Thursday, May 31, 2012

New Details on the D23 Cars Land Preview Event


D23 just announced some added details for the Carthay Circle Restaurant Dining Experience for the Cars Land Preview event on June 10. The Disneyland Resort has released a limited number of tickets for D23 Members ranging from $50 for a basic preview to $500 of the Carthay Circle Restaurant Dining Experience.

New details about the Carthay Circle Restaurant Dining Experience ($500 per person)
  • A three-course meal and wine presentation at the Carthay Circle Restaurant
  • Wines from the Lasseter Family Winey
  • Greeting guests will be Cars creator John Lasseter and his wife Nancy, along with a representative  from the Lasseter Family Winery
  • A tour of 1901, the exclusive lounge for Club 33 members
  • A commemorative Storytellers statuette
  • Priority boarding for Radiator Springs Racers in Cars Land
  • Admission to Disney California Adventure park for the day you attend
  • Complimentary valet parking at the Downtown Disney District
Wow! What an experience! We're D23 Members and I sure wish we lived closer to California to be a part of this special night. Having John Lasseter greet you, ride Radiator Springs Racers and have a tour of 1901 -  what a dream.

Click here to purchase tickets to this great preview event.

Pixar Post - Julie
info@pixarpost.com

New Brave Trailer - The Suitors

Another Brave trailer has just been released via YouTube.  Titled "The Suitors" this trailer gives us another look at the three Lords and their sons.




What Lord do you favor?  I'm team Macintosh - though I also favor the bumbling Young MacGuffin.

Pixar Post - Julie

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Ed Catmull Speaks of Pixar's New Animation System

It's no surprise that I am in awe of the work that Ed Catmull has put into Pixar.  In this video from the D10 conference you'll hear Ed speak of Pixar's beginning and of the rollout of the new next generation of animation software - which was used in Brave.  



"Brave was built on our whole new animation system" noted Catmull when discussing how many studios fail when they change systems. "The fact is that we didn't have to do that, and for some people they ask 'Why did we do that?' But I believe strongly that you need to do stuff that's just out there, you always need to do something that you just can't justify because it gets your head in a different place."

When Catmull was asked what he would like to do in animation that he hasn't done, his response was very intriguing - as he stated that there are two challenges, watch the video below for his full response.


Pixar Post - Julie

Vinylmation 95 by Artist Noah

The grand opening of WonderGround Gallery in Downtown Disney at Disney Land will open it's doors on June 9.


The WonderGround Gallery will feature an Artist in Residence program, where each month a new artist will call the WonderGround Gallery their home as they work on upcoming projects.  On June 9, artist Noah will release 25 new 9" Lighting McQueen Vinylmations.

The cars are painted in a metallic rainbow flake and finished with a highgloss showroom finish, along with Noah's signature, tattoo ornamentation and pinstripe accents.  See the video for a more in-depth look at Noah's Lighting McQueen Vinylmation.


Release date and signing is June 9, 11am-1pm.  We wish we were going to be in California to pick up one of these amazing collectible works of art.

Pixar Post - Julie

Brave Behind the Scenes clip with commentary from Mark Andrews


If you went to the movies over the Memorial Day holiday and caught one of the re-releases of Ratatouille, Toy Story 3, Wall-E or Up!, you noticed a really cool (yet brief) behind the scenes look at Brave with commentary from Mark Andrews (director), Kelly MacDonald (Voice of Merida) and Katherine Sarafian (Producer).  This video is an abridged version of the trailer that was shown prior to those movies.  Sit back and enjoy!


Pixar Post - T.J.
info@pixarpost.com


Pixar Themed Disney Cruise - Starting in the Fall of 2012


If you're a fan of cruises...and Pixar...Disney Cruise Lines has just released some news that will make you pull out that old hawaiian shirt and slather on some sunscreen.  Starting in the fall of 2012 (first run September 16 through October 14) you can soak in the sun and get your Pixar fix as well while sailing the California coast.  The "Disney Wonder" will be decked out head-to-toe with Pixar details ranging from Pixar Screenings (movies and behind the scenes clips), original Pixar artwork that inspired the movies, Pixar character encounters, and the best part is that artists from Pixar Studios will be aboard the ship to provide an inside look at their creative process.  Who's booking their trip now?

