), who can literally color memories forever simply by touching them.
• Fear (Bill Hader), who views every experience as potentially disastrous, but is sometimes a valuable asset.
• Anger (Lewis Black, of course!), ready to throw a tantrum whenever things don’t go Riley’s way.
• Disgust (Mindy Kaling), who, like the other emotions, has shades of other traits. (Disgust can be quite the little narcissist.)
At first things are pretty simple and straightforward for Baby Riley, as she experiences the Joy of parental love, Disgust when she tastes broccoli, Fear of noisy household appliances, etc., etc.
But then we jump forward to Riley’s world at age 11, when the family moves to San Francisco because her father has a new job opportunity — and Riley has to cope with everything from tension between her parents to living in a less-than-desirable neighborhood to missing her friends to feeling like an outcast at her new school.
Things are getting COMPLICATED inside Riley Central.
It’s like an animated “Wizard of Oz” adventure within Riley’s mind. Riley’s memories arrive in the form of color-coded orbs and are stored away. Some of her experiences become important, influential long-term memories; others are dumped into the vast wasteland of forgotten experiences. (That’s where we meet the discarded but still fiercely loyal Bing Bong, Riley’s imaginary friend from childhood, who is voiced by the invaluable Richard Kind. Oh, Bing Bong. He will melt your heart.)
As Riley becomes increasingly sad and resentful, Joy goes on a desperate quest to regain control or at least once again become a constant presence in Riley’s life, lest Disgust and Fear and Anger remain at the controls forever.
The Pixar animation team outdoes itself with vast, intricate, amazingly detailed landscapes ranging from the “movie studio” where Riley’s dreams are produced every night (with a sly nod to Hitchcock, among other filmmakers) to Riley’s long-term memory bank (she’s forgotten nearly all of her piano lessons, but an annoying jingle for chewing gum will be popping into her head forever) to the places where Riley’s subconscious and abstract thinking reside.
Not to mention the Train of Thought, which is literally a Train. Of Thought.
Pretty complicated fare for a Pixar film — or for any film, come to think of it — and viewers a few years younger than Riley’s 11 will probably get a little fidgety and a little frightened by some of the proceedings. (Let’s just say Riley’s primary nightmare is something to which nearly all of us can relate, regardless of age.) But even if some of the references go sailing over their heads, there’s such a visual feast in every frame of this film, it’s hard to imagine any child growing restless even during the darker and more complex passages.
Directed with great flair and pitch-perfect timing, brimming with sparkling visuals, filled with first-rate voice performances, thrilling adventures and unforgettable moments, “Inside-Out” is an instant classic.
Someday the children of the children who will love this film, will love this film.

Disney-Pixar presents a film directed by Pete Docter and Ronaldo Del Carmen and written by Docter, Meg LeFauve and Josh Cooley. Running time: 93 minutes. Rated PG (for mild thematic elements and some action). Opens Friday at local theaters.
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