From Disney•Pixar comes Up, an animated comedy in which 78-year-old Carl Fredricksen fulfills his dream of a great adventure when he ties thousands of balloons to his house and flies away to the wilds of South America, only to discover that his biggest nightmare has stowed away on the trip: an overly optimistic 8-year-old Wilderness Explorer named Russell.
Scheduled for release this year, director Pete Docter and producer Jonas Rivera sat down to discuss the uplifting comedy.
“Please do not try this at home,” jokes Director Pete Docter, as he discusses the highly anticipated release of Pixar Animation Studios’ 10th animated feature film, Up. The studio offered reporters a 46-minute sneak preview of the film, and afterwards, Docter and Producer Jonas Rivera sat down to discuss their journey into a film that is sure to lift the spirits of the young and the young at heart.
Carl Fredricksen, a 78-year-old curmudgeon, is feeling as if life may have passed him by. To make good on a promise he made to his late wife, he sets out to fulfill his dream of a great adventure by tying thousands of balloons to his house and flying away to the wilds of South America — only to discover that he has inadvertently brought along a very chatty and frustratingly cheerful 8-year-old boy named Russell.
Docter and Rivera realize that an old man might seem the most unlikely of characters to entertain audiences. “We knew it was a risk, but there is a rich history of grouchy, old characters,” said Docter. “A crusty, old guy just felt appealing. There are a lot of entertainment possibilities. Also, it hadn’t been done yet. One of the big things for us at Pixar is not treading the same ground, and this being the tenth film, that’s getting harder and harder to do.”
With Pixar churning out such critical and commercial hits as Toy Story, Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Cars, Ratatouille and WALL•E, Docter and Rivera recognize that all eyes are on them to hit the next animated homerun. While they admit to trying to act cool, they do feel the pressure. Their winning formula is to make films that they themselves love and that will both entertain and strike a real emotional chord with audiences.
Docter and Rivera asked themselves one question while making this film, “What are we giving the audience to take home?” It is this approach that has made them two of Pixar Animation Studios’ most prodigious talents.
Joining Pixar in 1990, Docter was part of the original team responsible for developing the story and characters for Toy Story, for which he also served as supervising animator. He served as a storyboard artist on A Bug’s Life, and wrote the initial story treatment for Toy Story 2. Docter made his debut as a director on Monsters, Inc., which was nominated for an Academy Award® for Best Animated Feature Film. As one of Pixar’s key creative contributors, Docter garnered an original story credit for early story development on Disney•Pixar’s Golden Globe® and Academy Award®-winning film, WALL•E. For his contributions on WALL•E, Docter was nominated for an Academy Award® for Best Original Screenplay.
Rivera joined Pixar in 1994 as a production assistant on the studio’s first feature film, Toy Story. Having worked on almost every Pixar feature film to date, Rivera’s ability and expertise has enabled him to advance his role on each of the studio’s subsequent productions. Most recently, Rivera served as production manager on the Golden Globe® winning feature Cars.
When the duo teamed up in 2004 to begin work on Up, they knew the look of the characters was going to be an artistic breakthrough for animation, unlike any they had ever dreamed in the past. Docter recalls, “We have these amazing technical directors who know how to do almost everything, and on this film we said, ‘We want you to do everything wrong!’ Ignore the way things work in real life. The look was very hard to achieve both artistically and technically. Hopefully it’s something that is not obvious but invisible.” Rivera adds, “We didn’t want real, we wanted caricature. It is a little more throwback to old Disney.”
The look of the film was so important to Docter and Rivera that the Up creative team traveled to the South American backdrop of the film to ensure that the landscape was perfect. Paradise Falls, the fictional location of the film, was sketched from the actual table top mountain, like an island in the sky, where Brazil, Venezuela and Guyana meet. They chose the locale because they needed someplace isolated that Carl could get stuck, without any outside influences so that he could grow and evolve as a character. “The mountains are over a mile high, there is no way to get up or down,” said Rivera. “This location felt like a cool place because it is a lost world and very detached, and also sets the tone for making an adventure film.”
Docter and Rivera do a superb job of setting the emotive tone as well. Through a brief yet poignant segment early on in the film, an emotional foundation is established, which is the bedrock for the story. Through a glimpse into the charming relationship between Carl and his wife, Ellie, we learn that Carl was a balloon salesman. Together they had one big dream – to take a great adventure to Paradise Falls. But as life’s little unexpected nuisances got in the way, their dreams never materialized. After Ellie’s death, Carl disengages from the outside world. Upon the harsh realization that he never fulfilled her wish, he takes immediate action to keep their dream alive. It is from this very real-life, human montage, that serious wackiness builds, and there seems to be no shortage of it.
The film stars the voice talents of Ed Asner (TV’s “Mary Tyler Moore,” TV’s “Lou Grant”), Christopher Plummer (Inside Man, A Beautiful Mind), Delroy Lindo (Gone in Sixty Seconds, Get Shorty) and John Ratzenberger (WALL•E, Monsters, Inc.). A number of talented young actors auditioned for the role of 8-year-old Wilderness Explorer, Russell. Surprisingly, the brother of a young actor, just along for the ride, snagged the part. “All the young actors we heard from were great, but just sounded too polished,” said Docter. “We fell in love with this kid, Jordan Nagai, who came along with his brother. He just started talking about soccer and karate practice and, we said, ‘that’s the kid!’ He had this great non-actor charm. I didn’t care what he was saying. I was just smiling listening to his voice. He was so authentic.”
When asked what they hope to achieve with Up for both themselves and the studio, Rivera said, “Hopefully it has the flavor of an action-adventure film, but a little softer then some of the movies that are out today. We are hoping this film is an extension of where the Pixar movies have gone, and at the same time reaches back into the past and grabs on to the things that we love from the classics.”
Scheduled for release on October 16, 2009, the film will also be presented in Disney Digital 3-D™ in select theaters.
If the remainder of the film is as charming and entertaining as the first 46 minutes, we can be sure that things will be looking “up” for Pixar yet again.