DEL REVES (INSIDE OUT) - explorar la mente de una niña (by Pixar)

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Copiando un post que dejó Dr_X en el hilo propio sobre Pixar (;)):

Estaba leyendo esta última noticia y creo que es realmente buena ya que van a seguir apostando en gran medida por historias originales. El calendario quedaría así:

[...]

  • Película de Pete Docter sobre el interior de la mente humana (verano 2014)

Pues bien. Hoy ha salido más info al respecto del título subrayado en negrita.

El 7º arte:

La cinta de Pixar de Pete Docter explorará la mente de una niña

John Lasseter, de Disney•Pixar apareció en el show de Charlie Rose [...] y dio algunos detalles del futuro proyecto también de Pixar que será dirigido por Pete Docter, el cual todavía no tiene título, si bien sabemos que su estreno será el 30 de mayo de 2014.

Lasseter dijo al respecto:

Pete Docter, de 'Monsters, Inc.' y 'Up' hará una nueva película con nosotros, la cual tendrá lugar dentro de la mente de una niña. La película tratará sus emociones como personaje, será algo que no hemos visto jamás anteriormente

Anteriormente, Pixar había revelado lo siguiente sobre este mismo proyecto: “Pixar ha llevado al espectador a mundos increíbles y viajes extraordinarios: desde las más oscuras pofundidades del océano hasta la cima de las montañas Tepui en América del Sur; desde la metrópoli ficticia de Monstropolis hasta una fantasía futurista en el espacio exterior. Pete Docter ('Up', 'Monsters, Inc.') y el productor Jonas Rivera ('Up') crearán ahora una película en un mundo que todo el mundo conoce, pero que nadie ha visto jamás: el mundo a través de la mente humana”.


La verdad es que el proyecto promete y mucho. Si Docter inyecta la sensibilidad de Up al respecto puede que salga un título realmente interesante.

A la espera de más.


PD: En Coming soon hacen referencia al asunto.
 
Respuesta: Próximo proyecto Pixar: explorar la mente de una niña

El título está mal, debería ser "Próximo proyecto Pixar: engordar más el culo el Lassetter".
 
Respuesta: Próximo proyecto Pixar: explorar la mente de una niña

Jaja, ¿más? Al paso que va me lo veo con poncho y lavando su gorra de gordo con detergente perfumado. :cuniao
 
Cositas:

LHP:
http://www.lashorasperdidas.com/ind...-de-las-proximas-peliculas-de-disney-y-pixar/

Se llamará "Inside out".

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El proyecto más interesante de toda la nueva línea de Pixar; una película original de Pete Docter (Monstruos S.A., Up) que nos sumergirá en el interior la mente de una niña de once años; a través de cinco personajes dentro de su cabeza conoceremos todos sus sentimientos y exploraremos su forma de pensar. Esta familia disfuncional de emociones estará formada por Rabia (el cómico Lewis Black), Disgusto (Mindy Kaling, The Office), Miedo (Bill Hader, Saturday Night Live), Júbilo (Amy Poehler, Parks and Recreation) y Tristeza (Phyllis Smith, The Office).

Marcad el calendario para junio de 2015.
 
http://www.elseptimoarte.net/nuevos...a-mente--proximo-proyecto-de-pixar-20802.html

Nuevos detalles de 'Inside Out (Divertida-mente)', próximo proyecto de Pixar

Por primera vez desde 2005, cuando el estudio se tomó un año de descanso entre 'Los Increíbles' y 'Cars', Pixar no realizará ningún lanzamiento durante este 2014. Inicialmente este mes estaba destinado al estreno de 'Dinosapiens', pero tras los problemas de producción surgidos el año pasado y la posterior salida de Bob Peterson de la dirección, su lanzamiento fue pospuesto a noviembre de 2015 sin que ninguna otra película ocupara su lugar.

Tras 'Monsters University', el próximo proyecto de Pixar será en junio de 2015 y se titulará, 'Inside Out (Divertida-mente)', una historia que tiene lugar dentro de la mente de una niña y cuyos protagonistas son versiones antropomorfizadas de las emociones de la joven.

