SummaryDespite his sensational sniffer and sophisticated palate, Remy's dreams of becoming a chef seem hopeless due to one small detail--he's a rat! Through a twist of fate, he ends up in the world-famous restaurant of his late hero, Auguste Gusteau. With a dash of culinary courage and the help of garbage boy Linguini, Remy whips up exquisite m...
SummaryDespite his sensational sniffer and sophisticated palate, Remy's dreams of becoming a chef seem hopeless due to one small detail--he's a rat! Through a twist of fate, he ends up in the world-famous restaurant of his late hero, Auguste Gusteau. With a dash of culinary courage and the help of garbage boy Linguini, Remy whips up exquisite m...
This is a 10/10 film, and the fact that I haven't rated it sooner after just watching it again for the ...I don't know, 5th? 7th? Time is a sin.So here I am, folks, this is PIXAR at its Prime.Remy, as a character, aliteral artt is one of the most Relatable characters ever, and not only is it supported and exceeded by and for other characters, it is incredibly well animated and scripted to be inspiring.The Animation, Music, Story, Characters, and Food are all PEAK.This film will make you want to ****??!!This is one of the films that needs a Sequel, and it has to go Hard AF.Brad Bird, it's time for Remy to face off against other chefs and Critics because I really want to see more Remy, Linguini, and Collette with modern Animation with the same style we have in this Film.Disney, you want to sell Tickets? Ask Brad to write up Rataouille 2, and I can guarantee this will sell almost like the Super Mario Bros Movie.But remember, Anyone can make a Film, but those who take Risks can make it great.
If there is a genius working in Hollywood today, it's animation director Brad Bird, who tops the delightful "The Incredibles" with arguably the finest 'toon in the Pixar canon, Ratatouille.
Ratatouille is delicious. In this satisfying, souffle-light tale of a plucky French rodent with a passion for cooking, the master chefs at Pixar have blended all the right ingredients -- abundant verbal and visual wit, genius slapstick timing, a soupcon of Gallic sophistication -- to produce a warm and irresistible concoction that's sure to appeal to everyone's inner Julia Child.
Esta película es una de las mejores películas de animación de la historia por no decir la mejor, la película destaca en su animacion, en su estilo artístico que es uno de mis favorito, destaca en su banda sonora con una de las mejores canciones de una película y con su historia, es una película que debe ver todo el mundo es una obra que para mi es la mejor película de Pixar que han creado
Ratatouille, a Walt Disney animated movie, was a decent watch. While watching it, I was reminded of the Telugu film Ninnila Ninnila. For me, the highlight was definitely the last half hour. That part stood out the most.
Pixar stuffs a foodie rat under the toque of a wannabe chef with one foot (barely) in the door at a fading gourmet restaurant. The rodent was weaned on cooking TV shows, the human represents the end of a celebrity chef’s bloodline, and together they manage just enough culinary magic to raise a ruckus in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower.Ratatouille’s scenery is enchanting and its food is mouth-watering, but its core ingredients are rather thin. Neither Remy (the rat) nor Alfredo (the man-child) enjoy an especially deep or involved character arc, two cases of WYSIWYG given flesh, and Pixar seems to recognize this, crowding the scenery with all manner of half-hearted side dishes to compensate. I was hardly surprised to learn of a shakeup behind the scenes, with original director and screenwriter Jan Pinkava ousted in favor of then-ascendant studio bigwig Brad Bird. Despite the late shift, this still feels like an unfocused draft. The technical team does its job well - Alfredo’s physical comedy is riotous, Remy’s all-too-limited tasting scenes are bright and imaginative, the city and kitchen both look gorgeous - but it all feels a little wasted without a more substantial base.I recognize and appreciate the irony of critiquing a movie in which a snobby food critic is the big bad. Wish I could say that my second viewing, and first in around a decade, could’ve provided me with the same kind of big revelation that my on-screen counterpart enjoys. Instead, I must confess that Ratatouille still lives in precisely the same place I left it. Enjoyable but very light, and a far cry from the kind of potent, accomplished material we expected of Pixar at the time.My preceding review from 2014: One of the few Pixar movies I hadn't yet seen. Like each of their other films, this is witty, beautiful and genuine, but in the end feels like light fare compared to some of the studio's masterworks. It doesn't have the suspense of The Incredibles, the heart of Up or the scale of Wall-E, for example, but that's not to say I didn't enjoy it.The script enjoys a few big, family-friendly laughs, the animation shows some real inspiration (I appreciated the visualizations of competing/combining flavors) and it gets points for the unique setting, but it never really finds that essential moment where everything shifts into overdrive.Ah, well. My least favorite Pixar effort is still better than most of the competition.
I honestly walked away from this feeling largely indifferent. The plot doesn't do anything unexpected, The characters are typical tropes. TBH, I just didn't care for this movie at all.
By far one of the weakest recent animation films. The story is predictable and the script is banal without a hint of cleverness. Great for 10 year olds and Disney sycophants.