Up Movie

Up
Rating:
Run Time: 89 min
MPAA Rating: PG
Released: 2009
Directors: Pete Docter
Genre/Type: Children's/Family
Family-Oriented Adventure
Producers: Jonas Rivera
Plot Synopsis by Jason Buchanan
A feisty septuagenarian teams with a fearless wilderness ranger to do battle with a vicious band of beasts and villains in this computer-animated adventure scripted by Pixar veteran Bob Peterson and co-directed by Peterson and Monsters, Inc. director Peter Docter. Carl Fredricksen is a 78-year-old balloon salesman. His entire life, Carl has longed to wander the wilds of South America. Then, one day, the irascible senior citizen shocks his neighbors by tying thousands of balloons to his home and finally taking flight. But Carl isn't alone on his once-in-a-lifetime journey, because stowed away on his front porch is an excitable eight-year-old wilderness explorer named Russell. Later, as the house touches down on the world's second largest continent, Carl and his unlikely traveling companion step outside to discover that not only is their new front lawn considerably larger, but that the predators therein are much more ferocious than anything they ever faced back home.

Back to the top Images of Up

Popular Products on Up

Videos of Up

Back to the top Top Questions about Up

Tips and tricks to get pages out sooner PC World Staff (PC World (US online)) 24/11/2009 10:10:00 Tags: print speed, printers Raw printer speeds keep improving each year, but we always seem to want documents to come out just a little bit fa...
an has always been finding ways to speed up things so as to save his time. One of the top most concerns for people nowadays is how to speed up their computer. There are many simple solutions to this issue ranging from hardware up gradation ...
Two leading Anglican bishops are demanding that Christians turn back the tide of political correctness by wearing religious symbols during the Christmas period. Comments 2 | Comment on this article The Bishops of Lichfield and Chichester ha...

Cast

Actors Character Born
Ed Asner Carl Fredricksen Nov 15, 1929 in Kansas City, KS
Christopher Plummer Charles Muntz Dec 13, 1927 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
John Ratzenberger Construction Foreman Tom Apr 6, 1947 in Bridgeport, CT
Bob Peterson Dug
Jordan Nagai Russell
Delroy Lindo Beta Nov 18, 1952
Jérôme Ranft Gamma
Bob Peterson Alpha

Back to the topReview

Review by Perry Seibert
There might not be a more dependable name in all of Hollywood than Pixar, and their tenth animated feature, Up, continues the studio's remarkable hot streak.

As is usually the case, the premise is elegantly simple: in order to fulfill a promise to his dearly departed adventure-loving wife, senior citizen Carl Fredricksen (Ed Asner) flies to South America by hitching thousands of helium balloons to the house they built together. As silly as that may sound, director Pete Docter captures the audience's heart right from the beginning, thanks to an opening ten minutes that encapsulate the happy, decades-long marriage Carl shared with his dear Ellie. Following the duo from their first meeting as children who idolized the same superstar adventurer, to their tragic inability to have children, to their final moments together, this sweet, nearly dialogue-free sequence stands as arguably the most poignant in Pixar history -- right alongside WALL-E's spacewalk, and Jessie's abandonment in Toy Story 2. It's a remarkably emotional way to start things off, but it sets the audience up for all the amazing things that follow precisely because you never question why Carl acts on his obsession.

But, of course, he doesn't go on this journey by himself. Wilderness Scout Russell (Jordan Nagai) -- think "green" Boy Scout -- happens to be on Carl's porch right when the house takes off. Russell enthusiastically offers his assistance because if he can help an old person, he'll be able to earn the final badge he needs to become a Senior Wilderness Scout -- and gain his dad's elusive attention. They're eventually joined by Dug (Bob Peterson), a dog that talks with the help of a special collar invented by his owner, who turns out to have a special role in Carl's past.

Divulging any more of the plot would be just plain mean, because above all else, Up is an old-fashioned adventure story -- a throwback to the kind of breathless storytelling that made serials popular in the early days of movies. So much of the fun in watching Up comes from never quite being sure what thrill is right around the corner. You get the feeling that, had Pixar been in business 25 years ago, Steven Spielberg might have made this movie for them as a follow-up to Raiders of the Lost Ark.

But it's not just the anything-could-happen excitement that gives the film a Spielberg vibe, it's also the genuine emotion at the heart of all that adventure. There is real grief, longing, and heartbreak in both Carl and Russell, and that makes us care about what happens to them. In fact, the way that Up grounds its fantastical events in such emotion could also have made it a worthy successor to E.T.

And just as it would be a mistake to dismiss Raiders as just another textbook adventure film or E.T. as just an average lovable-alien-eats-Reese's Pieces flick, it would be equally foolish to think of Up as little more than another CG family film. Pixar doesn't really make family films in the way we've come to use that term -- a dismissive shorthand for something blandly inoffensive. No, Pixar lets smart, quirky artists indulge their creativity, and the results are often the kind of universally appreciated movies that helped make Hollywood a dream factory in the first place. Up fits proudly into that tradition.
Table of Contents