Movie Review: The Good Dinosaur 11-25-15
After Monsters University, I thought Pixar lost their magic
touch. But then, on June 19th, 2015, Pixar's fifteenth animated feature,
Inside Out, premiered in theaters and got very good reviews. But that
wasn't over; This year, 2015, happened to be the first year Pixar
released two films in the same year. Pixar's other feature, The Good
Dinosaur, which premiered today, asks a question that has probably been
asked before: What would happen if the dinosaurs didn't go extinct? A
few million years after the meteor that destroyed the dinosaurs misses
the Earth, the dinosaurs learned how to farm vegetables and get along
with rodents, canines, and ungulates. The movie tells the story of a
young apatosaurus named Arlo, who happens to be youngest and smallest of
a batch of three. When his father gets swept away by a rainstorm, Arlo
becomes upset. When Arlo gets lost from his family, he meets a man cub
who has been stealing from the corn garden. Arlo tries to kill it, but
the man cub was quick. He finds food for Arlo, and instead of killing it
when he had the chance, Arlo brings the man cub along for the ride
home. While other CGI movies like Disney's Dinosaur, Meet the Robinsons,
and Ice Age 3 had dinosaurs very realistic-looking, the dinosaurs in
Disney•Pixar's The Good Dinosaur looked slightly unrealistic, but still
believable, a similar approach Brian Henson, Michael Jacobs, and Kirk
Thatcher did with the TV series Dinosaurs. DreamWorks did a similar
approach with The Croods, but the flora and fauna looked and acted too
Pokemon-ish for a Prehistoric world. In conclusion, The Good Dinosaur is
proof that two animated movies from the same studio released the same
year can achieve exceptional quality, if done right.
Rating: 4 out of of 5 stars
My name is Andrew, and I am a movie fanatic! On this blog, I will be discussing and reviewing movies, as well as other topics. I also happen to be a BIG Jim Henson fan: I adore The Muppet Show (both old and new), Fraggle Rock, old school Sesame Street (the 70s and the 80s), and the 1990s TV series Dinosaurs. I am also a Disney and Pixar buff. Enjoy my blog! Follow me on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/andrew.sateriale.31
Sunday, January 31, 2016
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Movie Review: The Peanuts Movie
Hi, everybody! Starting today, I an going to post old reviews of movies I wrote on my iPod not too long ago. I will post the reviews every few days, starting with my review of The Peanuts Movie, which I wrote back in November. Without further ado, let's start the review!
Movie Review: The Peanuts Movie 11-7-15
Have you noticed in the past 35 years, there have been quite a few live-action movies that were based on cartoons? There have been some good ones, like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (that one from 1990 with Judith Hoag and Elias Koteas) and George of the Jungle, but there have been some bad ones, like those awful Alvin and the Chipmunks movies, The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, The Last Airbender, and The Smurfs. With the advent of new technology, there have been CGI movies (and some TV shows) that have the characters designed in a classic cartoon style, like The Jimmy Neutron Movie, Ice Age, Madagascar, and the works of Sony Pictures Animation. As of late, there have been three CGI movies based on comic strips, like the ones you'd find in the newspaper. There's been DreamWorks' Over the Hedge, Spielberg's The Adventures of Tintin, and released yesterday, The Peanuts Movie.
The tenth animated movie from Blue Sky Studios, the animation house behind the Ice Age movies, Robots, Horton Hears a Who!, and Rio, The Peanuts Movie is based on the comic strips by Charles Schulz and tells the story of a young boy named Charlie Brown. He has all the bad luck a kid would never want, like getting a kite stuck up a tree and getting a football pulled away right before he kicks it. When Charlie falls in love with a new student named Heather, he tries to impress her through entering the talent show and writing a book report on War & Peace. However, because he is Charlie Brown, nothing goes his way. The story may sound depressing, but the movie itself is very sweet and stays true to the original comic strips without being too modern. The animation itself is very convincing, and at some points, I couldn't tell if it was CGI! For those who aren't into the Peanuts or despise the TV specials from the 60s and 70s, I noticed similarities to more modern cartoons, like Doug, Hey Arnold!, and Ed, Edd n Eddy. For example: In this interpretation of the Peanuts comics, Lucy is very similar Helga Pataki from Hey Arnold, except she doesn't have a crush on Charlie. That would be disgusting! Overall, The Peanuts Movie is an enjoyable film for everyone young and old, and is probably the second best animated movie of the year, only behind Disney•Pixar's Inside Out.
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Have you noticed in the past 35 years, there have been quite a few live-action movies that were based on cartoons? There have been some good ones, like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (that one from 1990 with Judith Hoag and Elias Koteas) and George of the Jungle, but there have been some bad ones, like those awful Alvin and the Chipmunks movies, The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle, The Last Airbender, and The Smurfs. With the advent of new technology, there have been CGI movies (and some TV shows) that have the characters designed in a classic cartoon style, like The Jimmy Neutron Movie, Ice Age, Madagascar, and the works of Sony Pictures Animation. As of late, there have been three CGI movies based on comic strips, like the ones you'd find in the newspaper. There's been DreamWorks' Over the Hedge, Spielberg's The Adventures of Tintin, and released yesterday, The Peanuts Movie.
The tenth animated movie from Blue Sky Studios, the animation house behind the Ice Age movies, Robots, Horton Hears a Who!, and Rio, The Peanuts Movie is based on the comic strips by Charles Schulz and tells the story of a young boy named Charlie Brown. He has all the bad luck a kid would never want, like getting a kite stuck up a tree and getting a football pulled away right before he kicks it. When Charlie falls in love with a new student named Heather, he tries to impress her through entering the talent show and writing a book report on War & Peace. However, because he is Charlie Brown, nothing goes his way. The story may sound depressing, but the movie itself is very sweet and stays true to the original comic strips without being too modern. The animation itself is very convincing, and at some points, I couldn't tell if it was CGI! For those who aren't into the Peanuts or despise the TV specials from the 60s and 70s, I noticed similarities to more modern cartoons, like Doug, Hey Arnold!, and Ed, Edd n Eddy. For example: In this interpretation of the Peanuts comics, Lucy is very similar Helga Pataki from Hey Arnold, except she doesn't have a crush on Charlie. That would be disgusting! Overall, The Peanuts Movie is an enjoyable film for everyone young and old, and is probably the second best animated movie of the year, only behind Disney•Pixar's Inside Out.
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Sunday, January 10, 2016
Top 30 Greatest CGI Movies of All TIme Part 3
Top 30 Greatest CGI Movies of All TIme Part 3/3
10. Tangled (2010)
I know what you're thinking
at this point. "Why have Tangled placed so high?" I'll tell you why:
First of all, Tangled is Disney's 50th animated movie! Disney started as
a small company in 1923, and Walt's first animated feature film, Snow White and
the Seven Dwarves, premiered in late 1937. Now try subtracting 2010 by 1937.
