monsters incIt is now very, very unlikely that we’ll be getting another installment of the celebrated Pixar classic Monsters Inc any time soon, and frankly, that’s probably for the best.

Seriously, the way they ended the last one was going to make for some serious problems if a sequel were to come up.  The whole idea that children’s laughter was several orders of magnitude stronger than their fear, and that solved the monster energy crisis, was pretty much as final as it got.  Who would go back to scaring children?  There’s no percentage in it any more.

But former Monsters staffer Pete Docter is apparently neck deep in something else, and Pixar’s newest project is about a few weeks in, if the advance word is to be believed.

Of course, we’ve all been  wrong before on this sort of thing, but I have to admit that the smart money right now says no more corporate monsters any time soon.

Disney has released one minute of Pixar’s newest short film, Dug’s Special Mission. The short will be released with the UpDVD/Blu-ray on November 10, 2009. It’s a brandnew five minute short film that is a prequel to Up, following “the good-hearted dog, Dug as he is sent on a series of quests by his mean canine bosses.”  Truthfully, it looks like Dug’s canine bosses are trying to get rid of him.

I get a kick out of visiting Jim Hill’s website because his Disney scoops are untold elsewhere. When he first posts the monsters-inc-monsters-inclatest news about Disney and Pixar ventures, I sense I am in the know with a top secret, hush, hush report. 

Even so, in a matter of hours the news is all over the Internet. Such is the news about a sequel to Monsters Inc., over the top closet monsters, is in development at Pixar, along with Cars 2 and Toy Story 3.

Apparently, Peter Doctor, who directed the first Monsters Inc.  is involved with the sequel.  You might not be aware of this, but Doctor has been taking the bows for Up doing superbly at the US box office.

Up  

$44,244,000

The Hangover  

$43,275,000

Land of the Lost  

$19,524,000

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian  

$14,650,000

Star Trek  

$8,400,000

Terminator Salvation  

$8,175,000

Drag Me to Hell  

$7,342,000

Angels and Demons  

$6,500,000

My Life in Ruins  

$3,200,000

Dance Flick  

$2,000,000

up.jpg

If Up had popped a couple more balloons The Hangover would have beaten the Disney/Pixar film.  The race was that close. As it is, Up is the number one film, again.  I am not surprise, the film is pure adventure, laughter and a wonderful story for the whole family.

Up  

$68,200,000

Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian  

$25,500,000

Drag Me to Hell  

$16,628,000

Terminator Salvation  

$16,140,000

Star Trek  

$12,800,000

Angels and Demons  

$11,200,000

Dance Flick  

$4,900,000

X-Men Origins: Wolverine  

$3,900,000

Ghosts of Girlfriends Past  

$1,905,000

Obsessed  

$665,000

up.jpg

Up is in the clouds winning the number one spot at the box office this weekend. The Disney/Pixar film scored an estimated $68.2 million.

1. Up  

$ 21.4

2. Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian  

$ 7.4

3. Drag Me to Hell  

$ 6.4

4. Terminator Salvation  

$ 5.1

5. Star Trek  

$ 3.6

up-movie

Up ranks high with its cousins: Wall-E, Incredibles and Finding Nemo, hitting the 21 million mark.

After seeing Up today, I can’t wait for Toy Story 3. Just seeing these characters together again makes me wish the movie was in the theaters now.  Alas! I will have to watch the original and 2 instead, which is a wonderful substitute.

up-movieThere’s one thing you can always say for a Pixar movie.  It WILL be a box office smash.  Seriously—considering the performance of like the last eight, about the only way a Pixar movie won’t have an eight-figure opening weekend is in the event of a nationwide power outage.  Though I admit, going into this one I was a bit concerned about a possible new direction as set by the previous Pixar smash, Wall-E.

So what was new release Up going to be?  An action smash comedy in the vein of its earlier hits?  Or would I get yet another preachy monstrosity this time exhorting me to honor the elderly and be a friend to the environment (like Wall-E) and maybe even get plenty of exercise (again like Wall-E).

The answer, I’m happy to announce that the answer is the FIRST one—action smash comedy uber alles, baby.

This time around, we join Carl Frederickson, a quiet young man who falls in love with Ellie, a young firebrand dedicated to the pursuit of adventure, both of which share a common love of the tales of industrialist adventurer Charles Muntz. They marry, to Ellie’s family’s intense shotgun-firing joy and Carl’s family’s…moderate interest.  The two grow old together, sharing a common dream of one day moving the abandoned house in which they met (which they subsequently bought, fixed up, and lived in) to Paradise Falls in the same fashion as their hero Muntz.  Fast forward to the future, Carl, now a widower, finds himself in a position to realize his and his late wife’s dream…but it won’t be anywhere near as simple as he imagines.

This begins a tale of adventure and laughs that’ll easily rank Up among Pixar’s best.

That’s the tough thing about writing about Pixar movies.  You go into them expecting them to be good.  Pixar movies are like pizza—even when they’re bad (A Bug’s Life, Finding Nemo, Wall-E, I’m looking at you) they’re still pretty good.  You wind up saying much the same things about each: they look spectacular, they sound great, the voice acting is top-notch and even the plots are generally at the very least solid.  Not because you can’t think of anything else to say, mind you, but because it’s true.  Pixar movies are a standard of quality all their own.

That having been said, for a Pixar movie to distinguish itself it must do something unusual.  For instance, my current personal favorite, The Incredibles, went above and beyond in the action department.  It still brought the funny, of course, but it was an action movie unlike anything else.  Up, meanwhile, will distinguish itself too…in comedy.

I can’t remember the last time I laughed so much at a movie, even at a Pixar movie.  The fact that I can laugh this much at a movie means they’ve got a superabundance of fresh, unique jokes that can’t help but provoke laughs.  In much the same way as The Incredibles, sure, Up brought the action, but it was a comedy movie unlike anything else.  Truly, this was a movie to love, and now leaves me with an unsettling question as to just which is my FAVORITE Pixar movie.

In summary, folks…you need to see this movie.  It’s too good to miss.  There are too many laughs and too much action and too many carefully tugged heartstrings and too much sheer fun to avoid this.

Up is one movie that provides EXACTLY what it says on the box.  It is happy in a box.  It is a mood elevator like no other, and a downright chronic Up.

UGO posted an exclusive behind-the-scenes clip from Pixar’s ‘Up.’  Pete Doctor and John Lasseter talk about Dug, the dog who wears a collar that translates his thoughts into speech.

It’s a fun and entertaining clip that gives Pixar fans an inside scoop on the making of this highly anticipated cartoon coming out May 29, 2009.

partlycloudy

Pixar’s Partly Cloudy is a short film about what storks do in the clouds besides delivering babies.  Pixar is a fabulous company in the style of Walt Disney. They make big money maker films, and then on the side make short films to research and develop their technology.