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Harry goes gaga over THE ART OF FINDING NEMO book!

Published at:  Mar 28, 2003 9:46:38 AM CST


Pixar simply rules… Today, in a surprise package from some publishing company that sends me tons of film books each year, I got one that really surprised me.


THE ART OF FINDING NEMO


Inside… Wow… Ya know, looking at the trailers, I thought I had a handle on the scale of this movie, and frankly I was impressed by it. The undersea vistas, the coral the sea life on the bottom floor of the ocean… it was all leaving me with an impression that… well, that the film looked like another great outing from PIXAR.


Then I got this book, a book that made me look and stare at each page agog by the beauty I found. With a computer generated film, many people often marginalize it to being the work of just COMPUTER ARTISTS that are sitting around building structures, then handing that structure off to some muscle guy or gal, then that muscled structure goes to some texture mapper that puts the skin on, then some lighting folks that light that skin… What is often times forgotten… the thing that you never really think about till you see it in a book like this… is all the pre-production art, the conceptual work… the art meant to inspire tone, emotion and atmosphere. The charcoal illustrations that look like some modern Thomas Hart Benton woodblock…


As I was flipping through the book, I came to a whole series of illustrations about undersea landscapes… both realistic and impressionistic… color and black & white… As I was turning the marvelous pages I came to an illustration of a broke in half WWII submarine on the bottom of the ocean floor… decades of life built upon it, sediment, coral formations… all growing upon this recognizable man made construct and I got giddy. I didn’t want to READ the book, because I don’t want the characterizations of the story laid bare for me, but I love seeing the images… trying to imagine how it all comes together. I’ll read the book when I return from the theater and I want to spend a few hours in that universe, but for now… I love dancing with these impressions. I love seeing a barnacle attached Flying Tiger on the ocean floor… scarred Sharks, barracudas and stranger things yet.


The only page I read was a introduction page by the director, Andrew Stanton… I met him on my visit to Pixar back around the opening of A BUG’S LIFE… a nice guy. According to his little preamble to the pictures, the first notion of this story entered his head as a boy in a dentist’s office looking at the aquarium and imagining that each fish wanted to get back to the ocean, to the family from whence they came. On subsequent visits he often wondered what the fish think of humanity based upon their Dentist’s Aquarium existence. The lurid black light colored decorations in the tank… that miniature skeleton against the treasure box that opens up with bubbles from time to time… Those creatures on the other side of the glass. He began to think it would be like someone judging the United States having only seen Las Vegas. --- Around this time I began to like where I felt he was probably going with this story of his. --- Then he talked about how he never really had the story blossom for him till a couple years back, sometime in 1999 when he was taking his son out for a visit to a park, and his 5 year old was running ahead of him, and he was backseat driving him… Screaming to watch out for the curb, the street, don’t do that it’s dangerous… and realizing that by being overly-protective, he was being a bad parent. Then he decided to marry the theme of Fatherhood and the relationship between fathers and sons to a story of separation and literal… FISH OUT OF (big) WATER story he had as a child. Then with the work of many super-geniuses… which they breed in this wild laboratory that Steve Jobs has in this huge underground facility in the Bay Area… well, the story and film FINDING NEMO began to take shape, firm up and now we’ll get to see it this May.


What I liked about that, is what I like about the PIXAR films in general… the universal themes they bring to their stories… the simple truths that give their films a timeless parable feel that is missing from all other American Feature Animation today. I have all the “Art Of” books from the PIXAR universe, this one makes me all the more anxious to see the final film. If you see it at a book store, and you’re trying to pinch pennies, beware of flipping through it… You’ll find yourself charging it to a card of some sort… You won’t be able to help yourself, I know I wouldn’t if I didn’t have it already.




