Bolt Streaming
Jeudi, mars 18th, 2010![]() |
Bolt Streaming.
Movie Title: Bolt Bolt is available for streaming or downloading. |
Despite having far suitable product for distribution via Pixar, Disney tranquil tries to churn out their believe animation these days. While the golden days of yesteryear are gone and the resurgence succor in the early 90s are long gradual us, it’s nice to gape disney establish out a couple obliging titles here and there.
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“Paddle” is gorgeous grand. It’s predictable, to be obvious. In fact, some of it reminds me of Disney’s other unusual dog film, “Beverly Hills Chihuahua,” in that a dog is removed from a somewhat priviliged background and forced to live like a regular dog. Like any helpful animal movie, Dawdle meets friends along the design. Upstaging Tear is Rhino, a hamster who worships Stride and moves around in a puny plastic ball.
What Disney has succeeded in doing is injecting a small heart help into their product. It’s something they’ve really not been able to successfully do since “Lilo and Stitch.” There’s a really touching scene between Tear and a stray cat named Mittens that not only captures the heart of the film, but really makes you reflect twice about animal abandonment!
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Performances are superb all around and the animation is top notch. For some reason, I feel that Disney composed wants to compete against their contain partner Pixar. Aloof, the characters aren’t quite as multidimensional. And considering the hero’s predicament to gain serve to his owner Penny, Penny really gets petite time in this. The film has a fun road movie quality and the film makers seemed to have fun with the action sequences. It’s a fun glance, but glowing far from Pixar quality.
“Lunge” really blew me away; this is the first time that I have seen a CGI film that shows a level of mastery that allows the visual artistry of the film to be the driver rather than the capabilities of the computer. The characters have the typical CGI look–extremely well rendered, with the 3D type inspect you’d examine. However, the backgrounds have the behold of a archaic painting. Art Director Paul Felix should be commended for this mixing of styles which works out extremely well. The overall lighting, colors, and style of this film are its hallmark in my idea. The tale is really not anything that will blow you away; in fact, it is somewhat predictable; however, with the characterizations, action sequences, visual quality, and the vocal talents tedious the characters, “High-tail” becomes a must-see.
In a nutshell: Accelerate (John Travolta) is a super-hero canine…at least in his acquire mind and to TV viewers everywhere. In order to protect his performance and preserve it “genuine,” TV execs have sheltered Perambulate and he believes that what he accomplishes on his display is all done on his believe, not through special effects. Plug is deeply devoted to his human costar, Penny, a itsy-bitsy girl (Miley Cyrus), who is also deeply devoted to him as well. Mistakenly thinking that Penny is in grief at the hands of the TV villains, Travel escapes his trailer and finds himself in the trusty world, where his orderly powers are not so elegant. He accidentally gets shipped to NYC, and thinks that the pink styrofoam peanuts clinging to his fur are the cause of his loss of power. With the aid of a hamster named Rhino (Brand Walton) and a street-tough kitten, Mittens (Susie Essman, who is Astonishing!), Trudge must derive his method help to Hollywood and his beloved Penny. It is a record of growth, maturity, and love; again, nothing really earth-shattering, but in this recycled chronicle that we have seen in other movies, it is done so well that you forgive the studio for its predictability.
BONUS MATERIAL:
“Tidy Rhino” (4:27) –Rhino the hamster gets the spotlight in this piquant short focusing on him. Cute!
Deleted Scenes: 2 deleted scenes (”Dog Fight in Vegas” and “River Sequence”) with introductions by directors Chris Williams and Byron Howard. They are both shown in storyboard construct and neither is really missed from the final relate. They were not primitive mainly because they wanted to heighten the emotional level of Race finding out about his lack of powers.
“In Session with John Travolta & Miley Cyrus” (:59) –This one is like a blip on the radar…very short! Interviews with both stars as they win ready to yell the duet from the movie “I Notion I Lost You.” They are truly a mutual admiration society, with Travolta comparing Cyrus to the appeal of Olivia Newton John in “Grease.”
“I Concept I Lost You” Music Video–Interspersed with footage of Travolta & Cyrus and clips from the film.
Bolt’s Be-Awesome Mission–High def video game is somewhat more titillating and fun than the typical Disney video game extra. Initiate at level 1, The Burning Warehouse and observe how far you can progress! Takes a minute bit of mastering of the controls on the remote.
“A Current Breed of Directors: A Filmmakers’ Meander” (4:34) — The two directors discuss what it was like to execute “Flow,” and how John Lasseter was a spacious mentor and guide in the process. Fun to watch the sizable plastic hamster ball that the animators played in to diffuse tensions around the office. Obviously immense camaraderie was apparent with the team, as they also stopped shaving in unison during the last 9-10 weeks of work on the film.
“Act, Advise! The Voices of Stir” (9:47) –Always challenging to inspect how each actor has to picture their lines independently, making the process of playing off the other characters next to impossible. Really takes talent to beget it work. Travolta began in voicework (commercials), so this was a return to his roots. He comments that “You can only contribute your issue…the most piquant this was seeing the marriage with the animation.” Trace Walton, a Disney animation team member, did the scratch yell of Rhino, and was so perfect that he was cast in the final movie. The trusty video of him finding this news out is touching to inspect as you stare his unbridled enthusiasm. Susie Essman (”Curb Your Enthusiasm”), the command of Mittens, was inflamed to expose her map acting skills, but was told by the Disney team to be herself. They wanted a tough kitten with a Recent York accent. As Susie says, “It’s honest me.” Disappointingly enough, she never met Travolta during her recording sessions, even though practically every scene in the movie involves her character interacting with Travolta’s.
Bolt Art Galleries: Character Beget, Color Script, Storyboard Art, and Visual Development. Determined is unbelievable to search for this ample pieces of art filling up a widescreen high-def TV. The quality is really unbelievable, and clear beats the old-fashioned days of DVD when art gallery images were in low-res and fairly limited.
“Creating the World of Journey” (6:45) : The extraordinary work of art director Paul Felix and lighting director Adolph Lusinsky is detailed here. They actually visited the many locations across the country to accomplish clear that they were able to steal the light of each new scenic setting. Felix wanted the painterly looks of traditionally spirited Disney films, and he definitely succeeds. Animated to look this featurette.
Also included:
Digital Copy disc and a DVD of the feature with all the bonus features except the art gallery and video game.
SPECS:
Video: 1080p High Def/1.78:1. Disney is to be commended for having high-def extras as well. Whereas most studios go to the usual crappy video quality, Disney consistently upgrades even the extras. Especially scrumptious for the video game.
Audio: English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio (48 kHz/24-bit) and Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital. I actually had to turn the volume down a bit, as this movie really gives the speakers a work-out. Sound comes out of all your speakers, and with a number of action sequences, the subwoofer really rumbles! Extremely impressive! Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish.
Tri Slim
TriSlim
