Docter conceivedSoul in January 2016, examining the origins ofhuman personalities and the concept ofdeterminism. During his first meeting with Jones, he pitched the idea about spacetime involving souls with personalities. The film's producers consulted various jazz musicians, includingHerbie Hancock andTerri Lyne Carrington, and animated its musical sequences using the sessions of musicianJon Batiste as a reference. Apart from Batiste's original jazz compositions, musiciansTrent Reznor andAtticus Ross composedthe film's score. Production onSoul lasted for four years on an approximate $150million budget. It was the first Pixar film to feature a black lead.
Soul premiered at theBFI London Film Festival on October 11, 2020, and was scheduled for theatrical release on June 19 and November 20; however, it was postponed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. It was releaseddirect-to-streaming onDisney+ on December 25, 2020, accompanied by the short filmBurrow, and in theaters in countries without the streaming service. It was theatrically released in the United States on January 12, 2024, and grossed over $122 million at the worldwide box office.
In New York City, pianist Joe Gardner teaches music part-time at a middle school while dreaming of playing jazz professionally. When he receives an offer to teach full-time, his mother Libba urges him to accept, although Joe is resistant. Joe learns famous jazz musician Dorothea Williams has an opening in her quartet and auditions at a jazz club. Impressed with his piano playing, Dorothea hires him for that night's show. As Joe heads off, his excitement distracts him, and he dies falling down an openmanhole.
Joe finds himself a disembodied soul heading into anafterlife called the "Great Beyond". Unwilling to die, he tries to escape but ends up in the "Great Before" (aka "You Seminar"), a realmwhere new souls are prepared for life on Earth with guidance from otherworldly counselors — all named Jerry — and experienced souls who act as mentors. Each new soul has a badge that grants passage to Earth once it has been completely filled in with interests and personality traits. Mistaken for a mentor, Joe is assigned to 22, a stubborn soul who has been in the Great Before for thousands of years and hopes to avoid Earth. Intrigued by Joe's desperation to return to an unremarkable life, 22 agrees to let Joe help find her "spark", which will complete her badge and enable Joe to use it to return home. After Joe fails several attempts to find 22 a passion, they visit "the Zone", a place that souls enter when their passions createa euphoric trance, but which becomes a trap for obsessed, lost souls. They meet Moonwind, asign twirler who regularly enters the Zone to rescue lost souls, and helps the duo locate Joe's soulless body in a hospital.
Joe returns to Earth but accidentally brings 22 with him, and they awaken in Joe's hospital room in the wrong bodies, with 22 inhabiting Joe's body and Joe inhabiting the body of atherapy cat. They locate Moonwind, who agrees to meet at the jazz club that night to restore Joe to his body. In the meantime, 22 settles into Joe's body and starts to find enjoyment in trivial things like food, wind, and music. She holds poignant conversations with Libba, Joe's student Connie, and Joe's barber Dez, deepening her understanding of life. Meanwhile, Terry, the being in charge of counting souls, discovers the count is off and arrives on Earth to find Joe.
As the day ends, Joe and 22 visit Moonwind to return Joe to his body, but 22, having finally discovered the joy of living, refuses to leave Joe's body and flees. As Joe chases her through a subway station, Terry disconnects them from life and returns them to the Great Before. 22 discovers her badge is complete, but Joe bitterly insists it was the result of experiencing life in his body with his preferences and that she has no purpose of her own. Distraught, 22 throws the badge at him and retreats into the Zone. A Jerry informs Joe that a spark is not a soul's purpose in life, but Joe refuses to believe this and discreetly uses 22's badge to return to Earth.
The show at the jazz club is successful, but Joe is confused when it does not bring the fulfillment he was expecting. Looking at small objects that 22 collected while occupying his body, he recalls the moments they had enjoyed together and realizes these experiences gave 22 her spark. Joe plays piano and enters the Zone to return 22's badge but discovers she has become a lost soul, obsessed with the idea that she has no purpose. Joe chases her down and shows her a helicopter leaf she collected to remind her of her time on Earth. They realize that a spark is not a soul's purpose, but simply a desire to live. Joe's actions restore 22 to normal; he returns her badge and accompanies her for as long as he can on her journey down to Earth.