(Video via YouTube - DisneyTravelPros)


Thanks to Stitch Kingdom and Pixar Portal for the info!

Pixar Post - T.J.
info@pixarpost.com

Pixar Shorts - A Short History


As a Pixar fan, the shorts have always been a special part of watching a Pixar Feature Film - but, do you know the story behind the Pixar Shorts?  How fast were the computers?  What short is popular in Europe?  How big was Pete Docter's hair?

All of these questions (and more) will be answered in my review of The Pixar Shorts: A Short History, as seen on the Pixar Short Films Collection (Volume 1).  Note: this video was about 20 minutes long and gave a brief history on the Pixar Shorts.


In the beginning, before Pixar, was...well Pixar, just with a different name - at the time they were the Computer Division of Lucas Films.  "We had a Vax-780, which is a million instructions per second, which is less than 1% of what you would find in a modern day PDA. The computer in a cell phone was 100 times faster than the one we had at Lucas Films" said Pixar co-founder Loren Carpenter.


The first short idea came from Alvy Ray Smith - that short was The Adventures of Andre and Wally B.


It was around this time when Ed Catmull went out and hired John Lasseter to come and animate for the Computer Division at Lucas Films.


The team asked John to create a character based on simple geometric shapes, spheres, cones and boxes.  John had sketched his version of Andre and had his heart set on a soft-edged character rather than a rigid-looking character.  Alvy had stated that the technology wasn't really there to do soft-edged, model-able characters.


John really wanted to get the characters body to bend as he felt that it would express more emotion if it could move in a bendable way.  John mentioned that he went to Ed Catmull and in classic "Catmull style" said "Hmmm, let me think about this" and he went away, came back and he had invented the teardrop. The bottom was a hemisphere the top was a hemisphere and the computer filled in the middle and it bent.


John was so inspired by his animation of Andre that he came up with a second character - a bumblebee with big jellybean/water balloon feet named Wally B.  


Bill Reeves created the particle system that allowed the control of millions of individual particles - such as leaves on trees.  Bill also developed the Motion Blur effect that was first used in Andre and Wally B - which made the difference in becoming commercially successful and not.  The team used these effects on the short so that they could show off these animation milestones at the annual SIGGRAPH conference.  

During the conference, which was held in a large auditorium, there were previews of logos that danced around the screen - albeit all circled digital animation.  The crowd was loving what they were seeing, the Andre and Wally B. team sat in anticipation - then cheers erupted.  The team didn't finish rendering the short film - so part of it was in wire frame, but John said that the audience didn't even notice, they were captivated by what the team had accomplished.


When Steve Jobs bought the computer division of Lucas films in 1986 (officially forming the company Pixar), the company mainly sold computers and software - though still in the background was the animation group. (To read more about the Pixar computer - click to see what Loren Carpenter gifted the Computer History Musuem).


In the beginning of Pixar, Bill Reeves was teaching John Lasseter how to model.  John sat at his desk, which had a Luxo lamp sitting on it, staring at it he noticed the simple geometric shapes and began to model the lamp.  Moving the lamp up and down, side to side, the lamp began to look alive.  Around this time is when Ed Catmull came into John's office and they discussed creating a new short to show off at the upcoming SIGGRAPH conference - officially announcing themselves as Pixar.

While John was working on the short, Tom Porter walked into the graphics room with his son Spencer.  John took notice of the proportions of Tom compared to his son and that's when the idea of the "baby" lamp Luxo Jr. came about.


When Luxo Jr. premiered at SIGGRAPH, Craig Good said "As soon as the lamp moved people started going crazy and then the ball came in and they were going nuts!"  Before the end of the minute and a half short, the audience were on their feet in a standing ovation.  John stated that a fellow computer enthusiast came over and asked him if the lamp was a "Mom" or "Dad", John said to himself, "we did it".  The Pixar team wanted to convey emotion through the story of their animation and they did it!


An interesting side note on the production of Luxo Jr. was the ripples of the cord and the rolling of the ball.  John stated that it was the hardest thing to do on the short.  There he sat in front of all these expensive computers while holding a calculator and using his simple "art school math" trying to figure out how if a ball was "this" size and is moving "this" fast - how far would it move.

