Tag: Luca

  • Pixar is “Really Bummed Out” On ‘Turning Red’ Heading to Disney+ Instead of Theaters

    Pixar is “Really Bummed Out” On ‘Turning Red’ Heading to Disney+ Instead of Theaters

    There has been a rather discouraging trend of Disney sending Pixar films to Disney+ for free. The prestigious animation studio was one of the leading voices in spearheading our modern understanding of CG-animated filmmaking. Yet, as the pandemic hit, things haven’t been easy for everyone in the industry. Especially with uncertainty if families will visit cinemas as they did before the pandemic started in 2020. As such, Disney made the move to release some of its films on their new streaming service.

    Strangely, there still is seemingly no clear strategy moving forward. Only select films were made available through their Premier Access options, where you can purchase the film for a set price. Yet, while their original and Marvel Studios offerings got the special treatment, Pixar’s Soul and Luca didn’t get the same. They were made available for free to push Disney+’s subscription numbers. Turning Red, their next film, was their big return to cinemas but ended up following the same fate. In a new piece by The Hollywood Reporter, they shared a statement by an anonymous Pixar employee on the situation.

    Everyone is really bummed, but most of us get it. Families just aren’t going to the movies

    They highlight that the company isn’t mad about the decision, but more disappointed. There’s a good chance that Encanto’s low box office numbers were one of the reasons they went down this route, especially. Sing 2, the most recent animated film to release in theaters, also didn’t fare much better if compared to pre-pandemic numbers. Here’s hoping that the current omicron development gets better so that Pixar can make its grand return to cinemas once again.

    Source: The Hollywood Reporter

  • REVIEW: ‘Luca’ Feels Like Pixar’s First Studio Ghibli Film

    REVIEW: ‘Luca’ Feels Like Pixar’s First Studio Ghibli Film

    To say that Luca is Pixar’s best work to date feels trite given the brilliance of each film the company puts on a consistent level, which is unlike any other animation studio. I mean, last year saw the release of the beautifully gut-wrenching existential reflection that was Soul, which I absolutely adored. In the years before that, you had Coco, Inside Out, and The Incredibles sequel! If Pixar was a band, they’d probably be the Beatles during their studio years, where every single album was of note. We live in an age of Pixar films where there’s an argument to be made that each release is their best so there’s almost no point in proclaiming why Luca is the best when their next one might just surpass it.

    But with that said, it’s hard not to look at Luca as one of “those” Disney classics. The spirit of the film feels like a homage to the quaint stories of old that brim with wonder and awe. When I spoke to director Enrico Casarosa, he mentioned the huge influence Hayao Miyazaki and the Studio Ghibli films had on his own ideations of friendship and adolescence as he was making the film. And you can truly feel that emanate from Luca; the way the film captures the innocent gaze a child casts onto its world, the nostalgia invoked by a homely summer setting, and the conflict of having to conquer one’s fears. There’s an undeniable timelessness in Miyazaki‘s and Studio Ghibli’s work and Luca bats for the same feeling by painting the perfect time with you and your childhood friends.  There’s poignancy in simplicity and the film has that in earnest.

    Luca, the titular lead, is voiced by Jacob Tremblay and he’s a young sea monster who spends his days shepherding fish (fisherding?) on his family’s underwater farm while daydreaming of a more exciting life. He lives with his overbearing mother, absent-minded father, and carefree grandma. One day, his curiosity is piqued by life outside the ocean. Problem is, the surface world either means trouble or death for their kind because of fishermen hunting for sea monsters. As such, Luca spends his days cooped up under the stern rule of his mother.

    This all changes when he meets a troublemaker named Alberto, voiced by Shazam star Jack Dylan Grazer, who spends his days scavenging human belongings in the surface world (sea monsters, by the way, turn into humans outside of water). The two bond over a shared dream of one day owning a Vespa, which they believe to be the most beautiful invention known to man. Alberto, being an unruly kid, forces Luca to step outside of his comfort zone as they partake in shenanigans on a nearby remote island. This, of course, doesn’t sit well with Luca’s mom. 