As Joe prepares to enter the Great Beyond, a Jerry stops him and offers him another chance at life in thanks for finally inspiring 22 to live (while another Jerry distracts Terry to manipulate the count). Joe returns to his body on Earth, committed to fully living life.
Additionally,Daveed Diggs plays Paul, Joe's neighborhoodfrenemy;[2][6] Cora Champommier plays Connie, one of Joe's middle school band students; Margo Hall and Rhodessa Jones play Melba and Lulu, Libba's co-workers;[9]June Squibb plays Gerel, a soul who meets Joe before going to the Great Beyond;[4]Esther Chae plays Miho, a bassist in Williams' band.[10][11]Cody Chesnutt provides his vocals, from his song "Parting Ways", as a street singer with a guitar.[12]
Sakina Jaffrey, Calum Grant, Laura Mooney, Peggy Flood, Ochuwa Oghie,Jeannie Tirado, andCathy Cavadini provide the voices of Doctor, Hedge Fund Manager, Therapy Cat Lady, Marge, Dancerstar, Principal Arroyo, and Dreamerwind.[9]
Soul began development in January 2016 following the announcement of the88th Academy Awards when directorPete Docter hadpitched an idea for a new film to then-studio head of PixarJohn Lasseter.[13][14] Docter pondered the origins of human personalities with the concept ofdeterminism. In his first meeting with co-writerMike Jones, Docterpitched an idea set in theastral plane involving souls with personalities.[15] The film spent four years in production,[16] with an approximate $150 million budget.[17]
Docter and Jones worked on the development of the main character for about two years.[15] Initial ideas included portraying Joe as a scientist, which did not feel "so naturally pure". Pixar eventually settled on portraying the film's main character as a musician because they wanted an appealing profession for the audience. According to Docter, once the creative team decided the main character played jazz music, the filmmakers chose to make him African-American due to the race being tied to jazz history.[18][19]
With co-writerKemp Powers's help, Docter wrote Joe during the film's early development. Powers's initial contract was 12-weeks long, but was later extended.[15] After making extensive contributions to the film, Powers became a co-director, making him Pixar's first African-American co-director.[19] Powers based several elements of Joe on his personal life, but wanted the character to "transcend [his] own experience" in order to make him more accessible.[18] Powers also placed additional emphasis on authentically depicting Joe's relationships within the black community.[20] In order to portray accurately African-American culture within the film, Pixar worked closely with an internal "Cultural Trust" composed of black Pixar employees, and hired several consultants. These consultants included musiciansHerbie Hancock,Terri Lyne Carrington,Quincy Jones, andJon Batiste; educatorJohnnetta Cole; and stars Questlove and Diggs.
The idea of Joe's soul entering the body of a therapy cat came from Mike Jones. Docter and Powers appreciated the idea, as it allowed Joe to "be able to look at his own life from a different perspective" and appreciate it. According to Murray, the filmmakers were undecided onSoul's ending before the last screening. Some test versions of the film ended featuring Joe pondering whether to pass on to the Great Beyond; returning to Earth a year later; or staying in the Great Before as a mentor. Initial storyboards featured several brief scenes showing 22's life on Earth after her new birth, including one of her reuniting with Joe in New York. These scenes were ultimately discarded.[21]
Docter saidJamie Foxx (himself a classically trained pianist) was perfect for Joe, citing his comedic skills and musical background.[17] Foxx related the film's "bittersweet [feeling] of losing someone but gaining a vision of joy".[22][23]
Tina Fey, in addition to voicing 22, also contributed to the screenplay, helping to write her character's lines.[24] She considered the film, in the context of theCOVID-19 pandemic, a "helpful reminder that [life] isn't defined by achievement or attainment".[22]
Soul is Pixar's first film to feature an African-American lead.[25] Pixar and Docter were mindful of the history of racist imagery (particularly caricatured depictions of African-Americans) in animation and wanted to create black characters[15] as well as integrate authenticAfrican-American culture into the film's "DNA" to prevent caricatures, stereotypes, and tropes.[26] Pixar sought to capture the fine details of the characters, including the textures of black hair and the way light plays on various tones of black skin.[15] According to Powers, the animators used lighting in emphasizing the character's ethnic features.[27] CinematographerBradford Young worked as a lighting consultant on the film.[27]
