-
Monthly Archives
-
Categories
- Competitions (1)
- News (1)
- Out Now (16)
- People (10,928)
- Reviews (1,859)
- Action (501)
- Adventure (272)
- Animated (94)
- Asian (99)
- British (312)
- Comedy (681)
- Crime (320)
- Documentary (47)
- Drama (908)
- European (252)
- Family (187)
- Fantasy (210)
- Film Of The Book (1)
- Horror (272)
- Movies (256)
- Musical (62)
- Mystery (157)
- Romance (305)
- Science Fiction (230)
- Thriller (541)
- TV (10)
- War (86)
- Westerns (27)
John Ratzenberger
Reviews Featuring John Ratzenberger
This is a great fun film that will please adults as much as children and is just as entertaining on repeat viewings in fact, it seems even better the second time around.
With stunning animation and a fantastic script, this is quite possibly the finest feature-length toon ever made. Worth watching over and over again.
A perfect sequel to a perfect original.
A fun family film which shows that even a nobody can become a somebody - but with a story that is all too familiar from other Pixar ventures.
A weirdly charming adventure in ultra-light horror that is strictly for the kids.
Stunningly animated, if somewhat derivative, story of an ordinary, extraordinary family.
Once again, Pixar has crafted an Oscar-worthy film in a genre a lot of people dismiss as kid's stuff. No mere cartoon, WALL-E delivers on all levels AND packs in some pretty relevant statements on the state of the world to boot. Plus, it's quite possibly the best love story of the year.
Shouldve known a studio thats made us love a robot with no dialogue and rat living in a kitchen could make a story out of anything, but I had no idea they could make me cry, laugh, and feel as happy as I did with Up.
An OK diversion for the kids, Cars has a fantastic animation department but lacks when it comes to story and heart.
Its redundant at this point to continue to praise these Pixar films, but they did it again, and its funny and heartbreaking and a little scary and one of the best films of the year.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on May 17, 2003 at 12:00 am, filed under People. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
Both comments and trackbacks are currently closed.