The Boss Baby: Family Business look like a bad movie. It is indeed a bad film and the most disappointing DreamWorks film of all time. Why do they really need to make another one after the first one did poorly with critics and audiences? I bet a lot of bad films were box-office successes that they want to make more sequels so they can piss off the wrong target audience.
The film is based on the 2010 picture book The Boss Baby and its 2016 sequel The Bossier Baby by Marla Frazee. The film follows the now-adult Templeton brothers as they are brought back together after Tim's daughter Tina requests their help for Baby Corp to stop a professor from erasing childhoods worldwide.
The casting is fine and I love James Marsden's role in the film. Alec Baldwin playing a baby is still a big WTF moment in all of cinema. The animation is decent although I still have a problem with the lighting they use for the film. Why a lot of animation nowadays targeted for a young audiences use so much lighting like Cocomelon? I can hardly understand why a lot of children love colors, rainbows, clouds, happy music, dancing and fun is why the world try to make children happy around the world for these vibes to feel them entertained with the parents, just like with dance parties in movie endings. Oh look! We saved the day! Let's dance cause, the movie is over! Whatever. I like the soundtrack and Tom McGrath's directing skills is fun. I had to give credit for his part of the film except, it wasn't a good movie to begin with. I still do not like the humor at all as it tense to displeased a lot of people who just want a good comedy, but fails. The usage of product placement is weird like that one part when the babies use Mentos. Oh, they're using Mentos to make the Coca-Colas explode! Boom!
After watching The Boss Baby: Family Business, I would never eat Mentos and drink Coca-Cola ever again after one bad popcorn flick. It wasn't a popcorn flick, it was just embarrassment. It is no family business at all.
Disney/Pixar's Coco is like the most beautiful animated film ever made in a long time. I knew this is the Día de los Muertos movie Pixar wanted to make for a long time. I remember when the trailers came out, people were like, eh. Fearing that the movie would be a copy of The Book of Life. Even it's a original story on its own take, after the movie came out, they ended up loving it.
The story follows a 12-year-old boy in Mexico named Miguel who is accidentally transported to the Land of the Dead, where he seeks the help of his deceased musician great-great-grandfather to return him to his family and reverse their ban on music.
The casting is spectacular with the likes of, Anthony Gonzalez, Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt. The Mexican/Hispanic representation is amazing, respecting their culture and capturing the spirit of both worlds. I gotta admit, the animation is outstanding and embrace on whole new levels. It goes colorful when we get to the Land of the Dead. The cinematography is amazing to look at and heartwarming music. Did you know that most of the animation is made on a tablet? That's so cool! There are a lot of memorable moments and funny jokes in the film. The musical scenes are really well executed and enjoy the melody of each song they play out. It sometimes can get a bit sad cause of the emotional scenes. The third act goes really hard cause of the visuals and action. The ending is the best in decades in all of Pixar's history. "Remember Me" is the most beautiful song in a long time.
Not only does Coco deliver visual and visceral gusto, it also celebrates the reasons why we appreciate music, families, and Pixar itself with both vigor and poignance. It's full of emotions and color that would blow you away in the levels of a flawless work of art.
I find it weird that the movie came out a day after John Lasseter's allegations were revealed in the public and internet and how many people were mad by the news of Lasseter as someone you used to love not being a good person in twist of a predator. I knew this came out on a imperfect timing when Coco has a scene with a plot twist villain that Miguel used to endorse was revealed to be a murderer. Uh oh. I guess Coco learn us a moral lesson on never to meet your heroes in real-life or the people you used to look up to are revealed to be bad people in the first place. The news of Lasseter being a predator in the workplace were revealed a day after my birthday and the worst birthday wish I had to witness in all of humanity.
Does the gag of Abuelita hating and banning on music remind you a lot of a typical gag in The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning when King Trition strictly bans music in all of his kingdom and he forbids Ariel and everyone to not play music anywhere? Similar premise much?
The King of Cubes
The Boss Baby: Family Business look like a bad movie. It is indeed a bad film and the most disappointing DreamWorks film of all time. Why do they really need to make another one after the first one did poorly with critics and audiences? I bet a lot of bad films were box-office successes that they want to make more sequels so they can piss off the wrong target audience.
