It's rated Certificate U here in the UK, which is like being rated G in the US, and I actually think it should have been a PG here too. The UK has a habit of doing that though - all of the original Star Wars films were PG Stateside and a U over here.
Anyway, first thoughts...
Overlong. The middle section, with Bob on his secret mission alone, was too long and...dare I say...boring? Too many captures/releases/captures again (and then again later with the family).
The score: It captured the tone, but could have been a LOT more gelling in the bigger action scenes. Like Brian DePalma's films, the music didn't seem to be following the action on some occaisions, which threw moments here and there. Love the style though, and it DID capture the tone, as I say, but not bombastic enough. Perhaps too timid?
Animation: overall fantastic. Syndrome especially struck me has having some real visual flair, and there were moments of pur genius animation with him in there.
Best scene: Dash. Yep, I'm with you guys in that his chase moments were just great.
Worse scene: the final showdown between the robot and family downtown. Where were the people? The carnage we're used to in such movies? This needed to be BIGGER! Also, it was over with a kind of whimper rather than a huge bang, and the suspense didn't really hit fever pitch. I was hoping for some second moment where Syndrome would come back and control the robot. They never really built up his character enough, and left it till the very last scene for him to do anything remotely, personally evil.
Mistake: One glaring one that really jumped out was Violet's hair. Her parting jumped sides for the airplane-in-danger scene. Maybe they flopped this late in production in order to have the plane headed in the "right direction" on screen? Interesting, but noticable as being the only time this happend.
Edna Mode: fantastic again. A really good character that certainly lifted the film in the mid sectuion where things were getting bogged down.
Boundin': strange, wonderful short. I enjoyed this, even when the curve ball half way through came. Its sudden end completed the "what the?" feeling of what it possibly Pixar's oddest little film.
The Incredibles: when it was good, it WAS incredible. When it was bad, it was still good, but not always great. The jokes were funny, the set ups great, and it left a good taste in my mouth. But some of it seemed too overly familliar, and I don't just mean in the various references to other films and comic books.
I enjoyed it, but don't see the need that I thought I might have in seeing it again quick. A DVD for Easter I can wait for.
Toy Story 2 is, for me, still Pixar at the top of their game.