Animators used footage of several music performers, including Batiste, as reference for the film's musical sequences. By capturingMIDI data from the sessions, animators retraced the exact key being played on the piano with each note and animated the performances authentically. According to Docter, the animators assigned to specific musical instruments often either had experience playing them or a great appreciation for them.[27][28]
The souls were animated by the filmmakers in a "vaporous", "ethereal", and "non-physical" way. Souls were designed to depict various religious and cultural outlooks.[24] The designs were also inspired by early drawings made by Docter. Animators created two designs for the souls in the film: one for the new souls in "The Great Before" (described as "very cute, very appealing, with simple, rounded shapes" bysupervising animator Jude Brownbill) and one for mentor souls (feature distinctive characteristics since they have been on Earth).[29] They differentiated souls from ghosts by adjusting their color palette accordingly.[30] Animating the souls' designs was challenging and substantial. According to Murray, several artists helped create the souls' designs by giving their suggestions and opinions on how they should look.[31]
The design of soul counselors ("Jerrys") originated fromline drawings made by story artist Aphton Corbin. Another artist createdwire sculptures of them, and the design was finalized.[30] Together, with the design of "Terry", they were seen by critics as a reference toOsvaldo Cavandoli's 1971 Italian animated seriesLa Linea.[32][33][34]
Soul's fantastical elements were difficult to render. To address the issue, Docter referred to his filmInside Out (2015), where the filmmakers personified through physicality. For the Great Before, the filmmakers did not want it to be based in any specific culture given its nature of universality. They sought inspiration from the architecture of 1930s–1960sworld's fairs, making a "sense of awe and importance".[35] Production designer Steve Pilcher believed in the simplicity of the Great Before, saying that it was complicated and naive.[17] According to Docter, the aim of the design was to "make a grand statement about learning and knowledge."[36] The personality pavilions were designed to be "abstract-looking shapes" as a literal interpretation of the abstract ideas they represent.[35] For the Great Beyond, the filmmakers conceptualized "going toward the light", which they believed the audience would understand.[30]
The astral plane sequence took months to create, despite the actual scene having a short duration.Visual effects supervisor Bill Watral compared the sequence to the shower scene fromPsycho (1960), taking a long time to film in spite of the actual short time span. During this sequence, filmmakers painstakingly animated sands, liquids, and rocks for the brief sequence.[37]
To animate New York, the filmmakers explored jazz clubs and pizzerias for inspiration. A barbershop scene received additional input from Powers.[17] The animation style moved away from photorealism, depicting the city as distorted and crooked.[38]
MusiciansTrent Reznor andAtticus Ross ofNine Inch Nails composed anambientscore for the metaphysical segments of the film, whileJon Batiste composed a number of originaljazz songs for the New York City-based segments of the film.[39][40] Batiste created a "user-friendly jazz", which felt "authentic" but could still be appreciated by a general audience.[18][41] Ross composed a "somewhat ominous" musical cue in the afterlife walkway scene, which also incorporated real-world sounds.[17] Reznor and Ross were brought in on the recommendation of sound designerRen Klyce, who had worked extensively with the duo onDavid Fincher films.[42]
The score and the original songs fromSoul were released in twovinyl-exclusive albums, while also compiled onto a single digital album.[43][44] "It's All Right", the end credits song performed by Batiste, was originally recorded byThe Impressions. A second cover of the song, a duet between Batiste and British soul singerCeleste, was released alongside the film.[45]
Soul had its premiere on October 11, 2020, at theBFI London Film Festival.[46][47] It was initially scheduled for theatrical release in the United States on June 19, 2020,[48] but was later pushed back to November 20, 2020, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic,[49] beforeDisney decided to release the film onDisney+ on December 25, 2020. UnlikeMulan,Soul was not released throughDisney+ Premier Access, making it free for all subscribers.[50] On December 5, 2023, it was announced thatSoul, as well asTurning Red (2022) andLuca (2021), would be released in theaters in the United States throughout early 2024, withSoul being released on January 12, 2024.[51]
