THE INCREDIBLES
(a film review by Mark R. Leeper)
CAPSULE: Pixar does it again with a comedy/action
film about a family of superheroes. Just when they
thought they were out of the superhero business they
get pulled back in. Of course, as a film from Pixar
it is computer-animated, but that is just the
gimmick. The writing is the real attraction. Rating:
low +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10
I think the creative minds at Pixar periodically just look around the office
and see what their people's hobbies and interests are.
Then they build their films around those interests. They have built films
around toys, insects, tropical fish, and now comic book superheroes. I suspect
this is different from other animation studios that probably start with a high
concept. Pixar probably starts with a yen to play with some kind of gizmo
(fish, insects, monsters, toys, whatever) and then let the gizmos suggest the
story. Curiously it is a formula that works well. One really had the feeling
with FINDING NEMO that the animation people wanted to play putting realistic
looking tropical fish on a computer screen and that drove the story. SHARK
TALE, Dreamworks's fish animated film, just seemed to want to retell "The
Reluctant Dragon" with fish. (Probably they chose fish because Pixar was using
them.) But SHARK TALE lacked the joie des poisson that FINDING NEMO had. With
THE INCREDIBLES comic book heroes get the Pixar treatment.
In the comic books Superman never seemed to have much of a personal life. Out
of the blue suit Clark Kent had about as much personality as a bowl of oatmeal.
Originally none of the DC superheroes seemed to have much personal life of
interest. That was the revolution of Marvel comics. In the Marvel Universe
even superheroes have complex private lives and strong personal problems. THE
INCREDIBLES is a film mostly about the personal lives of superheroes. We have
a family of superheroes dealing with each other and deciding how they fit into
society.
Fifteen years ago Mr. Incredible, secretly Bob Parr (voice by Craig T. Nelson),
was a superhero at the top of his form. He spent his day doing
super-good-deeds. But too often he found his good deed were getting him into
legal problems. A superhero with a spandex suit is no match for a lawyer with
a lawsuit. Bob quits the hero business and marries Helen, a.k.a. Elastigirl
(Holly Hunter). Together they go into something like the Witness Protection
Program to be incognito and to try to have some semblance of a normal life even
if they are very abnormal people.
He becomes another frustrated cog in a giant corporate machine.
They have two super-children: the aptly-named Dash (Spencer Fox), who runs like
The Flash, and Violet (Sarah Vowell), who can make herself invisible and who
can create impenetrable force fields, just what the Shrinking Violet in her
needs to avoid the world.
There is also the baby, but he is "normal," Helen insists. With everyone in
the family trying to be normal, Bob can talk superhero only to his friend and
confidant Lucius Best (Samuel L. Jackson), formerly the superhero Frozone.
Both would love to get back into full-time action and still an occasional
heroic feat with the help of a police scanner. Then a mysterious offer from a
secretive organization might just give Bob a chance.
The script written and directed by Brad Bird tells a real story.
The Parr family goes through changes in this film. Essentially they learn the
value of synergy and teamwork. Michael Giacchino's score is usually fun and
when the action gets thick it lapses into a delicious pastiche of John Barry's
"James Bond" action music.
Previously Pixar seems to have been doing everything they could not to do human
figures. The tropical fish look very realistic, but they probably could not
fool a tropical fish. Pixar's few human characters just do not feel human.
This is the first film they have done in which major characters are human. But
still they are still exaggerated caricatures.
Pixar turns out one good film after another and each time they manage to make a
film that can be appreciated by just about all ages. THE INCREDIBLES is
subversive, heart-warming, and fun. I rate it a low +2 on the -4 to +4 scale
or 7/10.
Mark R. Leeper
mleeper@optonline.net
Copyright 2004 Mark R. Leeper
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X-RT-RatingText: 7/10
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