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  1. #1
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    Pixar steals fat kid in Up from Wall-E

    Watched Up the other night. What a great typical Disney story. I miss the old Wonderful World of Disney movies on Sunday nights. Instead of showing them then, they now sell them to you.

    I really enjoyed UP but am now getting disappointed with Computer Generated movies. Is Pixar that strapped for money that they had to reuse a character from another movie? I doubt it but it was a good way to save millions and reap the benefits.

    With all the talent and money Pixar has, you would think they could generate a new character for a new movie instead of recycling a model from an older movie.

  2. #2
    Vinyl Fundamentalist Forums Moderator poppachubby's Avatar
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    Ya, UP was cute. My kid is at the right age for these types of movies now. If you want a real laugh, try "Cloudy, with a Chance of Meatballs". I was laughing outloud. Probably enjoyed it more than my son.

  3. #3
    Close 'n PlayŽ user Troy's Avatar
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    What fat kid in Wall-E? The kid in Up was asian, there was no fat asian kid in Wall-E.

    Bear in mid also that Pixar used the same old guy character in several pieces as well. The one that was in the Chess short and the repair guy in Toy Story 2. Lasseter made a big deal of it at the time stating something to the effect that they were experimenting with the idea of making 'recurring actors' for their films just like every other director in the world has a stable of players that they use.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Troy
    What fat kid in Wall-E? The kid in Up was asian, there was no fat asian kid in Wall-E.
    I did not mean the boy as a complete character but modeled after all the same people on the space ship in Wall-e.

    Oddly, I did not get the impression that the kid in UP was anything other than white. Did they make any reference to him being Asian?

    The computer model used for him was the same as the one they used for Wall-E.

    I also was unimpressed with the old man having Octagon shaped ears. I wish they would go back to actual animation first and use the computer for fill in as opposed to the whole thing being done as modeling with canned shapes and such.

  5. #5
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Both are Pixar productions, so they have not stolen anything really.
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  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
    Both are Pixar productions, so they have not stolen anything really.
    I hope that was sarcastic. I did indeed mean "use character model from 1 pixar movie for use in another pixar movie"

  7. #7
    M.P.S.E /AES/SMPTE member Sir Terrence the Terrible's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hyfi
    I did not mean the boy as a complete character but modeled after all the same people on the space ship in Wall-e.

    Oddly, I did not get the impression that the kid in UP was anything other than white. Did they make any reference to him being Asian?

    The computer model used for him was the same as the one they used for Wall-E.

    I also was unimpressed with the old man having Octagon shaped ears. I wish they would go back to actual animation first and use the computer for fill in as opposed to the whole thing being done as modeling with canned shapes and such.
    Actual drawing of animation is too expensive and time consuming to meet production deadlines of today. Besides, animation of old could not render depth as well as computer generated, doesn't have the realism of today animation (see Polar Express, Beowulf, The Night Before Christmas), and does not have the smoothness of today animation.

    Oddly, I did not get the impression that the kid in UP was anything other than white. Did they make any reference to him being Asian?
    Look at the eyes.
    Sir Terrence

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  8. #8
    Musicaholic Forums Moderator ForeverAutumn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sir Terrence the Terrible
    Actual drawing of animation is too expensive and time consuming to meet production deadlines of today. Besides, animation of old could not render depth as well as computer generated, doesn't have the realism of today animation (see Polar Express, Beowulf, The Night Before Christmas), and does not have the smoothness of today animation.
    While that may all be true, I miss the old hand drawn cartoons. There is something charming about the old cartoons that I find lacking in today's computer generated world. While I'm sure that there is an art to making good computer generated animation, never again will we see the likes of artists like Friz Freling and Chuck Jones.

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