A pesar de que todavía falta algo más de un año para el estreno, una nueva sinopsis de 'Inside Out' ha sido revelada para arrojar algo más de luz sobre la película. La cinta contará con las voces de Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Mindy Kaling, Phyllis Smith y Lewis Black, llegará el 19 de junio de 2015 y contará con el siguiente argumento:

Desde América del Sur para una metrópoli llena de monstruos, el director Pete Docter ha llevado al público a lugares únicos e imaginativos. En 2015, él nos llevará a la más extraordinaria ubicación de todos - el interior de la mente de una niña llamada Riley de 11 años de edad.

El crecimiento puede ser un camino lleno de baches, y no es diferente para Riley, quien se desarraiga de su vida cuando su padre comienza un nuevo trabajo en San Francisco. Como todos nosotros, Riley es guiada por sus emociones - Alegría (Amy Poehler), Miedo (Bill Hader), Ira (Lewis Black), Enfado (Mindy Kaling) y Tristeza (Phyllis Smith).

Las emociones viven en Cuarteles Generales, el centro de control de la mente de Riley, donde ayudan a asesorarla a lo largo de su vida cotidiana. Con Riley y sus emociones esforzándose por adaptarse a una nueva vida en San Francisco, la confusión se produce en Cuarteles Generales. Aunque la alegría, la emoción principal y más importante de Riley, trata de mantener una actitud positiva, el conflicto de emociones surge sobre la mejor manera de proceder en una nueva ciudad, una casa y una escuela."
 
http://www.movieweb.com/news/pixars...e-imagination-nightmares-and-abstract-thought

Pixar's 'Inside Out' Will Travel Through the Imagination, Nightmares and Abstract Thought. Director Pete Docter sheds new light on the story of Pixar's new animated feature 'Inside Out', which is set inside the mind of a young girl.


Last month, Pixar released the first plot details for their upcoming animated feature Inside Out, which centers on an all-star voice cast portraying the emotions inside an 11-year-old girl named Riley Anderson, such as Joy (Amy Poehler), Fear (Bill Hader), Anger (Lewis Black), Disgust (Mindy Kaling) and Sadness (Phyllis Smith). Director Pete Docter shed even more light on the story during an hour-long presentation at the Annency International Film Festival in France yesterday, which he described as the most high-concept idea ever to come out of the hallowed halls of Pixar.

The filmmaker screened the first five minutes of the movie, most of which was still in animatic form, which introduces viewers to Riley as a baby, along with all of her emotions, which all live inside her brain at a base known as Headquarters. The emotions all watch as Riley gets her first memory, which they can bring up on a projection at Headquarters. The opening scenes also show Riley begin to grow up, and how the emotions all cope with those changes, ending with an encounter where Joy can't seem to comprehend why Sadness is needed.

As we saw in the first photo from August, each emotion has a different color. These characters are trying to help Riley process new memories, each coded with the emotion's corresponding color, which are filed away every night and erased in Long Term Storage by the Forgetters, who are described as having similarities to the Minions from Despicable Me. Pete Docter also explained that Riley and her parents relocate from a "quite rural home" to San Francisco at an impressionable age, which forces Joy and Sadness out of the "control panel" to explore unexplored areas of her mind.

Another scene was shown where Fear, Anger and Disgust try to keep everything under control during a family dinner, while Joy and Sadness take a tour through Riley's thinking process, where they discover areas such as Imagination Land, described by the director as, "a giant amusement park full of everything Riley has ever daydreamed about," a movie studio where nightmares are made, the Train of Thought, which can dart off in any direction at a moment's notice, and a zone known as Abstract Thought, which Pete Docter said he had the most fun translating to the screen.

After the presentation, the director explained that he approached the idea from a poetic standpoint, not a scientific perspective.

"I was pretty certain someone must have done an idea like this before. We're approaching it from a poetic viewpoint. It's not even trying to be scientific at all."


The director explained that Inside Out is based on his experiences in watching his young daughter grow up, and how he noticed that when she turned 12 years old, her "childhood joy" began to disappear.

"It's based on a strong emotional experience I had watching my daughter grow up. There is something that is lost when you grow up - and the film became a way to explore that change on an emotional level."


He added that one of the big challenges was to make sure audiences will be able to understand what is happening with all of the emotions.

"One of the big things in this film has been simplifying and making things 'gettable.'"