That's 50 animated movies in 73 years, which is very impressive. Secondly,
think of what characters have been used in the world of computer animation, as
of November 2010. There were toys, animals (both extinct and still alive),
food, robots, automobiles, monsters, aliens, and most importantly, humans, and
the humans in Tangled look great in my opinion. When John Lasseter joined the
project, he asked executive producer Glen Keane, a legendary Disney animator,
if he wanted to do Rapunzel (that's what the project was called at the time)
hand-drawn, but Glen decided to take the CG challenge. Besides, I think Tangled
would be even harder to make if it were hand-drawn, because of all that hair.
And finally, Tangled is a CGI fairy-tale that ISN'T a satire. How many movies
can you think of before Tangled that were identical to it? Sorry, Barbie, but
your direct-to-video cheap-quills don't count. Anyway, Tangled is about a 17,
going on 18-year-old girl named Rapunzel (Mandy Moore). She was secretly
kidnapped by a woman named Mother Gothel (Donna Murphy) so she could use
Rapunzel's magic hair to keep herself (Gothel) young. On the day before
Rapunzel's 18th birthday, Rapunzel encounters a thief named Flynn Rider
(Zachary Levi), and the both of them go on an adventure that will change both
of their lives forever. Tangled is an enjoyable gem with beautiful animation,
an organic story that stays true to the original fairy tale, well-developed
characters, and rememberable songs by the legendary Alan Menken.
9. WALL-E (2008)
700 years into the future,
Earth has been piled high with trash. Humans have abandoned the planet and
reached extreme levels of obesity and laziness and became entirely dependent on
robots. WALL-E, a brown and yellow square-shaped robot, has been working for
years to clean up the planet. After he encounters EVE, a more advanced robot
who has been sent to find plants, he falls in love, and together WALL-E and EVE
save humanity. This was probably the most ambitious animated movie of that
year, setting a cute comedy with a somber warning about ecological
irresponsibility and runaway consumerism, with very little dialogue. Some fans
consider this to be Pixar's best, while others didn't like it that much. Probably
because the movie is only 15% dialogue. Never the less, WALL-E is an enjoyable
film for the entire family.
8. The Incredibles (2004)
The longest, but arguably
the greatest, animated movie of 2004, The Incredibles was Pixar's first movie to
have the PG-rating. It was also Brad Bird's first animated movie since The Iron
Giant. The Incredibles takes place in a world of superheroes and
super-villains. After being saved, who didn't want to be saved, by a superhero
named Mr. Incredible, the man sues Mr. Incredible, and all superheroes are
banned in that city, or live a normal live as a modern-day citizen. 15 years
have passed, and Mr. Incredible (now known as Bob Parr) is married to the
super-stretchy Elastigirl (now known as Helen Parr), who gave birth to three
kids, each with different superpowers. When a new villain named Syndrome (who's
actually a rejected fanboy from Mr. Incredible's fan club) plans to destroy the
city with Technodrome knock-offs, it's up to Bob and his family to come out of
hiding and save the world. The Incredibles was also Pixar's first feature to
have humans as major characters, rather than toys, insects, monsters, or fish.
Despite earning the PG-rating, The Incredibles earned great reviews and won the
Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
7. Monsters Inc (2001)
In another world inhabited
by monsters, monsters scare children to use their screams as electricity. The
best scarers at Monsters Inc, the company that provides the energy for the
city, are James P Sullivan (nicknamed Sulley, voiced by John Goodman) and Mike
Wazowski (voiced by Billy Crystal). When a child goes loose in the monster
world, havoc erupts, and it's up to Mike and Sulley to return the girl to her
bedroom. While Shrek is good at hilarity and background designs, Monsters Inc
has a more organic story (if you think hard enough, Shrek is similar to The
Princess Bride) and imaginative character designs. Ultimately, Shrek won the
first-ever Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
6. How To Train Tour Dragon
(2010)
Like Kung Fu Panda, How To
Train Your Dragon had no pop-culture references. I personally find that ironic
because director Chris Sanders' previous movie, Lilo & Stitch, had quite a
few pop-culture references. There were Elvis songs, a live-action B-movie from
the 50s, and even a View Master. Anyway, How To Train Your Dragon is about a
teenage boy named Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III (Jay Baruchel) who lives a
small Viking village called Berk. The only problem is the pests. While other
places may have mosquitoes or mice, Berk has dragons that steal their livestock
and fish. After capturing a legendary Night Fury, instead of killing it, Hiccup
releases the dragon, names it Toothless, and becomes its friend. How To Train
Your Dragon is an enjoyable entry into the DreamWorks library with an original
story, brilliant animation, and a music score that deserved to win the Oscar
for Best Original Score, though some believe ‘Dragons 2’ was better.
5. Up (2009)
The 2009 Academy Award winner for
Best Animated Feature is about an elderly man named Carl Frederickson (Ed Asner), who ties
thousands of balloons to his house and flies it to South America to fulfill his
deceased wife's dreams. A young Boy Scout named Russell hitches a ride on
Carl's house, much to his (Carl's) dismay. When they finally land in South
America, Carl and Russell meet a rare bird that Russell named Kevin, and a
friendly talking dog named Dug. Little do Carl and Russell know that Dug is one
of the hundreds of dogs who Charles Muntz (Christopher Plummer) sent out to
capture Kevin, who wants the bird to prove to scientists that a bird like Kevin
did exist in Paradise Falls. Up was the first animated movie since Beauty and
the Beast to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, and is
considered Pixar's masterpiece by fans.
4. Finding Nemo (2003)
In the oceans of Australia, a
clownfish named Marlin (Albert Brookes) has a son named Nemo. On his first day
of school, Nemo touches a boat against his dad's orders and gets kidnapped by a
scuba diver. Now Marlin, along with a forgetful regal tang named Dory (Ellen
DeGeneres) have to search the whole ocean to find Nemo, while meeting
characters like vegetarian sharks, a school of moonfish, and hippy sea turtles.
Meanwhile, Nemo gets dumped into a fish tank in a dentist's office with four
domesticated fish named Bubbles, Bloat, Gurgle, and Deb, a sea star named
Peach, a French cleaner shrimp named Jacques, and a feral Moorish idol fish
named Gil (William DeFoe). Finding Nemo is an unforgettable gem with
breathtaking animation, many species of fish, and rememberable quotes. 'Nemo'
was also Pixar's first movie to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature
and earned 800 million dollars worldwide at the box-office.
