Monsters University
Pixar has been in the middle of a minor slump, as far as making films go. For the company’s first decade or so, they made hardly a wrong move. Instead, they piled up classic after classic, from Toy Story to Finding Nemo to Cars to even quirkier fare like Ratatouille and Wall-E.
However, the studio seems to have peaked in 2009-2010 with the near perfect double shot of Up and Toy Story 3. Sadly, pretty much every film they have released since has been a bit of a disappointment – only one film was actively bad (Cars 2) but the others, like Brave and Planes, have been pretty minor pleasures.
Add to that listing Monsters University. It’s certainly not a bad film. It’s even marginally entertaining. But in the past, Pixar movies were so much more than that.
Monsters University is a continuation of the studio’s sudden fascination with the sequel. Well, Monsters University is actually a prequel. But between Toy Story in 1994 and Up in 2009, Pixar released exactly one sequel (Toy Story 2). Since Up came out, there have been three (Toy Story 3, Cars 2 and Monsters University.) That is giving them the benefit of the doubt that Planes is not a Cars sequel, even though it took place in the Cars universe. Coming soon, Finding Dory, as well as whispers about a possible Incredibles sequel and maybe even Toy Story 4.
The truth of the matter is that Monsters Inc. was no masterpiece in itself, making the idea of expanding its universe all the more confounding. In fact, truth to be told, the most purely entertaining Monsters Inc. spin off is the Monsters Inc. Laugh Floor show at Disney World.
Still, Monsters Inc. was spun off of a quite wonderfully fanciful idea. Those monsters that show up in small kid’s bedrooms at night… what if they were real? Not only real, but normal 9 to 5 workers at a scare factory, mining children’s screams for power?
It’s a clever, easy to relate to premise. And if the original film sort of spun out of control eventually (that scene with all the doors felt like a film that was running out of ideas), the movie was mostly fun.
Did you ever really wonder how these monsters got into the biz? I didn’t think so. But Pixar is gonna tell you anyway.
Click here to read the rest of the review!