The movie has already went through internal test screenings at Pixar. Pete Docter shared a story from an early screening where a young boy learned to overcome his fear as a result of watching Inside Out.

"One family came and watched the movie. The son had always had trouble going off the diving board, and that day, he dove off, and he said, 'I just felt like Fear was driving, and I needed to make him step aside.'"


The filmmaker added that the process of making this movie has changed the way he looks at his own emotions.

"There's this whole system that's basically designed to operate in your subconscious. All of the impulses that control your decisions, actions, stuff like that is out of your control, which is not the way I like to think of myself at all."


He added that the movie is told from a parent's point of view, although he initially thought he was making a movie about his young daughter.

"I thought I was making a film about my daughter, but the truth is, I'm more making a film about myself in relation to my daughter and understanding that. The film is told from a parent's point of view, and being a parent, I just sort of slipped into that, I guess. It's definitely made me think again about the way I grew up, my adolescence, and even on a day-to-day basis what I'm doing and why."
 
LHP:

Poster de Lava, el corto de Pixar que acompañará a Inside Out, el nuevo film de la compañía. Es un musical dirigido por James Ford Murphy, actual jefe de animación de la empresa, informa Film Divider http://cort.as/D84W


http://www.comingsoon.net/news/movienews.php?id=119756

CS Gets an Early Look at Pixar's Inside Out

Set for release in theaters in exactly one year, Disney•Pixar's Inside Out celebrated with a special event tonight at the Director's Guild of America in Hollywood, California. ComingSoon.net was there, so read on to hear what we thought of the newly-revealed footage! You can also check out the new logo, the following official synopsis and the stylish poster art for the studio's new short film, "Lava," set to hit theaters with Inside Out on June 19, 2015.

From an adventurous balloon ride above the clouds to a monster-filled metropolis, Academy Award-winning director Pete Docter (Monsters, Inc., Up) has taken audiences to unique and imaginative places. In Disney•Pixar’s original movie, Inside Out, he will take us to the most extraordinary location of all — inside the mind.

Growing up can be a bumpy road, and it's no exception for Riley, who is uprooted from her Midwest life when her father starts a new job in San Francisco. Like all of us, Riley is guided by her emotions – Joy (Amy Poehler), Fear (Bill Hader), Anger (Lewis Black), Disgust (Mindy Kaling) and Sadness (Phyllis Smith). The emotions live in Headquarters, the control center inside Riley’s mind, where they help advise her through everyday life. As Riley and her emotions struggle to adjust to a new life in San Francisco, turmoil ensues in Headquarters. Although Joy, Riley's main and most important emotion, tries to keep things positive, the emotions conflict on how best to navigate a new city, house and school.

Inside Out easily won over a small audience of press with a presentation by Docter and producer Jonas Rivera.

"We're pouring our lives into this one," said Rivera, who opened with a cute anecdote about how he originally joined the company.

He had just graduated from San Francisco State University's College of Liberal and Creative Arts when h called up the then-decidedly-smaller Pixar, inquiring as to whether or not they might have an internship program.

"No," a voice told him. "But come on down! We need help!"

That was 1994, the summer before the studio released its very first feature film, Toy Story. Since then, "Pixar's First Intern" has risen through the ranks and produced 2009's Academy Award-winning Up, directed by Docter. (Who had previously directed the studio's Monsters, Inc.) Twenty years later, Rivera is standing next Docter, one year away for their second big project together: Inside Out .

It was just down the street from the Guild, the pair explain, that they went to celebrate Up's success. Over flaming margaritas (they showed us the selfies), they began to plan their next project.

It was important, Docter explained, to find something that was emotionally resonant for him as some of the themes he had previously explored. Looking into his personal life, he discovered something that both troubled and intrigued him about his daughter, Elie (who provided the voice of "Young Ellie" in the opening scene of Up). As Docter demonstrated with photos, Elie -- whose early years were filled with smiles -- began, as she turned 12, to turn away from the camera, seemingly brooding and adopting a bit more cynical attitude to her father.

The necessary sadness of that transition as his baby girl became a teen became the earliest puzzle piece in what is rapidly becoming next summer's Inside Out . The film, as it exists now, is still largely animatics as animators race to meet Pixar's high standards for breaking new ground in animation.

Having found their central theme, Docter and Rivera asked themselves the same question they asked to help realize Up and Monsters, Inc..