     

    Watch Pixar's New Official Luca Trailer Deliver A Stunning Coming of Age story - The Illuminerdi

     

    From there on out, the story’s fabric unravels as a slice-of-life vignette across an Italian riviera. It takes place in a poor fishing village called Porto Rosso (an obvious reference to Porco Rosso). Luca and Alberto find themselves living their best days, learning the ropes of the surface world while keeping their monstrous side a secret. There, they meet a friend in Giulia, who helps them realize their dream of owning a Vespa by signing up for the local triathlon. This may all seem not exciting compared to Pixar films that have sprawling adventures into fantastical worlds but it’s in these unadorned, reserved vignettes of life where much of the film’s heart truly beats.

    Stand by Me was a movie that came to mind several times while watching Luca. Not because it had a bunch of kids cursing and smoking as they hiked to see a dead body, but for how it manages to capture the kinds of friendships a lot of people have during their youth. Alberto is the Chris Chambers here; a misfit that’s dismissive, reckless, protective, but deeply woeful while Luca, of course, is Gordie Lachance; wide-eyed, naive, and full of innocence. Their friendship feels tenuous at times, strained by the surface world they dream of living in but in spite of that, there’s a real undercurrent of love. And like in the Rob Reiner classic, the characters are inevitably faced with the hard choice of taking the first steps into maturity. “Silenzio, Bruno,” a mantra about conquering your fears is one you’ll often hear in the film and it’s one that ultimately crescendos into an absolutely beautiful finale that made my eyes bawl out.

     

    Tremblay and Grazer are phenomenal in this. They truly feel like the real-life counterparts of their characters. This was a movie that was wholly produced during COVID meaning the stars weren’t able to record in the same room as they normally would in these films. But their performances nonetheless feel so authentic and true. I don’t know if Grazer and Tremblay are good friends in real life but this movie convinces you they are. Grazer is fantastic in this and really carries that brazen vulnerability that makes Alberto such a resonant character. You can’t stand him at one point but then totally shed a tear for him later on. 

    The supporting characters are all so fun to watch too. Maya Rudolph and Jim Gaffigan voice the wacky sea monster parents of Luca. While they obviously play a critical emotional role in Luca’s journey, they really bring all of the laughs for a chunk of the film. Certain residents of Porto Rosso are also of note, specifically Giulia’s father Massimo and his cat Machiavelli, who feel like the most Ghibli-esque characters in the film. Even the film’s de facto bad guy/bully Ercole, while one-note at times, is entertaining to watch. 

     

    VIDEO: New Trailer for Pixar's "Luca", Coming to Disney+ June 18 - WDW News Today

     

    And then you have the obviously gorgeous visuals by the Pixar team. Their version of the Italian Riviera is breathtaking, albeit exaggerated to feel more like an impressionistic painting. Knowing Casarosa’s admiration for Miyazaki, I can’t help but imagine how even more spectacular this film would be as a hand-drawn film. Nonetheless, the film stands as a pure treat for the eyes and ears with its vibrant vistas and Dan Romer’s vintage-inspired Italian score. 

    With its big Studio Ghibli energy and old-fashioned tale of friendship and overcoming fears, Luca is a fresh kind of Pixar movie in and of itself. It may not have the existential ambition of Soul nor the superhero fun offered by the Incredibles but it has a heart unlike any other and that makes for the perfect feel-good movie to watch these days. 

  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Luca’ Director Enrico Casarosa on Miyazaki, Morricone, and Myths

    EXCLUSIVE: ‘Luca’ Director Enrico Casarosa on Miyazaki, Morricone, and Myths

    It’s that time of the year again where Pixar unleashes another masterpiece onto the world. Their latest film, Luca drops this Friday on Disney+ for everyone to see and it’s one I adamantly recommend to anyone that loves the films of Studio Ghibli and Hayao Miyazaki. It’s a beautiful story about friendship and the growing pains of adolescence set in the Italian summer starring two sea creatures. Murphy’s Multiverse was fortunate enough to speak with the director of the film, Enrico Casarosa, who elaborated on some of the craft that went into making this emotional and stunning movie.

