Jordon Briggs

Jun 28, 2015

Staying In: Inside Out Movie Review

 Directed by: Pete Docter and Ronaldo Del Carmen

Written by: Pete Docter, Ronaldo Del Carmen, Meg LeFauve, Josh Cooley 

Produced by: John Lasseter, Mark Nielsen, Jonas Rivera

Starring: Amy Poehler, Phyllis Smith, Bill Hader, Mindy Kaling, Lewis Black, Richard Kind, and Kaitlyn Dias

-Because Danyle

The whole time watching Inside Out, I was wondering about what I was watching. Sometimes when I
 

 
talk or debate with people about politics or culture or current events, I can
 

 
sound abstract when I say things. And in
 

 
my training in film studies, I was taught to read between the lines, using
 

 
theories pertaining to filmmaking. I also learned that media, at all times, is trying to sell you something. Couple that with history, knowledge  and your
 

 
own experience one can come up with an analysis. And at times sometimes by the way my thoughts are articulated, I can come off abstract. I work hard on that. I don’t want to be Big
 

 
Snooty. However I can’t help it. If I see it, I see it. I was definitely not trying to analyze Inside Out. It was #JordonAndDanyleGototheMovies
 

 
day. Danyle is Bae, haha. But I did however see things, which made me wonder what these dudes—Pixar and Disney—were trying to say about human psyche, human
 

 
emotion, and humans. Inside Out, for
 

 
the most part is funny, and creative, and some ways reminds one a Christopher
 

 
Nolan film, for its understanding of theories, and their possible cultural implications. Inside Out It’s about a girl,
 

 
Riley voiced by (Kaitlyn Dias) who moves to a new town, and how the move effects
 

 
her. Before this we see moments of Riley growing up which introduces us  to her characterized emotions, who seemingly
 

 
control Riley’s moods, which effects the way she processes the world, and her
 

 
memories. Joy (Amy Pohler) is the boss. She along side Fear (Bill Hader) Anger
 

 
(Lewis Black) Sadness (Phyllis Smith) and Disgust (Mindy Kaling), man the
 

 
controls and determine how Riley will feel and understand life. Everything is
 

 
all is good, at least to Joy’s standards ( I just want Riley to be happy) until
 

 
Sadness starts to get bored with her role. She barely has one. When she gets
 

 
ahold of a core memory, things start to change. She turns a happy core
 

 
memory into a sad one, which the others do not understand and sends Joy on a
 

 
rampage of  positive intent to keep this
 

 
from happening, and in doing so, marginalizes
 

 
Sadness. This doesn’t work, as Sadness keeps on touching memories, which begins
 

 
to upset the mode of operations until, in an effort to quarantine Sadness, and keep
 

 
Riley happy, Joy ends up getting she and Sadness pulled out of the control
 

 
center, which renders Riley indifferent. The two co-workers must return back to
 

 
the control room in order to get Riley to a normal self—but what is a normal
 

 
self?

Inside Out is as good for its
 

 
story, bare minimum animation, and good writing (not overly witty, and not simplistic)
 

 
as it is partially bad for its message. During the journey, Joy and Sadness meet
 

 
Big Bog (Richard Kind) Riley’s former imaginary friend who becomes their guide
 

 
through the mind.  From “Imagination
 

 
Land” to the center of abstract thought, a “short cut” (hahaha) to the Train of
 

 
Thought, and the sub conscious, Big Bong acts a bridge for Joy and Sadness to
 

 
work  their relationship. The
 

 
relationship each other and themselves, in which either experiences personal
 

 
sadness, or personal joy, during their own separate interactions with Big
 

 
Bog.  Writers and directors, Pete Docter
 

 
and Ronaldo Del Carmen,  seem to be
 

 
saying balance. The fact the  Joy and
 

 
Sadness recognize themselves after crucial moments with the imaginary friend,
 

 
harkens to the ideal that imagination is key to understanding life–Pixar and
 

 
Disney’s bread and butter. The lop side to this–and this is something I saw in
 
Tomorrowland as well—is that in order
 

 
to be able to be understand life—to get out of one’s own way—is to relinquish control to something more powerful.  In Tomorrowland it was artists, and innovators kind of like the ones
 

 
in the Silicone Valley, and in Inside Out,
 

 
it’s your emotions. Who ever heard of balanced emotions? Nobody is  Jesus are they? Or Buddha? The philosophy of
 

 
balance, was never about being in
 

 
control, (since no one can do that) nor was it ever about pacifism. As funny as
 

 
the scene with the two parents voice by Diane Lane and Kyle MacLachlan at
 

 
dinner with Riley is– the special effects bringing us into the mind of either
 

 
parent where we see a panel of emotions planning out what either will say, is
 

 
also very false, and in a way condescending. Basically, no one can think for himself
 

 
or herself, and in order to experience life you shouldn’t. Let someone else do
 

 
the thinking. While Joy has a lot to learn about letting go, and Sadness has a
 

 
lot to learn about being affirmative, the film acts as one big judge of what
 

 
happiness is and isn’t. How can someone determine that for a child?  It’s one big proponent for imagination. As if
 

 
nobody, not even a kid, has one.

#pixar #insideout #disney #animation #summermovies2015 #insideoutmovie

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