Movie Review: ‘Inside Out’ Is The Gorgeous Stuff That Emotions Are Made Of

Admin 27-Jun-2015 10:25:15 Inothernews

Movie Review: ‘Inside Out’ Is The Gorgeous Stuff That Emotions Are Made Of


Voices of: Amy Poehler, Phyllis Smith, Bill Hader, Lewis Black, Mindy Kaling, Kaitlyn Dias, Richard Kindm Diane Lane, Kyle MacLachlan Director: Pete Docter Pixar's latest offering, Inside Out, is yet another interesting take on that tough process of growing up and all the highs, lows and irrational hissy fits it entails. The movie introduces us to the cerebral cityscape that the mind of 11-year-old Riley is. The prospect of her moving house and city tugs at your regular-growing-up-movie-heartstrings. Spoilers ahead. Duh. | Source: Pixar Post



Apparently, everything is in your head. Every single move you make, every single emotion you emote, every single dream you dream is all a concoction cooked up by those feelings in your brain. The idea can get slightly creepy. But the personification of emotions is all in good fun.

So, these emotions, literally, run amok. It's like they are playing a video-game, replete with a button-filled-satisfying-console. The all-star cast is great and all but my favourite is Bing Bong, Riley’s former imaginary friend, voiced by Richard Kind.

Of course, the five emotions closely resemble their temperament — Anger’s head literally sets on fire, Fear is a bookish twerp, Sadness is blue. You get the drift. All the feelings help Riley in one way or the other... except Sadness.

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No one understands why she is around. She is this smurf-coloured-yet-oh-so-unlike-any-smurfball-creature who wears nerdy glasses (geek alert) and has trouble interacting with any other feeling. The moaning-myrtle-like-voice-and-thoughts of 'Blue' seem out of place in the beginning of the movie. But, she has as big a part to play as any of the other feelings. The biggest, actually, but you guessed that already, right?

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