    As you will read in my review, the movie has big Miyazaki energy and Enrico Casarosa isn’t ashamed to admit it. We spoke to him about how his love for Miyazaki shaped the film and the magic of Studio Ghibli films.

    I just feel that Miyazaki does something magical with anything he touches. I grew up with his work. As a teenager in Italy, we would have all these Japanese cartoons and I realized a few years later, Future Boy Conan was one of the first TV series he really directed. 

     

    Having loved, observed, studied, and met him, showed him La Luna, he’s in my DNA. But what is the heart of what I wanted to capture is his ability to convey a child’s point of view. That was important for our movie. That point of view is made of imagination and this wondrous, curious gaze of nature. So this was really great because I could really have Luca experiencing an Italian town for the first time. Have him experience the wind, leaves, and waves for the first time. And that’s what Miyazaki is amazing at.

    Luca’s central characters are two sea creatures living on the coast of the Italian Riviera. The idea of making mythological creatures central to a very human story stemmed from the myths that surrounded Casarosa’s homeland and the rest of the world. He elaborated on what particular legends he drew inspiration from and how he formed his own version of the mythology in the process.

    The inspiration for some of the ideas of changelings comes from my love of Japanese and world folklore. The inaris (foxes) come to mind as they’re able to transform and look human. The selkies from Ireland as well. 

     

    But when you then do the research, you find out there’s a lot of wonderful strange stories in Liguria too because there’s fishermen. For example, St. George and the dragon are the symbol of Genoa. Almost everywhere you walk in Genoa, you will see images of someone spearing a dragon. And then there are dragons in San Fruttuoso. “Don’t go there because there’s a dragon.” We realized that some of these folktales were there so people wouldn’t go and fish there. 

     

    Some towns had really specific ones. There’s an octopus that saved this whole town by ringing this bell because the pirates were coming. So that’s how we connected all those things to the film.

     

    Lastly, we had to ask Casarosa of reports that legendary composer Ennio Morricone was Disney’s first choice to score the film before he passed.

    Yeah, for some reason, that info is online. That is not true. I mean, I love Ennio Morricone and his music. We can officially say here that it didn’t happen. But making the movie, we listened to Ennio Morricone, Nino Rota, and Nicola Piovani. Those are some of the key scores that inspired Dan Romer. Dan was my first choice. Beasts of the Southern Wild was the first time I noticed his beautiful music. 

    Luca comes out on Disney+ this Friday!

  • Disney Unveils Its Disney+ Releases for ‘Cruella’ and ‘Luca’

    Disney Unveils Its Disney+ Releases for ‘Cruella’ and ‘Luca’

    It looks like Disney is facing a long list of delays with the recent news that Black Widow won’t premiere in May. It has been pushed back into July taking over Shang-Chi and the Legends of the Ten Rings’ spot, which will now release in September. Of course, this also affects the rest of Disney’s upcoming film slate, which has been pushed back into the second half of the year. There is one exception, as Emma Stone‘s Cruella is sticking to its May 28th release date. It will also become a Disney+ Premier Access offering while also airing in theaters.

    That isn’t all, as Pixar’s upcoming film Luca will be available on Disney+. Strangely, the second Pixar entry is getting this treatment by being made available directly without any Premier Access offering. There are plenty of other delays, such as Ryan ReynoldsFree Guy releasing in August, The King’s Man being pushed into late December while Deep Water and Death on the Nile being pushed into 2022.

    Disney has been very keen on pushing Disney+, which has offered them some flexibility in the current pandemic-affected market. It is uncertain if the other releases mentioned above may face a similar fate, but anything can change. It was already a major surprise to see Black Widow get a simultaneous release, as Disney has been very focused on ensuring its theatrical release. They have pushed out this decision for quite some time, which is also the reason why it had to be delayed. They want to advertise it far in advance to ensure they can get people informed it will be available through both sources. It’s going to be an interesting year moving forward.

    Source: The Hollywood Reporter, Forbes