3. Toy Story 3 (2010)
In the final chapter of the beloved
Toy Story trilogy, problems mount as Andy grows up and goes to college while
the toys end up at a daycare center for destructive toddlers, ruled by a
sinister teddy bear who smells of strawberries. While the plot may not be as
elegant as the previous Toy Stories, Toy Story 3 more than makes up for it by
hitting new highs in other areas. For starters, the animation has improved. Not
only are there plastic toys as characters, but also plushes. Also, almost all
the original voice actors from the first two Toy Stories are back, even Andy's
voice actor. Jim Varney, who voiced Slinky Dog in Toy Story and Toy Story 2, sadly
passed away in February 2000, so he didn’t return for Toy Story 3. Instead,
Slinky was voiced by Blake Clark. Toy Story 3 earned over a billion dollars
worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing animated movie of all time, until
Frozen came along. Like Up the previous year, Toy Story 3 got nominated for the
Oscar for Best Picture. It also got nominated for Best Original Screenplay and
won the Oscars for Best Animated Feature Film and Best Original Song.
2. Toy Story (1995)
In the first full-length computer
animated feature film, Woody (Tom Hanks) is Andy's favorite toy, but gets
jealous when a newer toy, Buzz Lightyear (Tim Allen), takes Woody's place as
Andy's favorite toy. When Woody accidentally knocks Buzz out the window, Woody
must save his rival. But things take a dangerous turn when Woody and Buzz get
taken by Sid Philips, who tortures toys for his own amusement. Toy Story 1 is
actually my least favorite in the trilogy because Woody is treated like an
evicted criminal, and the scene in which Andy's toys see Buzz's detachable arm
and call Woody a murdering dog breaks my heart. Anyway, Toy Story earned 392
million dollars worldwide, making it the highest-grossing movie of 1995. Toy
Story also earned John Lasseter a special Academy Award for the achievement of
making a computer animated feature film.
And the best CGI movie of all time
is...
1. Toy Story 2 (1999)
In the sequel to the animation
phenomenon known as Toy Story, Woody gets kidnapped by Al, a greedy toy
collector. When Woody finds himself in Al's apartment, he discovers that he was
part of a popular TV series from the 50s called 'Woody's Roundup'. He also
meets a perky cowgirl named Jessie (Joan Cussack), a loyal horse named
Bullseye, and a boxed prospector named Pete. Little does Woody know that Al
wants to sell him and his 'Roundup Gang' to a toy museum in Japan! Now it's up
to Buzz Lightyear, along with Hamm, Rex, Slinky, and Mr. Potato Head to rescue
Woody. Toy Story 2 takes everything that made Toy Story 1 good and amplifies it
by 100%. There are also some enjoyable new characters, like Buster, Andy's dog
from the end of the first Toy Story, Mrs. Potato Head (voiced by Estelle Harris),
Wheezy the squeaky penguin, who was originally going to be in the first Toy
Story, the persuasive 'Stinky' Pete, and the hilarious deluded Buzz, a
doppelganger of Andy's Buzz. Toy Story 2 got really good reviews (and is called
the rare sequel that lives up to its predecessor), earned nearly 500 million
dollars worldwide, and won the Golden Globe for Best Picture.
And those were the 30 greatest CGI
movies of all time. What do you think?
Top 30 Greatest CGI Movies of All Time Part 2
Top 30 Greatest CGI Movies of All Time Part 2/3
20.
Kung Fu Panda (2008)
Kung Fu Panda is about a panda bear named Po (Jack Black), who is a big fan of the Furious Five: the heroes of China. After a few failed attempts to break into the palace, Po finally makes it in and earns the nickname "the Dragon Warrior" by the wise tortoise Oogway. Much to his dismay, Shi-Fu (Dustin Hoffman), trainer of the Furious Five, now must train Po so he can defeat an evil snow leopard named Tai-Lung (Ian McShane.) Kung Fu Panda was a big challenge for DreamWorks because there had to be absolutely no pop-culture references. That was a problem because pop-culture references are part of DreamWorks' trademark. If there were pop-culture references, the movie would feel more like a parody. This was also the solo directorial debut for Jennifer Yuh Nelson, making Kung Fu Panda the first American animated movie to be directed only by a woman. Kung Fu Panda eventually became another cash cow for DreamWorks and got nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
19. Bolt (2008)
Bolt was Disney's (Walt Disney Animation Studios') first CGI movie to fully involve John Lasseter, co-founder of Pixar. It was also their first CGI movie to feel like a true Disney movie, compared to previous efforts like Chicken Little and Meet the Robinsons. Bolt tells the story of a dog named Bolt (John Travolta) who stars in a very popular, big budget TV show with his owner Penny (Miley Cyrus). The only problem is that he thinks it's all real. When Penny gets kidnapped in Part 1 of a 2-part episode, Bolt gets anxious and runs frantically throughout the studio, eventually getting mailed to New York City. Eventually, Bolt learns that he is a normal dog with no superpowers, but learns being a real dog is just as special. Bolt also befriends a cat named Mittens and a hamster named Rhino, who happens to be his biggest fan. Bolt got really good reviews when it premiered, and was the first animated Disney movie to get nominated for the Oscar for Best Animated Feature since Brother Bear.
18. Shrek 2 (2004)
In the sequel to the first Academy Award winner for Best Animated Feature, Shrek and Fiona and happily married. After hearing their daughter is free from her prison, the king (John Cleese) and queen (Julie Andrews) invite the two ogres and Donkey to a party at their kingdom, Far Far Away. When they arrive, however, the king and queen were very surprised. Feeling like Fiona isn't happy with being ugly, Shrek, along with Donkey, go on a quest to find a potion that would turn him (Shrek) and Fiona human. The movie's plot is more complicated and slower than the original, but it does have its moments. The popularity and success of Shrek 2 lead to two more sequels, though they aren't that good (for certain people). Puss in Boots, voiced by Antonio Banderez, became quite popular, and even got his own movie in 2011.
17. Big Hero 6 (2014)
Big Hero 6 was Disney's first animated movie based on a Marvel comic, since they purchased the rights to Marvel in 2009. The story takes place in San Fransokyo, a highly stylized San Francisco, and tells the story of a child prodigy named Hiro Hamada (Ryan Potter) who gets a special present from his older brother, Tadashi: an inflatable robot named Baymax, who is designed to take care of Hiro. After a fire incident inside the science fair convention building, Hiro is devastated when he sees Tadashi jump into the fray to save his teacher, but didn't succeed. Hiro also discovers that his microbots, which he used in the science fair, were stolen by a man in a Kabuki mask, who also killed Tadashi! With the help of his new friends and Baymax, Hiro sets on an adventure to save San Fransokyo from certain destruction. Big Hero 6 easily became the highest grossing animated movie of the year and won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature (though some people think How To Train Your Dragon 2 should've won that award). This was probably because of the humongous success of Frozen from the previous year, and it's currently debatable on which movie was better.