"How could we take audiences someplace that they relate to, but had never been before?"

Enter Elie's fictionalized alter-ego, Riley Anderson. She's not the protagonist, however. She's the setting.

There's an effortlessness to the way that Inside Out delivers its exposition in a simple opening. We see the birth of Riley alongside her very first emotion, Joy. It's only 33 seconds, however, before the second emotion appears: Sadness.

In the "real world," baby Riley begins to cry.

One by one and with rapid progression, we meet the rest of the cast and learn their importance: Anger keeps things fair, Disgust avoids bad things and Fear keeps Riley safe. It's Sadness, though, whose value becomes the focus of the film's thematic exploration.

In many ways, Inside Out constitutes a true work of science fiction. Docter and Rivera read everything they could about neurology and how various scientists perceive the spectrum of our emotional makeup. All of it heavily influenced the design of the film which, for the first time in Pixar's history, embraces a 2D style of squash and stretch animation.

As if that's not enough of a challenge for the animators, the world of the mind (and the characters within it) are actually made of tiny, tiny pieces of energy. Watching the footage on a big screen makes one appreciate the intricate design of the project, as one can make out the incredibly compact makeup of what, from a distance, appear to be solid objects and characters.

The headquarters of the mind is what Rivera described as a "combination 'It's a Small World' and Apple store". One emotion controls the mind at a time, but all stand behind the control panel on the ready. As memories are processed, they appear as billiard ball-sized spheres of light, colored with whatever emotion was in control at the time of their capture. Stored on a short term memory wall, the balls are brighter the more powerful the memory.

On one side of the controls is a very precious box in which Riley's core memories are stored: the single most important moments that define who she is. At the end of the night, the rest of the memories are sent away to long-term, but the core ones stick around, always on the ready.

The opening five minutes has each member of the team showing off their special skills. Disgust warns baby Riley away from broccoli ("It's green and it's not shaped like a dinosaur!" Kaling's Disgust exclaims). Riley is told that she won't get dessert if she doesn't eat her broccoli, which launches Black's Anger in to action (he's holding a newspaper with the headline "No Dessert!").

The inciting incident of Inside Out is an Anderson family move from Minnesota to San Francisco. Riley is none too happy about the whole affair, and Sadness begins to act up. Joy tries to deal with Sadness, but something goes wrong and they wind up getting lost in the recesses of the mind.

In addition to showcasing the scene previously revealed at last year's D23 Expo, Docter and Rivera teased a number of other neat things that we'll see next summer. If you read on, please be aware that the rest of what was teased may be considered a bit spoilery.

Concept art shown included an image of the long-term memory, a sprawling field of little spheres stretching out in all direction. There, too, are the Forgetters, little blue avacado-shaped creatures that are in charge of deciding which memories need to be discarded.

At one point in their journey, Joy and Sadness visit "Imagination Land". Joy is disinherited to see that attractions like a fairy tale castle have fallen to disarray and are being torn down in place of new ones like "The Imaginary Boyfriend Generator" and the "Swear Word Library". Another piece of concept art offered a look at where dreams are made: A movie studio with poster attractions on the outside wall with titles like like, "You're Falling Into a Hole!" (complete with a Saul Bass-inspired design).

Joy and Sadness are able to travel thanks to a "Train of Thought," which generates tracks as it moves forward. Unfortunately, though, the train is easily lost and tends to generate tracks in the wrong direction. This, at one point, leads to Joy and Sadness winding up in abstract though a world that looks to be Pixar's Picasso.

"This film has had a profound effect on those who have seen it," said Jim Morris, Pixar's General Manager and Executive Vice President. "…it changes the way you think about thinking."

The presentation ended with a surprise screening of "Lava," the new short film that will be in theaters with Inside Out. Directed by Jim Murphy and produced by Andrea Warren (who has said to have just started work on a new, still unannounced Pixar film), "Lava" is a straight-up musical, based on a song Murphy wrote. He even serenaded the audience with his Hawaiian themed song just before the shot ran.

