Sunday, January 10, 2016

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 
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)
Happy Feet 
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 
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)
The Adventures of Tintin 
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 
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)

Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! 
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 Book of Life 
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)

Despicable Me 
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)

Azur et Asmar (Azur and Asmar: The Princes' Quest) 
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)
Avatar 
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?

1 comment:

  1. I'll definitely have to watch The Book of Life now, it's one of the only movies on your list that I haven't seen yet

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