John then went to Eben Ostby and asked, "Please can you do something with the computer to help me with this"?  Eben in return created a procedural animation so the ball that John animated would follow the path he created as well as make the ball rotate accurately.  However, there was no such luck with the ripples of the cord, John had to animate those by hand.


Loren Carpenter explained how not everyone had computers in their office, like we do today.  There was one animation station that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The next short that the Pixar team did was Red's Dream.  This is what John Lasseter calls Pixar's blue days, as the short was set on a rainy night in a city with a somewhat sad ending.  Although this short was more melancholy, John noted that Red's Dream is very popular in Europe.


The third Pixar short was Tin Toy, and by a consensus of the team was the hardest of the shorts so far.  This short was the first time the team used Renderman, the first time they introduced a human character (the scary baby) and first time they showcased soft shadows.


In the scene where the Tin Toy hides from the baby under the couch, everyone at Pixar who could model had to create a toy.  Craig Good created the airplane, Loren Carpenter created the fire hydrant and Ed Catmull created the elephant.  


Tin Toy was the first 3D computer animation to win an Academy Award.  John Lasseter said "The most important thing that Tin Toy did was plant the idea in our heads, the idea of toys being alive, and out of that grew Toy Story."


Just after the release of their fourth short Knick Knack, Pixar was experiencing some dark days in the animation department because the shorts did not bring money into Pixar.  It was at this time Steve Jobs felt it was time to reorganize the company and make big changes (the changes are not really delved into in the DVD in depth, but if you're looking for more details on this restructuring process, read The Pixar Touch.

Pixar Animation Studios first started in the TV commercial business to gain more exposure.  Peter Schneider (the former President of Walt Disney Feature Animation) tried for the third time to persuade John Lasseter back to the Walt Disney Company.  In return John asked Peter to come to Pixar.  That's when Peter approached Ed Catmull in regards to an animated feature film.

Among the many changes going on at the Studios, Craig Good said he can remember a great memory when he walked into the lunchroom one day and they handed out Pixar Animation Studios T-shirts. "That was such a huge turnaround that I cried" stated Craig.  Knowing that the team had gone from working in a cramped hallway to now being a real animation studio was a dream.



Ed thought it would be best to start with a half hour TV special, Peter said 'If you can do a half hour, you can do 90 minutes' and Ed said 'OK, I can buy that'.

While making Toy Story, the Pixar crew stopped doing short films.  It was Ed and John that decided to start to shorts back up as that's what helped make Pixar who they are.  John stated that Pixar will continue to do shorts films since it helped him as an artist and director and he wants to make sure that he gives that opportunity to other animators within the studio.


In this fun photo you can see the Pixar Animation Studios crew, including John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton and Pete Docter with a very fun hairstyle!  Can you name the other Pixarians?

"It's difficult to separate luck and talent when you have a fine result like this, but we had a pretty good mix of both." - Loren Carpenter

Pixar Post - Julie

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Finding Nemo Blu-ray Release Date Dec.4th

After what seems to feel like an eternity, Finding Nemo will be released on Blu-ray this Dec. 4th!  The details of the bonus features have yet to be released, but we can assume it will be filled with the original DVD material as well as some added features - perhaps more Round Table discussions! (fingers crossed)

Amazon still does not show a pre-order but we'll be sure to keep you posted on when you can place your orders.


Don't miss Finding Nemo in 3D this September 14 in theaters.

Pixar Post - Julie
info@pixarpost.com

Brave Featurette "Speak To Her" and Emma Thompson Interview

Thanks to Upcoming Pixar for noting a new set of videos to get a little more Brave insight. The first video from Yahoo movies showcases a scene where Elinor is stressed because she's not sure how to get through to Merida. Fergus offers some parenting advice sprinkled with some humor of course!


The second video from an Australian news channel shows some brief footage of Emma Thompson (who voices Queen Elinor). Emma briefly discusses parenting, Brave and her favorite Pixar movie, Wall-e. By the way, you've got to love local news banter - I had to laugh when the reporter suggests that Brave may have been inspired by The Hunger Games. That's just plain hilarious...as if Pixar made this movie in a few months since the craze of The Hunger Games took off!


Pixar Post - T.J.