16. Wreck-it Ralph (2012)
Wreck-it Ralph is about a video game baddie named Ralph (John C Reily). He is the antagonist of the Nintendo-inspired arcade game, Fix-it Felix Jr. The player plays a carpenter named Felix (Jack McBryer) and he has to fix the building Ralph wrecks, while avoiding falling bricks. Whenever a level is completed, Felix earns a medal. But are there medals for wrecking stuff really well? No, there aren't. (Except in the 1985 video game Wrecking Crew.) For 30 years, Ralph had to be thrown off the building repeatedly by the nice-landers. After saying that he'd earn himself his own medal, Ralph heads off to an intense first-person shooter game called Hero's Duty. Upon receiving a medal he stole, he steps on an egg that hatches an evil creature, a Cy-Bug. After blindly stumbling into an escape pod that sends Ralph and the Cy-Bug to a Mario Kart-inspired race game called Sugar Rush, Ralph meets a rejected racer named Vanellope (Sarah Silverman), and the fate of the entire arcade is in his big hands. Wreck-it Ralph is considered by fans, myself included, the Who Framed Roger Rabbit or Toy Story of video games. There are cameos from many different games, like Pac-Man, Sonic the Hedgehog, Bowser (from the Mario games), some Street Fighter characters, and even Q*Bert. Surprisingly, Wreck-it Ralph did NOT win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Instead, Brave, one of Pixar's lesser projects (but not their worst) won the award that year. Thankfully, Wreck-it Ralph won both the Annie Award and the KCA (Kids Choice Award) for Best Animated Feature.
15. Antz (1998)
Ever since both movies were announced, people have been debating whether or not Pixar's next movie, A Bug's Life, is a rip-off of DreamWorks' first animated feature, Antz. Jeffery Katzenberg, the co-founder of DreamWorks, stated that the idea for Antz came from director Tim Johnson, an independent of Disney/Pixar. The reason for two simultaneous insect films should also be seen, however, in the context of the computer technology at the time. Like toys, insects were suitable subjects, as it was too difficult to animate humans and furry animals affectively with computer animation. Anyway, Antz is about a neurotic and thoughtful ant named Z (Woody Allen), who questions the lack of individual freedom in the underground, soviet-style society he inhabits. Destined to become a soldier ant, Z unintentionally participates in a war with termites where all the other ants get killed. He survives by not fighting and running away, but to his dismay is hailed as a war hero. Z falls in love with Princess Bala (Sharon Stone) and has to rescue his colony from destruction by the evil General Mandible. More will be discussed in entry #12.
14. Shrek (2001)
Based on the obscure children's book by William Steig, Shrek is about an ogre named Shrek (Mike Myers) who thinks fairy tales are a load of *flush*. But when his swamp gets crowded with fairy tale creatures and characters, he sets on a quest with a donkey named Donkey (Eddie Murphy) to rescue a princess for Lord Farquad (John Lithglow) in order to get his swamp back. Shrek eventually saves and meets the Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) and eventually they fall in love. Shrek was very successful, earning over 400 million dollars at the box-office, got really good reviews, spawned a multimedia franchise, and won the very first Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
13. Arthur Christmas (2011)
Aardman's first movie since Flushed Away, and their second CGI movie, tells the story of Santa's youngest son, Arthur, who noticed that Santa forgot to deliver one present: a bicycle for a young girl in England! Now it's up to Arthur, Grandsanta, and a stowaway elf, to deliver the present to her by Christmas morning. Arthur Christmas is notable for featuring characters that aren't in the usual Aardman style. I personally think that was a good idea because, just imagine what the human characters would look like in the style of Wallace and Gromit in CGI form! Arthur Christmas got good reviews, but unfortunately bombed at the box-office. It had to compete against The Muppets (that 2011 movie about getting the Muppets back together again in order to stop an evil oil baron from destroying the old studio) as well as The Adventures of Tintin.
12. A Bug's Life (1998)
Pixar's follow-up to the hugely successful Toy Story, A Bug's Life is about a worker ant named Flik (Dave Foley), who accidentally drops all the food they prepared for the greedy grasshoppers, into the river. This causes tension between the ants and Hopper, the leader of the grasshoppers. He makes a deal with Princess Adda, who is becoming queen soon, that the ants will harvest the same amount of food that was lost in the river by the end of the summer, or else. Flik, the one responsible for this whole mess, insists that they should find bigger bugs to fight the grasshoppers. He then goes to the city to find some tough bugs, but discovers they were just a bunch of clowns. Literally. They were run-aways from the circus after their boss fired them. A Bug's Life may not be as good as Toy Story, but it has dazzling animation and rememberable characters. A Bug's Life won the box-office battle with Antz, but Antz got slightly better reviews. I personally prefer A Bug's Life because Antz can't decide if it's a kids movie or an adult movie, while Pixar knows their target audiences for the next decade.
Kung Fu Panda is about a panda bear named Po (Jack Black), who is a big fan of the Furious Five: the heroes of China. After a few failed attempts to break into the palace, Po finally makes it in and earns the nickname "the Dragon Warrior" by the wise tortoise Oogway. Much to his dismay, Shi-Fu (Dustin Hoffman), trainer of the Furious Five, now must train Po so he can defeat an evil snow leopard named Tai-Lung (Ian McShane.) Kung Fu Panda was a big challenge for DreamWorks because there had to be absolutely no pop-culture references. That was a problem because pop-culture references are part of DreamWorks' trademark. If there were pop-culture references, the movie would feel more like a parody. This was also the solo directorial debut for Jennifer Yuh Nelson, making Kung Fu Panda the first American animated movie to be directed only by a woman. Kung Fu Panda eventually became another cash cow for DreamWorks and got nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
19. Bolt (2008)
Bolt was Disney's (Walt Disney Animation Studios') first CGI movie to fully involve John Lasseter, co-founder of Pixar. It was also their first CGI movie to feel like a true Disney movie, compared to previous efforts like Chicken Little and Meet the Robinsons. Bolt tells the story of a dog named Bolt (John Travolta) who stars in a very popular, big budget TV show with his owner Penny (Miley Cyrus). The only problem is that he thinks it's all real. When Penny gets kidnapped in Part 1 of a 2-part episode, Bolt gets anxious and runs frantically throughout the studio, eventually getting mailed to New York City. Eventually, Bolt learns that he is a normal dog with no superpowers, but learns being a real dog is just as special. Bolt also befriends a cat named Mittens and a hamster named Rhino, who happens to be his biggest fan. Bolt got really good reviews when it premiered, and was the first animated Disney movie to get nominated for the Oscar for Best Animated Feature since Brother Bear.
18. Shrek 2 (2004)
In the sequel to the first Academy Award winner for Best Animated Feature, Shrek and Fiona and happily married. After hearing their daughter is free from her prison, the king (John Cleese) and queen (Julie Andrews) invite the two ogres and Donkey to a party at their kingdom, Far Far Away. When they arrive, however, the king and queen were very surprised. Feeling like Fiona isn't happy with being ugly, Shrek, along with Donkey, go on a quest to find a potion that would turn him (Shrek) and Fiona human. The movie's plot is more complicated and slower than the original, but it does have its moments. The popularity and success of Shrek 2 lead to two more sequels, though they aren't that good (for certain people). Puss in Boots, voiced by Antonio Banderez, became quite popular, and even got his own movie in 2011.