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    Readers Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 9:59:02 AM CST

    This sounds fab!

    by heleno

    Nice review. There's no such thing as enough Pixar.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 9:59:57 AM CST

    disney crap-o-rama

    by chunkyloverman

    thank goodness for the guys at pixar if it wasnt for them disney would be putting crap like Pocahontas 4:the syphlis years

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 10:04:07 AM CST

    I hope it captures the same magic that Bug's Life had

    by enigmainyourhead

    That's still their best film, and definately the most beautiful.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 10:39:08 AM CST

    How about a scanned image?

    by tsunami3g

    Come on Harry. Share the love. :-)

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 10:52:07 AM CST

    Come on Harry....

    by youngdrunkmick

    Give us a pic. That being said, and seeing as I just woke up, I need a drink.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 11:43:09 AM CST

    Would it kill you...

    by dru

    ... to put 1 lousy picture up? I'm so psyched about this movie it aches in strange places. A new Pixar movie is just 1 more reason to cheer. Let's see some images + start the collective drooling. Out...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 11:50:15 AM CST

    "judging the US of A having only see Las Vegas..."

    by no-no

    that seems about right.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 12:50:07 PM CST

    I'd like to propose a moratorium on gerund-titled movies.

    by rev_skarekroe

    Thank you. sk

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 1:16:14 PM CST

    Dammit, Stupid Return Key!

    by drath

    This isn't my day! First Harry sees a beautiful Pixar art book and makes me ENVY him, and then my damned keyboard messes me up! ARRRRRRGGGGHHHH!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 1:16:33 PM CST

    Kzoo Animation Festival

    by ivan alexeev

    At last year's 1st annual animation festival there was an animator from Pixar taking questions and giving a snapshot of what it's like working in the industry. He was saying that as great it was working on Nemo, he wanted to get off of it and work on Brad Bird's Incredibles. Word is, it's supposed to be the beyond shit, but then, what Pixar stuff ain't?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 1:21:27 PM CST

    Where's Our Sneak-Peek?

    by karl childers

  • Mar 28, 2003 2:00:34 PM CST

    What's it about?

    by christopher3

    I know the animation is good, but does it have, you know, a story?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 3:16:40 PM CST

    Hey, Harry, if you want a great art book

    by tbrosz

    Try "The Art of Spirited Away." You want backgrounds? Miyazaki's got backgrounds.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 7:47:52 PM CST

    admittedly i'm pretty new to this site

    by digdig

    but when i see that there's a link to info about an "art of book" (and i collect them), I REALLY don't expect to have to do that much reading with no pictures.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 8:43:17 PM CST

    some people really get worked up by picture books

    by lolthien

    010101010101 really gets worked up over his picture books eh? Wow.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 28, 2003 11:58:43 PM CST

    Waste of...

    by zone zero

    ...processor operations. This movie is a waste of the TRUE power of the computer. And Final Fantasy got shafted. With a poor plot. If someone attempted to use THAT quality of graphics for a movie with REAL plot, it'd scare me. TRY AND CATCH ME BIIIAAATTCCHHH!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 29, 2003 10:01:52 AM CST

    My, my...

    by huneybee

    Such bile, numberboy. You should see a gastroenterologist about that. Soon. ____ Thanks for the review, Harry, though I, too, wish there had been a picture.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 29, 2003 11:00:51 AM CST

    'The Art of Finding No-One'

    by ribbons

    Become a regular on this site. I wonder if Pixar realizes what Nemo means? If so, maybe it'll be more stimulating than I suspect.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 29, 2003 1:37:06 PM CST

    Nearly as pointless as clicking on this link

    by pertedetemps

    http://www.outwar.com/page.php?x=650475

    Reply to Talkback

  • Oh dear, I lost my bike in the woods, brother!

    Reply to Talkback

  • Mar 31, 2003 2:26:50 PM CST

    Graft

    by anyaormsby

    You get a Hulk script, say it's great, but reveal none of it's contents. You get a book of Return of the King concept art, say it's great, but show us nothing. You get a book of Finding Nemo concept art, say it's great, but show us nothing. This site is like a fashion magazine. It exists only to sell ads and get Harry free stuff.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 01, 2003 12:56:26 AM CST

    All Hail Pixar

    by pyner

    These guys DEFINE originality! Their stories are fresh and their art is nothing short of impressive. Every movie they make becomes an instant classic. I hope they leave the Disney fold and strike it our their own. I will watch every movie they create as long as I live.

    Reply to Talkback

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