A lot of new information regarding 'UP' *SPOILERS INSIDE*

A person from http://www.aintitcoolnews.com was able to attend a lot of Pixar’s presentations for their upcoming films. Here’s what he saw regarding ‘UP’ I’m rather excited for this film now…It sounds really heartfelt and sweet :smiley: [This is my first post…I joined today…Please be nice :stuck_out_tongue:]

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UP

I hadn’t known much about this one before the presentation.

UP comes out May 29th, 2009 and will be Pixar’s first 3-D movie. Lasseter said that all Pixar and Disney Animated movies from BOLT onwards will be made to release in Disney digital 3-D. Lasseter loves 3-D. He says even all of his wedding pictures were taken in 3-D he loves it so much.

UP is directed by Pete Doctor (MONSTERS, INC) and Bob Peterson and follows the most likely adventurer… Carl… a 78 year old man. He’ll be voiced by Ed Asner and is a grumpy ol’ man who walks on a cane that ends in four little legs, each one has a tennis ball on the end, like you’ll see at nursing homes.

Pete Doctor called it a “coming of old age story.”

The movie opens with Carl as a young kid in the ‘30s. They showed us this opening with storyboard reels. Carl is a chubby kid, arm in a cast and he makes friends with an adorable ball of energy named Ellie.

She wants to follow her hero explorer out in the wilds on adventures. She wants to show Carl something, but makes him cross his heart and swear he won’t tell anyone. He does and she shows him her adventure book. A scrapbook with clippings from her explorer hero, a guy named Muntz.

She says when she gets big she’s going to go where he went. She’s going to South America (“It’s like America, but south,” she says matter of factly). She has drawings of waterfalls and says she’s going to live there some day. It’s a place called Paradise Falls.

The rest of the pages are blank and she says she’s saving them for all the adventures she’s going to have… the only problem is she doesn’t know how she’s going to get there. Carl has a balloon in the room and she says, “That’s it! You can take us in a blimp! Swear you’ll take us!” She makes him cross his heart. “Good, you promised. No backing out!”

Carl is wide-eyed, clearly in love with this girl, in love with her spirit and enthusiasm. He barely speaks.

We get a montage now. No dialogue, just music. Ellie and Carl get married. They’re happy together. Carl sells balloons as they build their house. The years go by. They’re still young and playful. In love. They have picnics, look at clouds and see different shapes. Eventually Carl points out one in the shape of a baby. From here on out she sees nothing but babies in the clouds and smiles.

Carl awkwardly smiles as well.

Then we see them sitting in the doctor’s office. It’s dark and grey. Ellie has her face in her hands, crying as the doctor shakes his head no.

She sits in their front yard. She’s sad. Carl comes to cheer her up. He brings her the old Adventure book and she smiles again.

They make a Paradise Falls jar and put money and coins into it. The pile starts to grow but a series of events happen over time. Car tires blow out, the coin pile decreases. They put more money in it and Carl has his leg in a cast and the money decreases. The roof blows off in a storm, etc.

Now they’re elderly and the Paradise Falls jar is empty, forgotten. Carl loving looks at his elderly wife doing the daily chores. She’s happy, but you get the feeling that he’s sad for not giving her what he promised her. He looks at the crayon drawing of Paradise Falls she had in her adventure book and makes a trip to the travel place.

He has two tickets to South America. He hides them in the picnic basket and takes her out on a picnic. He makes it to the top of the hill. She doesn’t, collapsing halfway up. He runs to her.

Next we’re in a hospital. He’s very sad. She pushes her adventure book to him and makes him cross his heart. He does.

Next we see him slouched, wearing a black suit. He’s surrounded by hundreds of balloons… if I remember right they all had her name on them.

This sequence was already heartbreaking in this early form.

Carl lives on a few more years before his house is threatened by impending construction. So, he ties thousands and thousands of balloons to his roof with the intention of sailing to South America and bringing Ellie, in spirit, to Paradise Falls.

He apparently can steer his house with his weathervane.