17. Big Hero 6 (2014)
Big Hero 6 was Disney's first animated movie based on a Marvel comic, since they purchased the rights to Marvel in 2009. The story takes place in San Fransokyo, a highly stylized San Francisco, and tells the story of a child prodigy named Hiro Hamada (Ryan Potter) who gets a special present from his older brother, Tadashi: an inflatable robot named Baymax, who is designed to take care of Hiro. After a fire incident inside the science fair convention building, Hiro is devastated when he sees Tadashi jump into the fray to save his teacher, but didn't succeed. Hiro also discovers that his microbots, which he used in the science fair, were stolen by a man in a Kabuki mask, who also killed Tadashi! With the help of his new friends and Baymax, Hiro sets on an adventure to save San Fransokyo from certain destruction. Big Hero 6 easily became the highest grossing animated movie of the year and won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature (though some people think How To Train Your Dragon 2 should've won that award). This was probably because of the humongous success of Frozen from the previous year, and it's currently debatable on which movie was better.
16. Wreck-it Ralph (2012)
Wreck-it Ralph is about a video game baddie named Ralph (John C Reily). He is the antagonist of the Nintendo-inspired arcade game, Fix-it Felix Jr. The player plays a carpenter named Felix (Jack McBryer) and he has to fix the building Ralph wrecks, while avoiding falling bricks. Whenever a level is completed, Felix earns a medal. But are there medals for wrecking stuff really well? No, there aren't. (Except in the 1985 video game Wrecking Crew.) For 30 years, Ralph had to be thrown off the building repeatedly by the nice-landers. After saying that he'd earn himself his own medal, Ralph heads off to an intense first-person shooter game called Hero's Duty. Upon receiving a medal he stole, he steps on an egg that hatches an evil creature, a Cy-Bug. After blindly stumbling into an escape pod that sends Ralph and the Cy-Bug to a Mario Kart-inspired race game called Sugar Rush, Ralph meets a rejected racer named Vanellope (Sarah Silverman), and the fate of the entire arcade is in his big hands. Wreck-it Ralph is considered by fans, myself included, the Who Framed Roger Rabbit or Toy Story of video games. There are cameos from many different games, like Pac-Man, Sonic the Hedgehog, Bowser (from the Mario games), some Street Fighter characters, and even Q*Bert. Surprisingly, Wreck-it Ralph did NOT win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Instead, Brave, one of Pixar's lesser projects (but not their worst) won the award that year. Thankfully, Wreck-it Ralph won both the Annie Award and the KCA (Kids Choice Award) for Best Animated Feature.
15. Antz (1998)
Ever since both movies were announced, people have been debating whether or not Pixar's next movie, A Bug's Life, is a rip-off of DreamWorks' first animated feature, Antz. Jeffery Katzenberg, the co-founder of DreamWorks, stated that the idea for Antz came from director Tim Johnson, an independent of Disney/Pixar. The reason for two simultaneous insect films should also be seen, however, in the context of the computer technology at the time. Like toys, insects were suitable subjects, as it was too difficult to animate humans and furry animals affectively with computer animation. Anyway, Antz is about a neurotic and thoughtful ant named Z (Woody Allen), who questions the lack of individual freedom in the underground, soviet-style society he inhabits. Destined to become a soldier ant, Z unintentionally participates in a war with termites where all the other ants get killed. He survives by not fighting and running away, but to his dismay is hailed as a war hero. Z falls in love with Princess Bala (Sharon Stone) and has to rescue his colony from destruction by the evil General Mandible. More will be discussed in entry #12.
14. Shrek (2001)
Based on the obscure children's book by William Steig, Shrek is about an ogre named Shrek (Mike Myers) who thinks fairy tales are a load of *flush*. But when his swamp gets crowded with fairy tale creatures and characters, he sets on a quest with a donkey named Donkey (Eddie Murphy) to rescue a princess for Lord Farquad (John Lithglow) in order to get his swamp back. Shrek eventually saves and meets the Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) and eventually they fall in love. Shrek was very successful, earning over 400 million dollars at the box-office, got really good reviews, spawned a multimedia franchise, and won the very first Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
13. Arthur Christmas (2011)
Aardman's first movie since Flushed Away, and their second CGI movie, tells the story of Santa's youngest son, Arthur, who noticed that Santa forgot to deliver one present: a bicycle for a young girl in England! Now it's up to Arthur, Grandsanta, and a stowaway elf, to deliver the present to her by Christmas morning. Arthur Christmas is notable for featuring characters that aren't in the usual Aardman style. I personally think that was a good idea because, just imagine what the human characters would look like in the style of Wallace and Gromit in CGI form! Arthur Christmas got good reviews, but unfortunately bombed at the box-office. It had to compete against The Muppets (that 2011 movie about getting the Muppets back together again in order to stop an evil oil baron from destroying the old studio) as well as The Adventures of Tintin.
12. A Bug's Life (1998)
Pixar's follow-up to the hugely successful Toy Story, A Bug's Life is about a worker ant named Flik (Dave Foley), who accidentally drops all the food they prepared for the greedy grasshoppers, into the river. This causes tension between the ants and Hopper, the leader of the grasshoppers. He makes a deal with Princess Adda, who is becoming queen soon, that the ants will harvest the same amount of food that was lost in the river by the end of the summer, or else. Flik, the one responsible for this whole mess, insists that they should find bigger bugs to fight the grasshoppers. He then goes to the city to find some tough bugs, but discovers they were just a bunch of clowns. Literally. They were run-aways from the circus after their boss fired them. A Bug's Life may not be as good as Toy Story, but it has dazzling animation and rememberable characters. A Bug's Life won the box-office battle with Antz, but Antz got slightly better reviews. I personally prefer A Bug's Life because Antz can't decide if it's a kids movie or an adult movie, while Pixar knows their target audiences for the next decade.
11.
How To Train Your Dragon 2 (2014)
In the sequel to the groundbreaking DreamWorks movie How To Train Your Dragon, everyone is now five years older than in the original film. Hiccup and Toothless discover an evil man named Drago Bloodfist, who wants to capture all the dragons to build an army with them. Stoick, Hiccup's dad, is pressuring him to become chief, while Hiccup just wants to make peace with Drago. Hiccup then discovers an island covered with ice that holds a secret to his past: his long-lost mother, Valka (voiced by Cate Blanchett). Valka loves dragons, and the island she lives on has tons of them. The only problem I personally have with 'Dragons 2' is that the atmosphere is quite dark for a kid's film. To top it all off, one of the characters the audience gets attached to gets killed, which I haven't seen in a DreamWorks movie since The Prince of Egypt. Nevertheless, ‘Dragons 2’ is an enjoyable film, and deserved the Oscar for Best Animated Feature.