Buzz Lightyear Stars in New Disney Commercial

In this commercial (posted on May 23 by DisneyParks) for Disney's California Adventure, Buzz Lightyear detects "High Levels of Happiness" as he explores the park - including Cars Land, Radiator Springs Racers.  I'd have to disagree with Buzz at the end when he says to, "take the stairs" - Tower of Terror is my favorite ride at Disney!


Pixar Post - Julie

Brave Blu Ray Cover Art and Release Date - November 2012

As if you weren't excited enough to catch Brave in theaters on June 22 - now you can add November to your list of dates to be excited for as well. PixarBlog has posted a photo of another German ad (similar to the one last week that showed the released date for Shorts Volume 2) that shows the cover art for the Brave Blu-Ray as well as noting a release date of November 2012. Assuming that the U.S. and German release dates are the same (which I could only imagine Pixar would release it during November because of the holiday season)...mark your calendars!


UPDATE: Click to see more details on the Brave Blu-Ray and DVD release date.

Pixar Post - T.J.

Monday, May 28, 2012

AMC Theatre Brave Promotion

AMC Theatre's are running a promotion for Pixar's newest film Brave - "Find the Triplets and Get a Badge for Bravery".

Just find Harris, Hamish and Hubert in the theatre, once you located them go to the Service desk and there you will be handed your "Badge of Bravery".  The "badges" are really stickers - but fun for kids (or kids at heart) nonetheless.

Here is a look at the poster that was located in the lobby of our AMC Theatre - note: it was hung in a corner of the lobby and hard to notice, so look hard at your local AMC Theatre.

We found the Triplets!  

Our Badges of Bravery.  The employees at our AMC Theatre were kind enough to give us one of each.

Pixar Post - Julie
info@pixarpost.com

New Cars Land Concept Art

Disney released some new Cars Land concept art today, showing Radiator Springs Racers, Mater's Junkyard Jamboree and Luigi's Flying Tires - as well as Flo-s V8 Cafe, Radiator Springs Curios and Arial art concepts. Cars Land located on 12-acres in Disney's California Adventure, will open to the public on June 15.
We think it would be great if Pixar released an "Art of Cars Land" book so that we could have all this great artwork at our fingertips - including some of the stories behind the construction. What do you think?












Pixar Post - Julie

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Cutting Class Brave Featurette - Merida Swordfighting

Along the vein of the other Brave featurettes, the Disney homepage today is featuring a video of a Merida receiving a "lesson" from her Father, King Fergus.  While Queen Elinor is assuming that King Fergus will be teaching their daughter the history of their family using books, he ends up teaching Merida using a method she connects with much more - a friendly sword fight.


Pixar Post - T.J.
info@pixarpost.com

Next Toy Story Short to be called Partysaurus?

Film Blogs has posted details from a YouTube video with veteran techno/dance artist BT, that reveals some potential details for the next Toy Story Short.  I can't help but think that he wasn't supposed to have said all of that!

In the video (starting at 1:17) BT says that, "I wish I didn't have to rush out of here, I'm in the middle of scoring a film for Pixar right now.  It's a short for Toy Story and I'm not allowed to say the whole story, but quite literally, it's like a Toy Story rave - and I'm actually not kidding either.  The toys get into all these shenanigans and it's like pounding club music.  So it's really not very Pixar, but in a really hysterical way, everyone laughs really hard when they see it."


It is also speculated in an interview that BT does with Billboard that the short will be titled Partysaurus.  This can only make someone assume that it will be starring our good pal, Rex!

So, assuming this is true (and I think it is), what do you think about the upcoming short?  Sounds pretty hilarious to me - I could only imagine Rex's worried look getting into a whole bunch of accidental mischief (at least that's how my mind is seeing it at this point).

Pixar Post - T.J.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Pixar Short Films Volume 2 to Release in November?

The forum DVDizzy.com recently posted a screenshot of a German advertisement showing a release date of November 2012 for the Blu Ray, Pixar Short Films - Volume 2.  Speculation of a release date started after an interview with La Luna director, Enrico Casarosa, noted that the DVD would be coming out while performing a telephone interview with William Jardine of the A113 Animation blog.  Whether this is the exact release month worldwide is yet to be determined - time will tell as we get closer to November.


Pixar Post - T.J.