But he has a stowaway when he makes this journey. A chubby asian kid named Russell, a boy scout trying to get his last merit badge, one for assisting the elderly.

They make it to S. America, but just before they get to where they need to go they crash and thrown from the house. The house starts to float away and just before it’s out of reach, they grab on to a garden hose and keep it from leaving them.

Neither of them can climb back up to it, but they don’t want to leave it, so they each tie a line to themselves and traverse the South American jungles pulling the house behind him like a Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade balloon for the last 15 miles.

They showed us a test piece, with temp sets and character models and it looked really funny. Carl was short and squat, with his tennis-balled cane. Russell is whining. He’s tired. Carl is short with him and Russell falls over dramatically, but the balloon keeps him from doing much more than floating up and down. He ends up dragging forward on the ground, where he sees a bug and gets excited. He unclips himself and runs after it.

Carl looks back and sees he’s the only one tethered. He calls after the boy, getting no response as he’s slowly lifted up further and further and further until he’s out of frame. A bird squaks and he grumbles. There’s a tussle we don’t see and his cane drops to the forest floor.

They announced that the villain will be voiced by Christopher Plummer and that was it for their UP presentation.
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Direct Source: [url]http://www.aintitcool.com/node/36333[/url]

I just spoiled the whole movie for myself. i should have not read that.

Wow, that’s kind of a different premise. I wasnt really sure what to expect with this one, and I’m still not sure.

That sounds like probably one of the best premises of a Pixar film that I’ve heard for a long while. Up should be very, very interesting.

Sounds like half the film, that kinda stinks cause I read it.
:cry:

Reviews that just tell the plot of the movie are terrible, terrible, awful reviews.

A good review is one you can read, get a good sense of whether you might like the movie or not, and still not have much of the plot spoiled for you.

Ain’t It Cool is sort of the definitive gives-nerds-a-bad-name Internet sites.

i dont know about u, but that’s what i think!!! :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :sunglasses: :open_mouth:

I dont mind hearing about the plot, as long as the ending isnt given away. Although it is nice to have a completely blank slate before seeing a movie for the first time.

I like how Pixar is diving more and more into deep storytelling. I’ll have to bring a pack of tissues to this one. I have a feeling this one will easily rake in money and be a success. With the 3-D I can’t even dream of how this one’s going to look.

This sounds sad, I don’t think I will be able to bring my daughter to it. We love watching disney and pixar movies together but I may have to just go with my fiance to it.

I am excited about the 3-D though, which kinda bums me out b/c I know how much my daughter enjoys 3-D, she loved its tough to be a bug in Animal Kingdom and he other ones as well.

I’m gonna go get my 20 foot pole for this. pokes review I’m not going any farther than the mentioning of 3D, to which I must say “neat!”

it sounds sad in the beginning, but the rest of it sounds really uplifting (no pun intended)

wow I can’t wait for this movie. But it seems a little sad, so she dies? :frowning:

yeah, but in the beginning, kinda like Coral (Marlin’s baby mama), so it probably won’t be too sad.

Well looks like the movie has a pretty good plot. It just dosen’t sound like a movie I would really like. I’m not a fan of ‘feel-good’ movies.

It seems like Pixar is starting to make more artistic films. With Ratatouille and Wall-e, and Now this very intersting plot for Up, Pixar is really changing the definition of an animated film.

I don’t think they have ever stopped changing the definition of what an animated film is.

Phew! An awful lot of spoilers there! I stopped at the part where Carl has two tickets to South America, I’m saving the rest for the actual movie itself. The premise is not bad, but it doesn’t seem to have that same ol’ familiar kick I get when I watched the other great Pixar films like Finding Nemo, Monsters, Inc., and especially The Incredibles. Nevertheless, I might go and watch it. Maybe Pixar can delight me once more as they once did. That feeling kinda stopped with Ratatouille, so hopefully the upcoming features would be better. Hopefully.

Yeah I’m not too sure about the plot. I dont like to feel depressed while I’m watching a movie, and if there’s sad scenes that come along repeatedly i’m not sure If I’d enjoy that.

wow…looks good. This movie will have my approval all the way.