In the sequel to the groundbreaking DreamWorks movie How To Train Your Dragon, everyone is now five years older than in the original film. Hiccup and Toothless discover an evil man named Drago Bloodfist, who wants to capture all the dragons to build an army with them. Stoick, Hiccup's dad, is pressuring him to become chief, while Hiccup just wants to make peace with Drago. Hiccup then discovers an island covered with ice that holds a secret to his past: his long-lost mother, Valka (voiced by Cate Blanchett). Valka loves dragons, and the island she lives on has tons of them. The only problem I personally have with 'Dragons 2' is that the atmosphere is quite dark for a kid's film. To top it all off, one of the characters the audience gets attached to gets killed, which I haven't seen in a DreamWorks movie since The Prince of Egypt. Nevertheless, ‘Dragons 2’ is an enjoyable film, and deserved the Oscar for Best Animated Feature.
Top 30 Greatest CGI Movies of All TIme Part 1
Top
30 Greatest CGI Movies of All Time Part 1/3
Author's Note: The following article was made back in late 2015 in honor of Toy Story's 20th anniversary. I am aware I have made some errors, but I accept them as what they are. One more note before we begin: No flaming and no trolling please! I have worked so hard on this, and it would be my dream for the internet to see it!
On November 22nd, 1995, Toy Story, the first full-length computer animated feature film, premiered in theaters. In honor of this movie's 20th anniversary, from October 25th to November 23rd, I watched and talked about the 30 greatest CGI (computer generated imagery) movies of all time, based on ratings on Rotten Tomatoes. Now for the rules: First, the movie has to be 100% 3D CGI, with the exception of James Cameron's Avatar. Secondly, the movie has to be released in theaters in the U.S., meaning no direct-to-video movies. Thirdly, the movie cannot be newer than November 2014. And finally, the movie cannot be rated lower than 72% on Rotten Tomatoes. And before you get any bright ideas, I did not take Frozen, Cars, or any of the Madagascar films into account!
30. Flushed Away (2006)
Flushed Away was Aardman's first computer animated feature, and their third and final movie to be released by DreamWorks. The story concerns a pet rat named Roddy (voiced by Hugh Jackman), who gets flushed down the toilet by another rat named Sid. In the sewers, Roddy encounters many characters, like singing slugs, a mercenary frog, and a love interest (another rat named Rita, voiced by Kate Winslet). He also encounters an evil toad who wants to flush out every rat in the sewers and repopulate it with tadpoles. Aardman chose to do the movie in CGI because they find water extremely difficult to animate in stop-motion. The characters, however, still retain the Aardman style, looking like how they would in a Wallace and Gromit adventure. The movie, unfortunately, bombed at the box-office, and DreamWorks and Aardman decided to abandon one another.
29. Happy Feet (2006)
This was George Miller's first shot at making an animated movie, rather than a live-action one like Mad Max or Babe. Happy Feet was also the first animated feature to come out of Animal Logic, the Australian equivalent of Industrial Lights and Magic. This is also the first and only motion-capture movie to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Anyway, in the movie, every emperor penguin has a song. When they have the right song, they have the right mate. Mumble (voiced by Elijah Wood), however, has an awful singing voice. Instead, he can tap-dance. The elder emperor penguins find this a disgrace to penguin-kind, and they blame Mumble for the fish famine. Mumble gets banished from his colony, and the only friends he has are a group of 5 Hispanic Adele penguins (the leader voiced by the late Robin Williams) and the all-knowing rock-hopper penguin, Lovelace (also voiced by Robin Williams). Together, they go on an epic adventure to find out where the fish really went. The movie has dazzling animation, but the story can be a bit confusing for younger kids. Happy Feet, however, is very special for me because it has a strong environmental warning from the perspective of not a human, but a penguin.
28. Despicable Me 2 (2013)
Despicable Me 2, along with Frozen for some people, are claimed to be the best animated movies released in 2013. In the sequel to the 2010 blockbuster hit, Gru is asked by the Anti-Villain League to track down a villain who's been storing a secret stash of a serum that turns people, animals, and Minions into dangerous purple, hairy monsters. Gru is also paired up with a new character, Lucy Wilde (voiced by Kristen Wigg), to track down this new villain. Also, the Minions have a bigger role, but I won't say what. Despicable Me 2 is safe to be considered Illumination Entertainment's equivalent to Shrek 2, as both movies are considered by fans "just as good as the original". Also, both movies grossed over 900 million dollars worldwide.
27. The Adventures of Tintin (2011)
In 1981, when Steven Spielberg was reading a Belgian review of his newest movie, Raiders of the Lost Ark, he kept seeing the word "Tauntaun". Steven thought it was a French praise, but then he learned that "Tauntaun" means Tintin in French, and that Tintin was the name of a character in a popular book series. To top it all off, the plot of Raiders of the Lost Ark is similar to one of the Tintin books! Sadly, Hergé, the creator of Tintin, passed away in 1983, when Steven was working on the second Indiana Jones movie, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. In 2005, Steven Spielberg asked Peter Jackson if he could make a CGI dog for one of his (Spielberg's) movies. Steven thought the dog looked very realistic and convincing, and he asked if Peter could make a feature film in the style of the dog. The movie would eventually be animated at Weta Workshop in New Zealand and co-produced by Nickelodeon. The Adventures of Tintin premiered in late 2011 and grossed over 300 million dollars, becoming Nickelodeon's most successful movie to date.
26. Ice Age (2002)
Ice Age was originally intended to be Don Bluth's next movie after Titan AE, but because the movie bombed at the box-office, Fox Animation Studios closed their doors. However, that didn't stop Chris Wedge and his team at Blue Sky, the company who did the CG effects for 'Titan'. Ice Age is about a lone mammoth named Manfred (Ray Ramano) who saved a ground sloth named Sid (John Liguizamo) from a group of angry rhinos. After witnessing a female human holding a baby in the river, Sid decides that they should return the baby to its herd, much to Manfred's dismay. While trying to climb a rock wall, a saber-toothed tiger named Diego (Denis Leary) snatches the baby from Sid. Diego tells them that he knows where the humans are, and Manny and Sid reluctantly agree. Little do they know that Diego was sent to bring the baby back so the other tigers can kill it. Ice Age did very well at the box-office, got great reviews, and spawned three sequels and a Christmas special.