The film is based on the 2010 picture book The Boss Baby and its 2016 sequel The Bossier Baby by Marla Frazee. The film follows the now-adult Templeton brothers as they are brought back together after Tim's daughter Tina requests their help for Baby Corp to stop a professor from erasing childhoods worldwide.
The casting is fine and I love James Marsden's role in the film. Alec Baldwin playing a baby is still a big WTF moment in all of cinema. The animation is decent although I still have a problem with the lighting they use for the film. Why a lot of animation nowadays targeted for a young audiences use so much lighting like Cocomelon? I can hardly understand why a lot of children love colors, rainbows, clouds, happy music, dancing and fun is why the world try to make children happy around the world for these vibes to feel them entertained with the parents, just like with dance parties in movie endings. Oh look! We saved the day! Let's dance cause, the movie is over! Whatever. I like the soundtrack and Tom McGrath's directing skills is fun. I had to give credit for his part of the film except, it wasn't a good movie to begin with. I still do not like the humor at all as it tense to displeased a lot of people who just want a good comedy, but fails. The usage of product placement is weird like that one part when the babies use Mentos. Oh, they're using Mentos to make the Coca-Colas explode! Boom!
After watching The Boss Baby: Family Business, I would never eat Mentos and drink Coca-Cola ever again after one bad popcorn flick. It wasn't a popcorn flick, it was just embarrassment. It is no family business at all.
3 months ago | [YT] | 1
View 0 replies
The King of Cubes
Disney/Pixar's Coco is like the most beautiful animated film ever made in a long time. I knew this is the Día de los Muertos movie Pixar wanted to make for a long time. I remember when the trailers came out, people were like, eh. Fearing that the movie would be a copy of The Book of Life. Even it's a original story on its own take, after the movie came out, they ended up loving it.
The story follows a 12-year-old boy in Mexico named Miguel who is accidentally transported to the Land of the Dead, where he seeks the help of his deceased musician great-great-grandfather to return him to his family and reverse their ban on music.
The casting is spectacular with the likes of, Anthony Gonzalez, Gael García Bernal, Benjamin Bratt. The Mexican/Hispanic representation is amazing, respecting their culture and capturing the spirit of both worlds. I gotta admit, the animation is outstanding and embrace on whole new levels. It goes colorful when we get to the Land of the Dead. The cinematography is amazing to look at and heartwarming music. Did you know that most of the animation is made on a tablet? That's so cool! There are a lot of memorable moments and funny jokes in the film. The musical scenes are really well executed and enjoy the melody of each song they play out. It sometimes can get a bit sad cause of the emotional scenes. The third act goes really hard cause of the visuals and action. The ending is the best in decades in all of Pixar's history. "Remember Me" is the most beautiful song in a long time.
Not only does Coco deliver visual and visceral gusto, it also celebrates the reasons why we appreciate music, families, and Pixar itself with both vigor and poignance. It's full of emotions and color that would blow you away in the levels of a flawless work of art.
I find it weird that the movie came out a day after John Lasseter's allegations were revealed in the public and internet and how many people were mad by the news of Lasseter as someone you used to love not being a good person in twist of a predator. I knew this came out on a imperfect timing when Coco has a scene with a plot twist villain that Miguel used to endorse was revealed to be a murderer. Uh oh. I guess Coco learn us a moral lesson on never to meet your heroes in real-life or the people you used to look up to are revealed to be bad people in the first place. The news of Lasseter being a predator in the workplace were revealed a day after my birthday and the worst birthday wish I had to witness in all of humanity.
Does the gag of Abuelita hating and banning on music remind you a lot of a typical gag in The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning when King Trition strictly bans music in all of his kingdom and he forbids Ariel and everyone to not play music anywhere? Similar premise much?
3 months ago | [YT] | 1
View 0 replies
The King of Cubes
Peanuts are good.
4 months ago | [YT] | 1
View 0 replies
The King of Cubes
Cake or cookie?
5 months ago | [YT] | 1
View 0 replies
The King of Cubes
Who like bagels with butter?
7 months ago | [YT] | 2
View 0 replies