Imagine a movie that is at once wholly original and also completely
familiar, startlingly simplistic in its
scope yet containing multitudes of creativity and cavernous depths of
emotion, and that can also make you laugh routinely, thrill you
unexpectedly, and move you to near tears consistently. You would be
describing Pixar’s newest feature “Inside Out,” a journey inside the mind of an
11-old-girl from Minnesota who has just moved to her new home in San Francisco. She endures a first day at a new school, a disappointing hockey tryout, and vegan pizza. Little
stuff it seems to grown ups but to Riley it is the greatest
obstacle she has gone through in a life that hereto had been filled with
consistently joyful days. It is also the greatest obstacle her brain trust has
ever handled. And by brain trust I mean Pixar’s anthropomorphized metaphor for
her mind: a team of emotions that help Riley out from a mission control room in her brain.
The emotions have been perfectly cast from the broad and ever more
productive landscape of quality television entertainment. At the center is Joy,
voiced by the ever effervescent Amy Poehler (Parks and Recreation), Disgust, an
appropriately snarky Mindy Kaling (The Mindy Project), Fear, a fever pitched
Bill Hader (SNL), Anger, Lewis Black (The Daily Show) as himself, and finally
Sadness, Phyllis Smith (The Office) in all her humble muted Eeyore-like glory.
They function, in a tribute to Pixar’s ability to have it all, as part comedy
team, part tearjerk squad, and part science lesson. (If their was an emotion
left out, I would posit “desire” which would be the antithesis of Disgust much
like Anger and Fear or Joy and Sadness play off of each other so well. Perhaps
“Desire” shows up at 13).
This is the sort of movie that transcends movie-ness. Instead of talking
about whether the movie looked good or was funny, you want to talk about how
the movie was about what it was about. After all, everything that is shown onscreen corresponds to something everybody has experienced but
does not really understand. We have these unconscious bodies that operate
seemingly disconnected with our consciousness. What connect the two are our
feelings. But how do those work? Pixar probably is not that far off. The
emotions experience Riley’s life through her frontal lobe (this is a bit like
the front windshield of a starship). They can’t tell Riley what to do, but they
do color her experiences as they form memories (represented by luminous balls).
If it is a happy memory, then Joy turns it yellow. If it is a fearful memory,
Fear turns it purple. At the end of the day before the colored balls are
shipped off to long-term memory (which apparently is consistent with what
really happens when we are asleep), if the wall of short-term memory balls are
mostly yellow than the team feels that they have had a good day. Their mission is to keep Riley happy. This presents a problem with the
character of Sadness whose presence and efforts to help generally disrupt the mission. At one point Joy draws a circle around her and
tells her to not leave it as a way of doing her job correctly. Psychologists have a
word for this I believe. It’s called Repression. That’s a rather heavy topic for
an animated movie to tackle, but Pixar goes even further. Near the denouement
of this movie they will tackle the big D. Depression. And the way they do it
will probably make you cry and afterwords you will probably think about why you
cried and find a very plausible explanation in the way Pixar has portrayed the workings of the emotions in your mind. And you will probably feel better in an
enlightened way because feeling sad is sometimes the most healthy way to
respond to external stimuli. Psychologists would call that Emotional Maturity,
an attribute that the marketers in our modern society have a habit of scorning.
Fear it, they say, and buy this thing that will make you happy again. No, says
Pixar, Sadness is there for a reason and the wise person would understand its
utility. This is the sort of thing that Pixar has made a children’s movie
about. To do that as perfectly as they demonstrate is to be a masters of
emotions themselves. I tell you this: not since Hitchcock has a moviemaker been
so in tune with what the audience is experiencing moment to moment.
But I get too serious. Let’s talk about comedy and how Pixar does not
waste a moment in the entire movie when a joke can be somehow shoehorned in.
First of all, the brain trust with all their distinct personalities form as
good a comedy troupe as there can be. Through a mishap Joy and
Sadness are stranded in Long Term Memory and need to find their way back to the control room. Their journey takes them through several wonderful set pieces as Imagination Land, Abstract Thought, and Dreamworks Productions that has among other things a unicorn as a movie star. They meet many comic characters. My favorite are the brain
beureaucrats. One team works at Long Term memory and “forget” any
balls that are rarely used. For instance they take away all of Riley’s piano
lessons except “Heart and Soul” and “Chopstix”. But the really funny part is
what they keep: a commercial jingle for ‘Triple Dent’ gum which they reuse again and again as a practical joke. Riley is destined to never ever forget
it. Another good example is the two guards in front of the door of the
subconscious (which hides an angry clown) that perform what sounds like an
Abbot and Costello routine about whose hat is “my hat”. Then another time Joy
knocks over two boxes, one of Facts and the other of Opinions. As she tries to put them back she
exclaims how similar they look. And I haven’t even mentioned the imaginary friend voiced by Richard Kind who is the best part along with everything else.
“Inside Out” is one of Pixar’s best movies. And I say one of the best
because I happen to believe “Wall-E” is one of the best movies ever made. So is
this movie. When Wall-E (and “The Dark Knight”) failed to get a Best Picture
nomination the Academy expanded the field to ten pictures the next year. That
should easily include “Inside Out” this year and I’m not saying it should win
(I can’t because I haven’t seen all the other movies) but I would be totally
fine with the possibility.
You have given all of us an amazing review. It's interesting to read it as I have so many friends who also loved the movie and also acknowledged what you have expressed. Myself, I thought the story was a bit too Disneyland-ish with its ending. I did enjoy the simplistic way they actualized the brain and emotions, but I thought it was very peripheral and cartoonish. I do love reading your thoughtful reviews!
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