In international markets where Disney+ was not available,Soul was released theatrically.[52] These included China,[53] the Philippines,[54][55] Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, Singapore, among others.[56] The film was included in their lineups of the2020 Cannes Film Festival[57] and theRome Film Festival; it opened on October 15.[58] In theaters,Soul was intended to be accompanied bySparkShorts short filmBurrow, but it premiered on Disney+ instead;[59] the short would accompany the film's 2024 theatrical release.[51] A prequel short toSoul was released in 2021, titled22 vs. Earth. It focuses on 22 leading a rebellion against her superiors.[60]
Soul grossed $946,154 domestically and $121million in other territories, for a worldwide total gross of $121.6 million.[62] It grossed $7.65 million in its opening weekend in 10 markets, including $5.5 million from China.[63] By February 2021, it had become the highest-grossing Pixar release ever in Russia ($18.3 million), Ukraine ($1.9 million) and Saudi Arabia ($5.9 million). Its top international markets at that point were China ($57.9 million), Russia, South Korea ($14.8 million), Taiwan ($6.4 million) and Saudi Arabia.[64] The 2024 re-release debuted outside top-10 for a first weekend of under $431,840.[65] By the end of its run, its domestic gross was $946,154.[62]
Following the release ofSoul onDisney+, research firm Screen Engine reported that 13 percent of viewers watched the film, and it over-indexed among parents, particularly mothers. The company also said thatSoul was among the most-watched straight-to-streaming titles of the year, behindHamilton andWonder Woman 1984.[66] On December 21–27, 2020, the film gathered 1.669 billion minutes of watch time, making it the number 1 streaming title that week.[67]Nielsen reported thatWonder Woman 1984, with 2.252 billion minutes of streaming onHBO Max, had surpassedSoul, with 1.7 billion minutes on Disney+, in streaming numbers on Christmas weekend.[68]Samba TV later reported that 2.4 million households streamed the film over its opening weekend.[69] Nielsen reported thatSoul was the most streamed film across all platforms, during the week from January 4–10, 2021.[70]
Soul received critical acclaim.[71][72][73] On thereview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 95% based on 360 reviews, with an average rating of 8.3/10. The consensus reads; "A film as beautiful to contemplate as it is to behold,Soul proves Pixar's power to deliver outstanding all-ages entertainment remains undimmed."[74]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assignedSoul a score of 83 out of 100 based on 55 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[75]
Several journalists praisedSoul for its craftsmanship,[76][77] which they saw as an exercise of Docter's expertise,[78][79] as the film was considered a return of Pixar's form by some critics.[80][81] Leslie Felperin (The Hollywood Reporter) and Jason Solomons (TheWrap) described the film as its peak, with Solomons characterized its "colorful visuals and gentle wisdom".[9][82]A. O. Scott ofThe New York Times expressed its "combination of skill, feeling, and inspiration".[83]
The story, characters, and music were also commended. Kaleem Aftab ofIndieWire felt the narrative "[veered] off in many unexpected directions, so that even the inevitable end point feels just right."[7]USA Today's Brian Truitt commended the performances of Foxx and Fey.[84] ForTime Out Dubai, Whelan Barzey believed Joe's story could appeal to many generations.[85] Felperin andPeter Travers (ABC News) praised the musical score, calling it "sublime".[9][86] Truitt and Travers credited Batiste, Reznor, and Ross for their music merits.[84][86]
Reviews were not uniformly positive. Kirsten Acuna fromInsider felt that "the studio had taken a few steps backward" in their racial "sensitivity" asSoul used the same trope of "turning Black characters into creatures".[87] Molly Freeman ofScreen Rant acknowledged the film's "message about the meaning of life and finding purpose, but it's messy and only made muddier by the questions the movie sets up then fails to answer. The result isSoul loses much of its emotional impact, with the third act playing out more like a rush to the finish line of the story without giving as much weight to the themes and emotional throughline of the film."[88] Charles Pulliam-Moore ofGizmodo wrote that "Soul comes across less like an earnest and casual celebration of everyday Blackness, and more like a twee depiction of it that's meant for white audiences' consumption."[89] Namwali Serpell ofThe New Yorker published an extensive critical essay of the film, citing among other issues, "Not only does Twenty-two use Joe as a vehicle but the movie must also make the grandiose and grotesque claim that he has learned to live through her" and concluding that "The most glaring artistic error in 'Soul' is its misprision—its elision, really—of what soul means for black culture."[90]
^Schneider, Johannes (December 29, 2020)."90 Minuten Trost" [90 Minutes of Solace].Die Zeit (in German).Archived from the original on December 30, 2020. RetrievedJanuary 24, 2021.