Re: Lightyear (Pixar Film)
Posted: Fri Nov 12, 2021 1:03 pm
I agree, I think he looks better here than in all the previous images.Sotiris wrote:Human Buzz looks better in that angle.
I agree, I think he looks better here than in all the previous images.Sotiris wrote:Human Buzz looks better in that angle.
Curious that the last movie Lasseter would greenlit at Pixar was about a character from the first movie he was involved in. It will be almost six years since he left till we see the first feature greenlit by Docter.This is the last feature to have been greenlit before Pete Docter took over Pixar’s creative reins, so wait for the studio’s 2023 slate and beyond for a sense of his vision.
.Lin Manuel Miranda was approached in 2016 by John Lasseter, the then-chief creative officer of Walt Disney Animation Studios,with an idea for Encanto
Yes, I believe he still is, though I wouldn't be surprised if he leaves. How many times can you bear losing the director's chair? I'm not a WDAS insider and obviously have never met Mr Wellins, but I would imagine he feels very, very frustrated - and that's understandable. We're all human.Rumpelstiltskin wrote:(Assumed Dean Wellins was still at Disney?)
Are they just saying that to justify potential sequels? We went from this being the film the toy line was based on to it being the first in a series of films and the toy line being based on the subsequent entries.D82 wrote:MacLane and his team are looking at Lightyear as a prequel story to later Buzz films that the toy could conceivably have been based on.
Source: https://thewaltdisneycompany.com/disney ... nd-poster/Joining the previously announced Chris Evans, who lends his voice to Buzz, are Keke Palmer, Dale Soules and Taika Waititi as a group of ambitious recruits. Peter Sohn voices Buzz’s robot companion, Sox, and the cast also includes the voices of Uzo Aduba, James Brolin, Mary McDonald-Lewis, Efren Ramirez and Isiah Whitlock Jr.
Also revealed this morning, composer Michael Giacchino, who’s behind the scores for the upcoming film The Batman, as well as Spider-Man: No Way Home, is on board to score Lightyear. Giacchino has a long history with Pixar, as he won an Oscar®, Golden Globe® and Grammy® for the original score in Up. His other Pixar credits include The Incredibles, Ratatouille, Cars 2, Inside Out, Coco and Incredibles 2, among others. The Lightyear Original Motion Picture Soundtrack from Walt Disney Records will be available on June 17, 2022.
Source: https://thekoalition.com/2022/disney-an ... ergalactic
EVIL EMPEROR – Disney and Pixar’s “Lightyear” is a sci-fi action adventure and the definitive origin story of Buzz Lightyear (voice of Chris Evans), the hero who inspired the toy. The story, which follows the legendary Space Ranger on an intergalactic adventure, features none other than Zurg—a seemingly invincible adversary of Buzz who would go on to inspire his own toy.
HERO’S BEST FRIEND — Disney and Pixar’s “Lightyear” is an all-new, original feature film that presents the definitive origin story of Buzz Lightyear (voice of Chris Evans)—the hero who inspired the toy—following the legendary Space Ranger on an intergalactic adventure. But Buzz can’t do it alone—he shares space with a dutiful robot companion cat called Sox (voice of Peter Sohn). A hidden grab bag of gizmos in a cute kitty package, Sox is Buzz’s go-to friend and sidekick.
SCI-FI ACTION ADVENTURE – The definitive origin story of Buzz Lightyear (voice of Chris Evans), the hero who inspired the toy, “Lightyear” follows the legendary Space Ranger on an intergalactic adventure. Also featuring the voices of Uzo Aduba, James Brolin, Mary McDonald-Lewis, Keke Palmer, Efren Ramirez, Peter Sohn, Dale Soules, Taika Waititi and Isiah Whitlock Jr., Disney and Pixar’s “Lightyear” releases June 17, 2022.
TEAMING UP – Disney and Pixar’s “Lightyear” is a sci-fi action adventure and the definitive origin story of Buzz Lightyear (voice of Chris Evans), the hero who inspired the toy. The all-new story follows the legendary Space Ranger on an intergalactic adventure alongside a group of ambitious recruits (voices of Keke Palmer, Taika Waititi and Dale Soules), and their robot companion Sox (voice of Peter Sohn). Also joining the cast are Uzo Aduba, James Brolin, Mary McDonald-Lewis, Efren Ramirez and Isiah Whitlock Jr.
I think so too. Maybe it's because it's a straight sci-fi film and we're not used to that in animation. Maybe it's the uncanny valley factor of having a more realistically-designed animated version of an already-established animated character. Or maybe it's because the concept for this film feels more like a gimmick and that's something we expect from Disney's live-action department.PatrickvD wrote:I feel like this would be more appealing if it were live action for some reason. It’s bit jarring because we know the animated buzz. This is just a slightly more gritty animated buzz… which is just off.