Blu-ray Movies & TV

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Up

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Up is a 2009 American computer-animated comedy-adventure film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. The film premiered on May 29, 2009 in North America and is the first animated film to open the 2009 Cannes Film Festival. The film was released in the United Kingdom on October 9, 2009.

Up is director Pete Docter’s second feature-length film after Monsters, Inc., and features the voices of Edward Asner, Christopher Plummer, Bob Peterson, and Jordan Nagai. It is Pixar’s tenth feature film and the studio’s first to be presented in Disney Digital 3-D, and is accompanied in theaters by the short film Partly Cloudy. The film was also shown in Dolby 3D in selected theaters.

The film centers around a grumpy old man named Carl Fredricksen and an overeager Wilderness Explorer named Russell who fly to South America in a floating house suspended from helium balloons. The film has received overwhelmingly positive reviews with a rating of 98% on Rotten Tomatoes. A video game of the same name, based on the film, was released on May 26, 2009.
(www.wikipedia.org)


The Internet Movie Database
A young Carl Fredrickson meets a young adventure spirited girl named Ellie. They both dream of going to a Lost Land in South America. 70 years later, Ellie has died. Carl remembers the promise he made to her. Then, when he inadvertently hits a construction worker, he is forced to go to a retirement home. But before they can take him, he and his house fly away. However he has a stowaway aboard. An 8 year old boy named Russell, whose trying to get an assisting the elderly badge. Together, they embark in an adventure, where they encounter talking dogs, an evil villain and a rare bird named Kevin. Written by Garfield2710

Carl Fredrickson, a little boy and a dreamer who idolizes the adventurer Charles Munts. When he meets Ellie, who also worships Munts, they become close friends. However Charles Munts falls into disgrace, accused of forging the skeleton of the monster of Paradise Falls. He travels in his blimp to South America to bring the monster back alive but is never seen again. Eventually he Carl grows up and marries Ellie. They promise each other that they would travel together to Paradise Falls and build a house there. Many years later, Ellie dies and Carl, who’s lonely, refuses to move from their house despite the offers of the owner of a construction company. When Carl accidentally hits a worker that damaged his mailbox, he is sentenced to move to a retirement home. However, he uses many balloons to float his house in order to travel to Paradise Falls. Adventure ensues. Written by Claudio Carvalho, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

NY Times
In its opening stretch the new Pixar movie “Up” flies high, borne aloft by a sense of creative flight and a flawlessly realized love story. Its on-screen and unlikely escape artist is Carl Fredricksen, a widower and former balloon salesman with a square head and a round nose that looks ready for honking. Voiced with appreciable impatience by Ed Asner, Carl isn’t your typical American animated hero. He’s 78, for starters, and the years have taken their toll on his lugubrious body and spirit, both of which seem solidly tethered to the ground. Even the two corners of his mouth point straight down. It’s as if he were sagging into the earth.
full review

Rotten Tomatoes
Give 98% for tomatometer

Do you like hearing kids screaming and parents rushing their children out of the theater never to return? Me too. Adam Lippe

Pixar’s tenth film is one of the most uplifting ever made. It’s an instant classic and one of those rare movies which will appeal to all ages and intellects. It has heart and intelligence, beauty and excitement, plus loads and loads of imagination. Christopher Tookey

So expertly put together, so beautifully written and filled with such brilliant and believable characters, it’s no exaggeration to say we’re in the throes of a golden age of animation not seen since Disney’s heyday from the 1930s to the 1950s. David Edwards

Amazon
At a time when too many animated films consist of anthropomorphized animals cracking sitcom one-liners and flatulence jokes, the warmth, originality, humor, and unflagging imagination of Up feel as welcome as rain in a desert. Carl Fredericksen (voice by Ed Asner) ranks among the most unlikely heroes in recent animation history. A 78- year-old curmudgeon, he enjoyed his modest life as a balloon seller because he shared it with his adventurous wife Ellie (Ellie Docter). But she died, leaving him with memories and the awareness that they never made their dream journey to Paradise Falls in South America. When well-meaning officials consign Carl to Shady Oaks Retirement Home, he rigs thousands of helium balloons to his house and floats to South America. The journey’s scarcely begun when he discovers a stowaway: Russell (Jordan Nagai), a chubby, maladroit Wilderness Explorer Scout who’s out to earn his Elderly Assistance Badge. In the tropical jungle, Carl and Russell find more than they bargained for: Charles Muntz (Christopher Plummer), a crazed explorer whose newsreels once inspired Carl and Ellie; Kevin, an exotic bird with a weakness for chocolate; and Dug (Bob Peterson), an endearingly dim golden retriever fitted with a voice box. More importantly, the travelers discover they need each other: Russell needs a (grand)father figure; Carl needs someone to enliven his life without Ellie. Together, they learn that sharing ice-cream cones and counting the passing cars can be more meaningful than feats of daring-do and distant horizons. Pete Docter (Monsters, Inc. ) and Bob Peterson direct the film with consummate skill and taste, allowing the poignant moments to unfold without dialogue to Michael Giacchnio’s vibrant score. Building on their work in The Incredibles and Ratatouille, the Pixar crew offers nuanced animation of the stylized characters. Even by Pixar’s elevated standards, Up is an exceptional film that will appeal of audiences of all ages. Rated PG for some peril and action. –Charles Solomon

Buy Up (4 Disc Combo Pack with Digital Copy and DVD) [Blu-ray] from Amazon.com

Soundtrack

  1. Up With Titles
  2. We’re In The Club Now
  3. Married Life
  4. Carl Goes Up
  5. 52 Chachki Pickup
  6. Paradise Found
  7. Walkin’ The House
  8. Three Dog Dash
  9. Kevin Beak’n
  10. Canine Conundrum
  11. The Nickel Tour
  12. The Explorer Motel
  13. Escape From Muntz Mountain
  14. Giving Muntz The Bird
  15. Stuff We Did
  16. Memories Can Weigh You Down
  17. The Small Mailman Returns
  18. He’s Got The Bird
  19. Seizing The Spirit Of Adventure
  20. It’s Just A House
  21. The Ellie Badge
  22. Up With End Credits
  23. The Spirit Of Adventure

Up Soundtrack Full Album

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Written by yadhi

December 2, 2009 at 10:02 pm

Posted in Blu-ray Disc

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6 Responses

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    February 2, 2010 at 6:22 pm

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    Jennette Priolo

    February 11, 2010 at 11:15 pm

  3. I loved Star Trek! My husband and I have been obsessed since we were children. It was really fun to see how the characters met and developed their friendships. The choice of young actors was excellentyoung Kirk and Spock, excellent! When will the next Star Trek come out?.

    Tim Torbus

    February 11, 2010 at 11:34 pm

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    February 12, 2010 at 6:07 am

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  6. Apatow movies are not all about the filth – not sure how you come to that conclusion. His best directorial effort, Knocked Up, has a a couple raunchy times, but its theme of a Peter Pan type eventually having to grow older and accept responsibility for his decisions is a good message, and it was the sparse movie that most women and men could like together, it isn’t a chick-flick nor guy-flick. Much of his other work treads similar ground. I love raunch, and I want there were more of it out there – the world needs more teenage sex comedies in these depressing times

    Yaeko Mcmillen

    February 13, 2010 at 10:45 pm


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