25. Horton Hears a Who! (2008)
In 2004, shortly after the premiere of the atrocity known as The Cat in the Hat, Audrey Geisel, the widow of Ted Geisel (otherwise known as Dr. Seuss), banned any further live-action adaptations of her husband's books. However, she didn't say anything about animated adaptations. Horton Hears a Who!, based on the book of the same name, was Blue Sky's first movie to have the G-rating, and is considered their best film among fans. It concerns an elephant named Horton (Jim Carrey) who saves a speck of dust from drowning in a lake. He then learns that there's an entire species of microscopic mammals, known as Whos, living on that speck. A purple kangaroo, however, does not like this at all. She thinks it poisons the minds of the children of the jungle, including her own, so she asks a bird named Vlad and a group of chimpanzees to snatch the flower Horton placed the speck on and ditch it. The movie is different from previous theatrical Dr. Seuss adaptations because it stays true to the original story. They also expanded on some of the characters, like the mayor of Whoville and his son Jojo. 'Horton' is quite fast-paced and is very enjoyable.
24. The Book of Life (2014)
The best way to describe this movie is like a cross between Disney's Aladdin and Tim Burton's Corpse Bride. It concerns three friends: Manolo, Joaquin, and Maria. La Muerte, ruler of the Land of the Remembered, and Xibalba, ruler of the Land of the Forgotten, make a bet. If Manolo marries Maria, La Muerte will rule both lands. If Joaquin marries Maria, however, Xibalba will rule the Land of the Remembered. Xibalba sends a snake to kill Manolo, sending him to the colorful Land of the Remembered. It is now up to Manolo to get back to the Land of the Living and stop an invasion from a threat greater than Xibalba. The story may be a bit predictable and cliched (but far better than Epic), but the beautiful animation more than makes up for it.
23. Despicable Me (2010)
After working on Horton Hears a Who!, executive producer Chris Meledandri decided to form his own company: Illumination Entertainment. The result: Despicable Me, one of the most popular and successful animated movies of the decade. The story concerns a super-villain named Gru (Steve Carall), who has an army of yellow peanut-shaped creatures simply called Minions. The biggest thing he and his Minions ever stole was the Times Square Jumbotron, while a younger villain named Vector (Jason Segall) stole an entire pyramid from Egypt! Gru wants to top that by stealing the moon. Without the moon, things would go haywire, and the public would give Gru anything to bring it back, and then he would be the greatest villain of all time. However, the moon is quite large to steal, so first, they have to steal a shrink ray from an Asian laboratory. Gru and his Minions succeed, but it gets stolen by Vector, whose not-so-secret lair is heavily guarded. Gru then spots three orphan girls, who also happen to be cookies sellers, and they got in and out of Vector's lair with ease. Gru adopts these girls to secretly steal back the shrink ray, but slowly but surely, he gets attached to them. Despicable Me was Universal's most successful and most popular animated movie since The Land before Time in 1988, and the Minions became very popular, eventually getting their own movie in 2015.
22. Azur & Asmar: The Prince's Quest (2006)
This is the only CGI movie I chose that was made completely from a different country (Azur and Asmar is French), but it made it to the U.S. in 2008 by The Weinstein Company. The story is very complicated, but I'll try my best to summarize it. Azur and Asmar is an Arabian tale about two brothers: a white boy named Azur and a black boy named Asmar. Azur would normally get Asmar in trouble as a kid; so much that Azur's father banishes Asmar and his mother. Azur, however, travels to Asmar's country to see his adoptive mother and win the magic Djinn fairy, who doesn't look much like a fairy. Azur and Asmar was visually different from other CGI movies at the time because the movie used restricted perspectives, characters in formal poses, and background décor of arabesque patterns. Also, the human characters were flat, only their faces and hand were 3D. The strengths of the movie come from its organic story that would rival Walt Disney's storytelling.
On November 22nd, 1995, Toy Story, the first full-length computer animated feature film, premiered in theaters. In honor of this movie's 20th anniversary, from October 25th to November 23rd, I watched and talked about the 30 greatest CGI (computer generated imagery) movies of all time, based on ratings on Rotten Tomatoes. Now for the rules: First, the movie has to be 100% 3D CGI, with the exception of James Cameron's Avatar. Secondly, the movie has to be released in theaters in the U.S., meaning no direct-to-video movies. Thirdly, the movie cannot be newer than November 2014. And finally, the movie cannot be rated lower than 72% on Rotten Tomatoes. And before you get any bright ideas, I did not take Frozen, Cars, or any of the Madagascar films into account!
30. Flushed Away (2006)
Flushed Away was Aardman's first computer animated feature, and their third and final movie to be released by DreamWorks. The story concerns a pet rat named Roddy (voiced by Hugh Jackman), who gets flushed down the toilet by another rat named Sid. In the sewers, Roddy encounters many characters, like singing slugs, a mercenary frog, and a love interest (another rat named Rita, voiced by Kate Winslet). He also encounters an evil toad who wants to flush out every rat in the sewers and repopulate it with tadpoles. Aardman chose to do the movie in CGI because they find water extremely difficult to animate in stop-motion. The characters, however, still retain the Aardman style, looking like how they would in a Wallace and Gromit adventure. The movie, unfortunately, bombed at the box-office, and DreamWorks and Aardman decided to abandon one another.
29. Happy Feet (2006)
This was George Miller's first shot at making an animated movie, rather than a live-action one like Mad Max or Babe. Happy Feet was also the first animated feature to come out of Animal Logic, the Australian equivalent of Industrial Lights and Magic. This is also the first and only motion-capture movie to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. Anyway, in the movie, every emperor penguin has a song. When they have the right song, they have the right mate. Mumble (voiced by Elijah Wood), however, has an awful singing voice. Instead, he can tap-dance. The elder emperor penguins find this a disgrace to penguin-kind, and they blame Mumble for the fish famine. Mumble gets banished from his colony, and the only friends he has are a group of 5 Hispanic Adele penguins (the leader voiced by the late Robin Williams) and the all-knowing rock-hopper penguin, Lovelace (also voiced by Robin Williams). Together, they go on an epic adventure to find out where the fish really went. The movie has dazzling animation, but the story can be a bit confusing for younger kids. Happy Feet, however, is very special for me because it has a strong environmental warning from the perspective of not a human, but a penguin.
28. Despicable Me 2 (2013)
Despicable Me 2, along with Frozen for some people, are claimed to be the best animated movies released in 2013. In the sequel to the 2010 blockbuster hit, Gru is asked by the Anti-Villain League to track down a villain who's been storing a secret stash of a serum that turns people, animals, and Minions into dangerous purple, hairy monsters. Gru is also paired up with a new character, Lucy Wilde (voiced by Kristen Wigg), to track down this new villain. Also, the Minions have a bigger role, but I won't say what. Despicable Me 2 is safe to be considered Illumination Entertainment's equivalent to Shrek 2, as both movies are considered by fans "just as good as the original". Also, both movies grossed over 900 million dollars worldwide.
