lovingboth: (Default)
Ian ([personal profile] lovingboth) wrote2003-10-13 03:23 pm

Finding Nemo

The plan: to go to the new Sunday afternoon bi social thing at First Out. When that got moved to back to 5pm, I thought 'Ah ha, I can go to the Royal Academy in the afternoon, and walk up to First Out.'

What happened: I did the RA (I'm not sure I'd pay to see the current 'Andrew Lloyd Webber's collection' exhibition, but as a friend, it was well worth the trip to see it for free) and then thought 'hmm, there's time to go hunting for the new Fluke album' and went off and did so but without success. Transport problems then struck and, as I was outside a cinema, with Finding Nemo on...

The review: It's good. Parts of it are very very good. I loved the seagulls, for example, and the sharks were great too. Unfortunately, although JoJo loves looking at fish, it's probably a bit too scary for her at the moment.

Technically, it was mixed. There are some genuinely photo-realistic sections, with some excellent water effects, but they still can't do humans well. (Why do you think they've done toys and monsters for their other feature films?) The seagulls were oddly smooth too. And while many of the close ups of Sydney harbour were wonderful, the long shots screamed CGI.

(Looks for details of who did which section - the people who did the sharks also did another good bit and... ahhhh - the seagulls are meant to be modelled after the claymation in Wallace and Gromit, which is why they're oddly smooth.)

[identity profile] some-fox.livejournal.com 2003-10-13 07:48 am (UTC)(link)
I liked the male-female friendship between the two fish, especially since they didn't try to make it romantic at all, and when the Ellen voiced one said that being with him was like being home I thought that was really good. I also liked the idea about having to trust people/kids and let them take some risks, and the way they handled disability. Cool movie. Pixar rock for me mostly because they don't try to talk down to kids but include some level of complexity.

[identity profile] adjectivemarcus.livejournal.com 2003-10-13 08:41 am (UTC)(link)
Capalert don't notice that:

http://www.capalert.com/capreports/findingnemo.htm

But they still don't green light it!
djm4: (Default)

[personal profile] djm4 2003-10-13 09:07 am (UTC)(link)
Seems unlikely, given that the romance in Monsters Inc (such as it was) was a mixed-race one. I think it's just that Pixar films don't tend to have a big romance episode - if you think about Toy Story II, for instance, there was no overt sexual/romantic element at all in the relationship between Woody and Jessie.

I suspect it's more that the filmmakers believe (probabaly correctly) that kids understand friendship better than romance/sexual attraction, and find the former easier to relate to. Both B and C certainly seem to react to kissing scenes in much the same way as the kid in The Princess Bride.

[identity profile] mankylarry.livejournal.com 2003-10-13 09:00 am (UTC)(link)
Did you get to the Bi Social at First out ? And if so

a. ) who else was there and

b. ) Why was it moved to 5pm ?

Laurence

[identity profile] memevector.livejournal.com 2003-10-13 11:08 am (UTC)(link)
the new Sunday afternoon bi social thing at First Out

hmmmm, why do I have no recollection of hearing about this? did I miss something?

and is it happening again?

[identity profile] memevector.livejournal.com 2003-10-15 04:30 am (UTC)(link)
Cool. So, supposing I want to be kept up to date with reminders and/or "actually it isn't happening this month" type things, what should I subscribe to? Is anyone thinking of announcing it on UK-bi or anywhere on LJ, for instance?

[identity profile] scopo.livejournal.com 2003-10-13 07:37 pm (UTC)(link)
K & I can't see seagulls now without going 'mine' 'mine' 'mine' 'mine' like idiots for about 5 minutes!