Warren asked that we keep details to a minimum, but it's safe to say that "Lava" will be a new favorite for many a Pixar fan. Warren said that he wanted to create a song that would give people the same feeling he got the first time he heard Israel "Iz" Kaʻanoʻi Kamakawiwoʻole singing "Somewhere Over the Rainbow". Imagine that, tied to the story of of a very lonely volcano who wishes he had "someone to lava".
 
http://www.elseptimoarte.net/primer...pixar--inside-out-divertida-mente--21575.html

Primera imagen de Riley, la protagonista de lo nuevo de Pixar, 'Inside Out'

A través de The Pixar Times nos hacemos eco del lanzamiento de una primera imagen de Riley, esto es, de la protagonista de la que en España conoceremos como 'Inside Out' (a secas), la siguiente producción de Pixar Animation Studios a estrenar en junio de 2015. Escrita por Michael Arndt ('Toy Story 3') y dirigida por Pete Docter ('Monstruos SA', 'Up'), recordemos que buena parte de la acción de la cinta sucederá en el interior de la mente de una niña de 11 años, la mencionada Riley, cuyas emociones se enfrenta al igual que ella a una nueva vida en una nueva ciudad. La imagen, en realidad, es una doble captura de imagen procedente de un vídeo promocional de la compañía disponible para los suscriptores del nuevo servicio bautizado como Disney Movies Anywhere, una especie de almacén digital para películas accesible desde distintos reproductores.

Desde América del Sur hasta una metrópoli llena de monstruos, el director Pete Docter ha llevado al público a lugares únicos e imaginativos. En 2015, él nos llevará a la más extraordinaria ubicación de todos - el interior de la mente de una niña llamada Riley de 11 años de edad.

El crecimiento puede ser un camino lleno de baches, y no es diferente para Riley, quien se desarraiga de su vida cuando su padre comienza un nuevo trabajo en San Francisco. Como todos nosotros, Riley es guiada por sus emociones - Alegría (Amy Poehler), Miedo (Bill Hader), Ira (Lewis Black), Enfado (Mindy Kaling) y Tristeza (Phyllis Smith).

Las emociones viven en Cuarteles Generales, el centro de control de la mente de Riley, donde ayudan a asesorarla a lo largo de su vida cotidiana. Con Riley y sus emociones esforzándose por adaptarse a una nueva vida en San Francisco, la confusión se produce en Cuarteles Generales. Aunque la Alegría, la emoción principal y más importante de Riley, trata de mantener una actitud positiva, el conflicto de emociones surge sobre la mejor manera de proceder en una nueva ciudad, una casa y una escuela".

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http://www.movieweb.com/pixar-lava-movie-clip

Pixar's 'Lava' Clip Introduces Singing Volcano Uku
Pixar's new short film 'Lava', which centers on a volcano named Uku, will be attached to prints of 'Inside Out' in theaters next June.

Just one day after getting our first look at the upcoming Disney short film Feast, Pixar has unveiled a new clip from their next short Lava, which will be attached to Inside Out in theaters June 19.

Musician Kuana Torres Kahele provides the voice for the lonely volcano Uku, who breaks out into song in this scene, following the photo that debuted last month. Take a look at this new footage, then read on for more details from director James Ford Murphy.

LavaSinging Volcano
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Director James Ford Murphy, who also serves as Pixar's head of animation, revealed that they initially struggled a lot with how to bring a three-mile wide volcano to life.

We struggled with it a lot. But I feel like, once we were able to embrace the limitations of it, it unlocked all sorts of possibilities. I love that about animation: You can really make a mountain come alive. You can't do that in another medium."


The story centers on the lonely Uku, who falls in love with another volcano named Lele, which is told primarily through Uku's music and unique facial expressions. James Ford Murphy also revealed the primary inspirations he used to come up with Uku's face, Jackie Gleason and the bulldog in Chuck Jones' classic cartoon "Feed the Kity."

"That cartoon has so much heart and so much of the humor comes from genuine emotion. That was a major inspiration for us."


The filmmaker also revealed that he was inspired to make Lava because of his love for the Hawaiian islands as a child growing up in Detroit, and the classic Israel Kamakawiwo'ole rendition of "Somewhere Over the Rainbow."

"I thought that if I could marry the rich imagery and with the power and emotion of music, then I could really make something cool."
 
Me daba mucha pereza pero después de este trailer le tengo muchas ganas. Puede ser de lo mejorcito que hayan hecho a poco que les den cancha a los padres.
 
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