27. The Adventures of Tintin (2011)
In 1981, when Steven Spielberg was reading a Belgian review of his newest movie, Raiders of the Lost Ark, he kept seeing the word "Tauntaun". Steven thought it was a French praise, but then he learned that "Tauntaun" means Tintin in French, and that Tintin was the name of a character in a popular book series. To top it all off, the plot of Raiders of the Lost Ark is similar to one of the Tintin books! Sadly, Hergé, the creator of Tintin, passed away in 1983, when Steven was working on the second Indiana Jones movie, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. In 2005, Steven Spielberg asked Peter Jackson if he could make a CGI dog for one of his (Spielberg's) movies. Steven thought the dog looked very realistic and convincing, and he asked if Peter could make a feature film in the style of the dog. The movie would eventually be animated at Weta Workshop in New Zealand and co-produced by Nickelodeon. The Adventures of Tintin premiered in late 2011 and grossed over 300 million dollars, becoming Nickelodeon's most successful movie to date.
26. Ice Age (2002)
Ice Age was originally intended to be Don Bluth's next movie after Titan AE, but because the movie bombed at the box-office, Fox Animation Studios closed their doors. However, that didn't stop Chris Wedge and his team at Blue Sky, the company who did the CG effects for 'Titan'. Ice Age is about a lone mammoth named Manfred (Ray Ramano) who saved a ground sloth named Sid (John Liguizamo) from a group of angry rhinos. After witnessing a female human holding a baby in the river, Sid decides that they should return the baby to its herd, much to Manfred's dismay. While trying to climb a rock wall, a saber-toothed tiger named Diego (Denis Leary) snatches the baby from Sid. Diego tells them that he knows where the humans are, and Manny and Sid reluctantly agree. Little do they know that Diego was sent to bring the baby back so the other tigers can kill it. Ice Age did very well at the box-office, got great reviews, and spawned three sequels and a Christmas special.
25. Horton Hears a Who! (2008)
In 2004, shortly after the premiere of the atrocity known as The Cat in the Hat, Audrey Geisel, the widow of Ted Geisel (otherwise known as Dr. Seuss), banned any further live-action adaptations of her husband's books. However, she didn't say anything about animated adaptations. Horton Hears a Who!, based on the book of the same name, was Blue Sky's first movie to have the G-rating, and is considered their best film among fans. It concerns an elephant named Horton (Jim Carrey) who saves a speck of dust from drowning in a lake. He then learns that there's an entire species of microscopic mammals, known as Whos, living on that speck. A purple kangaroo, however, does not like this at all. She thinks it poisons the minds of the children of the jungle, including her own, so she asks a bird named Vlad and a group of chimpanzees to snatch the flower Horton placed the speck on and ditch it. The movie is different from previous theatrical Dr. Seuss adaptations because it stays true to the original story. They also expanded on some of the characters, like the mayor of Whoville and his son Jojo. 'Horton' is quite fast-paced and is very enjoyable.
24. The Book of Life (2014)
The best way to describe this movie is like a cross between Disney's Aladdin and Tim Burton's Corpse Bride. It concerns three friends: Manolo, Joaquin, and Maria. La Muerte, ruler of the Land of the Remembered, and Xibalba, ruler of the Land of the Forgotten, make a bet. If Manolo marries Maria, La Muerte will rule both lands. If Joaquin marries Maria, however, Xibalba will rule the Land of the Remembered. Xibalba sends a snake to kill Manolo, sending him to the colorful Land of the Remembered. It is now up to Manolo to get back to the Land of the Living and stop an invasion from a threat greater than Xibalba. The story may be a bit predictable and cliched (but far better than Epic), but the beautiful animation more than makes up for it.
23. Despicable Me (2010)
After working on Horton Hears a Who!, executive producer Chris Meledandri decided to form his own company: Illumination Entertainment. The result: Despicable Me, one of the most popular and successful animated movies of the decade. The story concerns a super-villain named Gru (Steve Carall), who has an army of yellow peanut-shaped creatures simply called Minions. The biggest thing he and his Minions ever stole was the Times Square Jumbotron, while a younger villain named Vector (Jason Segall) stole an entire pyramid from Egypt! Gru wants to top that by stealing the moon. Without the moon, things would go haywire, and the public would give Gru anything to bring it back, and then he would be the greatest villain of all time. However, the moon is quite large to steal, so first, they have to steal a shrink ray from an Asian laboratory. Gru and his Minions succeed, but it gets stolen by Vector, whose not-so-secret lair is heavily guarded. Gru then spots three orphan girls, who also happen to be cookies sellers, and they got in and out of Vector's lair with ease. Gru adopts these girls to secretly steal back the shrink ray, but slowly but surely, he gets attached to them. Despicable Me was Universal's most successful and most popular animated movie since The Land before Time in 1988, and the Minions became very popular, eventually getting their own movie in 2015.
22. Azur & Asmar: The Prince's Quest (2006)
This is the only CGI movie I chose that was made completely from a different country (Azur and Asmar is French), but it made it to the U.S. in 2008 by The Weinstein Company. The story is very complicated, but I'll try my best to summarize it. Azur and Asmar is an Arabian tale about two brothers: a white boy named Azur and a black boy named Asmar. Azur would normally get Asmar in trouble as a kid; so much that Azur's father banishes Asmar and his mother. Azur, however, travels to Asmar's country to see his adoptive mother and win the magic Djinn fairy, who doesn't look much like a fairy. Azur and Asmar was visually different from other CGI movies at the time because the movie used restricted perspectives, characters in formal poses, and background décor of arabesque patterns. Also, the human characters were flat, only their faces and hand were 3D. The strengths of the movie come from its organic story that would rival Walt Disney's storytelling.
21. Avatar (2009)
In the highest grossing movie of all time, a former marine soldier named Jake Sulley has been transformed by the government into a Nav'i, an extra-terrestrial cat-like creature, so he can infiltrate the inhabitants of the planet for the government's greedy needs. This becomes more difficult, however, when he falls in love with a female Nav'i named Neyteri. The stunning animation and effects were done at Weta Workshop, who previously worked on the special effects for the Lord of the Rings movies and a 2005 remake of King Kong. James Cameron, who previously had experience with CG effects through the Terminator movies, thought there should be a new Oscar category for best motion-capture performance, but they denied it. It may be long and overbearing, but Avatar is a must-see for any film buff. By the way, am I the only one who noticed this movie is similar to Disney's Atlantis: The Lost Empire?
In the highest grossing movie of all time, a former marine soldier named Jake Sulley has been transformed by the government into a Nav'i, an extra-terrestrial cat-like creature, so he can infiltrate the inhabitants of the planet for the government's greedy needs. This becomes more difficult, however, when he falls in love with a female Nav'i named Neyteri. The stunning animation and effects were done at Weta Workshop, who previously worked on the special effects for the Lord of the Rings movies and a 2005 remake of King Kong. James Cameron, who previously had experience with CG effects through the Terminator movies, thought there should be a new Oscar category for best motion-capture performance, but they denied it. It may be long and overbearing, but Avatar is a must-see for any film buff. By the way, am I the only one who noticed this movie is similar to Disney's Atlantis: The Lost Empire?
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