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Up (Four-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo + BD Live) [Blu-ray]

Average Customer Rating: 4.5
Release Date: 2009-11-10
Publisher:Disney*Pixar
Actors: Edward Asner; Jordan Nagai; John Ratzenberger; Christopher Plummer; Bob Peterson
Aspect ratio:1.78:1
Audience rating:PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Format: Animated; Color; Widescreen
Language:Unknown: English; Unknown: French; Unknown: Spanish; Subtitled: French; Subtitled: Spanish; Original Language: English;
Writer Bob Peterson; Pete Docter
Producer Andrew Stanton; Denise Ream; John Lasseter
Writer Thomas McCarthy
Weight:1 pounds

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Product description

 

Walt Disney Pictures and Pixar Animation Studios take moviegoers up, up and away on one of the funniest adventures of all time with their latest comedy-fantasy. Up follows the uplifting tale of 78-year-old balloon salesman Carl Fredricksen, who finally fulfills his lifelong dream of a great adventure when he ties thousands of balloons to his house and flies away to the wilds of South America. But he discovers all too late that his biggest nightmare has stowed away on the trip an overly optimistic 8-year-old Wilderness Explorer named Russell. Their journey to a lost world, where they encounter some strange, exotic and surprising characters, is filled with hilarity, emotion and wildly imaginative adventure.


At a time when too many animated films consist of anthropomorphized animals cracking sitcom one-liners and flatulence jokes, the warmth, originality, humor, and unflagging imagination of Up feel as welcome as rain in a desert. Carl Fredericksen (voice by Ed Asner) ranks among the most unlikely heroes in recent animation history. A 78- year-old curmudgeon, he enjoyed his modest life as a balloon seller because he shared it with his adventurous wife Ellie (Ellie Docter). But she died, leaving him with memories and the awareness that they never made their dream journey to Paradise Falls in South America. When well-meaning officials consign Carl to Shady Oaks Retirement Home, he rigs thousands of helium balloons to his house and floats to South America. The journey's scarcely begun when he discovers a stowaway: Russell (Jordan Nagai), a chubby, maladroit Wilderness Explorer Scout who's out to earn his Elderly Assistance Badge. In the tropical jungle, Carl and Russell find more than they bargained for: Charles Muntz (Christopher Plummer), a crazed explorer whose newsreels once inspired Carl and Ellie; Kevin, an exotic bird with a weakness for chocolate; and Dug (Bob Peterson), an endearingly dim golden retriever fitted with a voice box. More importantly, the travelers discover they need each other: Russell needs a (grand)father figure; Carl needs someone to enliven his life without Ellie. Together, they learn that sharing ice-cream cones and counting the passing cars can be more meaningful than feats of daring-do and distant horizons. Pete Docter (Monsters, Inc. ) and Bob Peterson direct the film with consummate skill and taste, allowing the poignant moments to unfold without dialogue to Michael Giacchnio's vibrant score. Building on their work in The Incredibles and Ratatouille, the Pixar crew offers nuanced animation of the stylized characters. Even by Pixar's elevated standards, Up is an exceptional film that will appeal of audiences of all ages. Rated PG for some peril and action. --Charles Solomon

Stills from Up (Click for larger image)





