Post
by Dacey » August 6th, 2015, 6:10 pm
I'm very late to the party on this one, as I only just saw the movie yesterday, two days before it was set to leave my local theater. But there were still a fair number of people (including, unfortunately, extremely little kids with parents who thought that loudly scolding them in the theater was perfectly okay!) regardless, which is a bit impressive for a film that's finally winding down after such a strong box office run.
There's no point in an overly long post at this point, but I will repeat the sentiment that others have been expressing. The movie was brilliant. But, like Ben, I'm not sure when I want to see it again. This film had such an impact on me that I felt like I had gone through some form of an emotional cleansing when the credits were rolling. It may take days for it all to fully sink in, but I don't see how this loses the Oscar this year, even with another Pixar film on the way (which, fairly or not, will probably find itself being compared to Inside Out in every single review).
I will say, though, that it's a bit shameful how variously websites have carelessly been reporting that moment in endless internet headlines. Yeah, I know, I saw this a month after it opened, but that scene was on my Facebook newsfeed only days after its release, and I really wish I could've been able to watch the movie without knowing about it. Even worse (well, to me, at least) are "columns" that accuse the Lava short of being "sexist," resulting in me spending the entire thing scratching my head trying to figure out how it was being seen that way. Great way to distract me during a first viewing of an actually really sweet short. (And, okay, I know that everyone has the right to write what they want to on their websites, but after seeing so many nasty comments on the internet, I feel like I know what actual sexism is).
On one last note, did anyone else think that Riley crying was some of the absolute best character animation that Pixar has ever done? Seriously, I get emotional just thinking about those scenes.
"Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift--that is why it's called the present."