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Did you know that a secret civilization of monsters needs the screams
of children to renew its depleted energy supplies? A company known as
Monsters, Inc., is staffed by brave monsters who are taught the art of
terror, in hopes that they can elicit vocalized fear from kindergartners.
To do this, they utilize dimensional doorways that create instant
thresholds from a factory in the monster’s universe to the bedrooms of
the human children, utilizing their closet doors. Unfortunately, children
are getting tougher and more desensitized to panic, making the monster’s
jobs harder.
Monsters, Inc., also educates its employees that children are carriers
of plague and disease, which beckons for harsh hazmat squads that respond
to all child related contaminates. You didn’t know this? Well, it’s all
explained in Disney and Pixar’s Monsters, Inc.
The daily grind of Monsters living in suburbia known as Monstropolis,
and the parody of company life, is extremely well done. Sulley and Mike
(voiced by John Goodman and Billy Crystal, respectively) are two likable,
monstrous chums who slowly realize the Company has perpetrated a
deception on them and their co-workers. While up to know good, a
particularly vile co-worker named Randall (voiced by Steve Buscemi)
accidentally allows a child, later nicknamed Boo, to enter the monster’s
dimension.
Five-year-old actress Mary Gibbs voices the precocious 2-year-old
toddler lending depth and authenticity that magnifies the great attention
to detail on this film.
Screenwriters Andrew Stanton and Dan Gerson made director Pete
Docter’s story the new standard by which all other animated features must
now compare. The excellent well-balanced script refuses to scrape the
bottom of good taste as some recent comedies have, and it features the
best that Pixar has offered in surreal animated realism. You can count
the hairs on Sulley’s back as they sway in motion and each cast their own
shadow. Randy Newman’s music is subtle and culminates in a clever duet
between Sully and Mike during the closing credits that make you yearn for
more visuals rather than scrolling names.
This film is perfectly constructed to appeal to the widest demographic
and is a wonderful family film. Yes, there are social commentaries about
labor and the work force, yes, there are moral sermons on fear and
priorities, and yes, there are inside jokes and references to Toy Story
characters, and revered, ground breaking animators of the past. Even
without all those things, Monsters, Inc. is a great movie.
* RAY BUFFER, 31, is a professional singer, actor and voice-over
artist.
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