Customer reviews


« Funny & Emotional Film - Good for All Ages »
I had been hearing good things about this movie, and finally sat down to watch it this past weekend... And what a GREAT movie.
First of all, it had me balling in the first 20 minutes, but the movie really carried itself well, without making it too long. Secondly, what I really liked about the movie, is that it did have a lot of adult themes in it (death of a spouse, divorce, neglectful parents, problems conceiving children), it was still great for kids.
Great story, and great movie :)
Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2010-07-31
« Great movie but maybe not for really little kids. »
I had not seen this movie before we watched it as a whole family. It's a very beautiful story but it does contain peril. Hours after watching this movie my daughter had a nightmare that her mother died and it really bothered her. Otherwise the movie is amazing and the 4 disc set is really cool too!
Rating: (4 out of 5) @ 2010-07-28
« Wildly Imaginitive, and Wonderful! »
This 2009 flick is Pixar's most imaginitive film to date.
In the 1930s, a wide-eyed lad with glasses, flight goggles, and a helmet over them named Carl Fredericksen(Jeremy Leary)sits before a movie screen in a cinema full of equally awed viewers, watching a newsreel featuring his personal hero, aviator and explorer, Charles Muntz( Christopher Plummer)have his career chronicled in an episode ending with his discreditation over a discovery he claimed to have made.Muntz vows never to return from the jungles of South America until he can prove his discovery valid.
Upon leaving the theatre, Carl's young life skips merrily along, until, to his great surprise, he meets the wild, red-haired Ellie(Elie Docter), with whom the staid and quiet young boy shares a passion for flight, and develops a desire to travel to Pardise Falls in South America, since Charles Muntz is her personal hero, as well.
Eventually, they grow up, and marry to the delight of Ellie's boisterous backwoods family, and Carl's elegantly staid family.
They go directly to their dream house, the old boarded-up cottage where they used to pretend they were exploring in a dirigible.
Over the years, Carl is employed as a balloon vendor at a local zoo, where Ellie works as a guide.In their spare time, they picnic on a hill and describe what they see in the clouds.
After learning that Ellie cannot have children, Carl brings her out of her depression by reminder her of her dream to visit South America, and they begin saving for it. Their dream is waylaid by unforseen expenses, and Life's calamities.Life continues, and they grow old together. Sadly Ellie passes away before their dream can be fullfilled.
Carl retired to the house he and Ellie shared. But things will not be quiet for very long.
The city literally begins to spring up around the Frederickson's cottage. Danny Mann's construction worker, Steve, working on behalf of his foreman, Tom(John Ratzenberger), unsuccessfully tries for the umpteenth time to buy the property.
At the same time, a Junior Wilderness explorer named Russell( Jordan Nagai), arrives at Carl's door, hoping to acquire his "Helping the Elderly" badge.Carl declines the offer, and diverts the boy.
Legal trouble results in Carl's being committed to an assisted living home. Two male nurses(Donald Fullilove, and Jess Harrell) arrive to escort him to his new home.
But guided by Ellie's spirit, he trumps them all by releasing a mountain of balloons tied to the roof of his house, which pull the house away from its moorings, to the astonishment of the nurses, of a little girl playing in her bedroom in her apartment highrise, whose world is momentarily but gloriously bathed in an array of colors by the balloon's reflections, and by sundry townspeople.
"We're on our way, Ellie!" Carl solemnly declares as he steers the flying wooden vessel, making his late wife's childhood imaginings a reality.
He is given an unexpected companion for the journey. Young Russell was caught on the porch when the voyage began, and while Carl is initially reluctant to let him in, the chatty lad is soon given a chance to earn his badge for assisting the eldrly in a way he never expected.
They reach South America with a thunderous jolt, and manage to tie themselves to the floating house as they explore the jungle.
They encounter a rainbow colored flightless bird, whom Russell entices with chocolate and names "Kevin", and a mysterious dog with a talking collar named Dug (Bob Peterson). Once again, curmudgeonly Carl accepts the company of both, only reluctantly.But the companionship of both will be invaluable.
The old man and the boy form a bond during their adventure. The widowered septegenarian learns why the young scout is in need of a father figure who will stand beside him when he receives his final badge.
As they doggedly approach Paradise Falls, the spot where Ellie had dreamt of having a house, since childhood, they find themselves diverted by a pack of canines, who, like Dug, have collars enabling them to talk. The most notable of these are the Doberman, Alpha( also voiced by Bob Peterson), and Beta (Delroy Lindo), a bulldog, and another dog named Gamma(Jerome Ranft).
The dogs'owner, as it turns out, is Charles Muntz, and Carl is delighted to meet his boyhood hero.But Carl and Russell realize Muntz's sinister designs on Kevin and must fight to save the bird.Despite Carl's initial refusal to get involved when Kevin is seized, Russell's derring-do forces him to act, ultimately giving the phrase, "Spirit of Adventure" a whole new meaning.
In the end, we see how a lonely widower's life is renewed after loss, and how sorrow gives way to new adventures, new hope, and new joys, if we allow it.
I would give this delightful fantasy the Ellie Badge.
In the final analysis, "Up" is simply "Up-lifting"!
Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2010-07-26
« Wonderful Set! »
I look this set! An amazing buy for the money, and I would do it again in a heartbeat! Everything works perfectly!
Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2010-07-26
« Great movie and great service »
Its a great movie and a good deal. Almost 4 cds just for a few bucks. And the digital copy is great.

The delivery was really really fast!
Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2010-07-11
Quantity:
List Price: $45.99
Our Price: $15.00 (Save $30.99)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days