Tuesday, 23 June 2015

Inside Out's success should turn Hollywood upside down

Inside Out, whose protagonists are the five squabbling emotions inside the “head-quarters” of an 11-year-old coming to terms with her family’s move to San Francisco, is literally at the cerebral end of Pixar’s output: conceptually driven and inclined to formal tricks. So rather than this outstanding strike, or even the $60-70m range in which the studio has unerringly opened its original offerings, you might have expected it to have debuted closer to Ratatouille’s $47m.
Perhaps it’s a testament not only to the strength of Docter’s film and the recent dearth of original animation, but also Pixar’s tilling of the mainstream down the years; how most of its 15 features have cultivated a taste for moral and emotional sophistication, as well as thrills and in-jokes, in children’s entertainment.

Inside Out should easily clear $500m globally, and be up alongside Up’s $731.3m and Monsters University’s $743.6m, but early indications suggest it could be tough for it to match Toy Story 3, Pixar’s one member of the $1bn club. Conspicuous in several of this week’s key overseas markets is that the film is opening at around 50-60% of Buzz Lightyear and co’s last outing: in France ($5.2m to TS3’s $10.5m), Australia ($3.6m/$6.4m) and Mexico ($8.8m/$15m). And it has Universal’s Despicable Me spinoff Minions, which beat out Inside Out in Australia this week, for competition over the summer. But counting for every last cent is what Disney does – and it surely bought Pixar to give it that special spark of something different.

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