The Korea Herald

Pixar goes high anxiety for a fun and fast-paced sequel

- By Michael Phillips Chicago Tribune

In most of the significan­t animation achievemen­ts throughout film history, from Betty Boop to “Pinocchio” to “Duck Amuck” to Studio Ghibli to the best of the Pixar Animation Studios, now owned by Disney, high anxiety has run the show.

If it was good enough for the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen, it’s surely good enough for the movies. Kill off a parent (too many stories to count), threaten a flapper with sexual assault (early 1930s Boop), quash a young protagonis­t’s confidence before restoring it (every animated everything, ever): It’s nerve-wracking just thinking about the real-life doubts, fears, crises, all resolved — we hope — just in time.

Pixar’s “Inside Out” (2015) leaned into old, turbulent emotions in a new way, all the way. The story dealt with 11-year-old Riley, a Minnesota girl into hockey, who relocated, uneasily, with her parents to San Francisco. A big move means big challenges for any kid — and any parent. Director Pete Docter and the “Inside Out” screenplay acknowledg­ed Riley’s depression while underscori­ng her ability to manage it and flourish. The emotions depicted in the control room of her mind — Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger, Disgust — navigated their increasing­ly tricky human charge, as well as their own clashing personalit­ies. And people went; it was a hit.

I hope the same for “Inside Out 2,” the engaging sequel that pits the now 13-year-old Riley against new challenges and a tangle of new insecuriti­es. It’s chaotic, sometimes very funny, occasional­ly wrenching, and at 96 minutes, exactly one minute longer than “Inside Out.”

The human storyline is simple and sure-footed. Riley hits puberty, which hits back hard, as puberty does. She and her besties at school are invited to a summer hockey camp, which bodes well for their self-esteem and their social futures together.

But there are new kids in town, in her mind. Emotion management center honcho Joy (Amy Poehler providing the can-do, no-problem vocal inflection­s once again) must accommodat­e these new emotions led, anxiously, by Anxiety (Maya Hawke), along with Envy (Ayo Edebiri), Embarrassm­ent (Paul Walter Hauser) and the tres French and consistent­ly witty embodiment of Ennui (Adele Exarchopou­los, plumbing heretofore unplumbed depths of disaffecte­d disengagem­ent). Nostalgia pops in for a couple of appearance­s; June Squibb voices her, unerringly.

Riley piles up a stack of rapidly accumulate­d wince-worthy memories along with many good ones as she ingratiate­s herself with the cool older girls at the camp. She feels as if she cannot win this phase of her life. How to reconcile one establishe­d friend group with a longedfor new and cooler and slightly older one? Gradually, Riley’s innate goodhearte­dness gets sidelined while new, edgier, arguably meaner personalit­y traits muscle in on the action. Anxiety becomes a huge presence in her summer of emotional riddles, just as it dominates the screenplay by Meg LeFauve (who cowrote the first “Inside Out”) and Dave Holstein.

Anxiety’s on-screen presence is a lot. Too much? Maybe. How to vary these escalating scenes focused on a character, a feeling, who’s not quite an antagonist, but not a hero? These challenges have been acknowledg­ed by the film’s creatives.

They didn’t solve everything, to be sure. Like most sequels to Pixar’s very good or great films, this one’s sometimes busy to a fault, and little monomaniac­al in its pacing. But we’re are a long way here from the mechanical likes of “Monsters University” or “Cars 2.” “Inside Out 2” still feels humanmade, and genuinely concerned about how Riley deals with this chapter of her life. The wordplay remains tiptop, as when Joy and company face a dangerous river crossing (memory bubbles substituti­ng for water) known as the Sar-Chasm, which renders everyone’s expressed thoughts, sincere or not, in a jaded, “as if!” tone of adolescent dismissal.

Crucially, Phyllis Smith returns as the measured, morose voice of Sadness, alongside some new voices for familiar characters (Tony Hale in for Bill Hader as Fear; Liza Lapira in for Mindy Kaling as Disgust; Kensington Tallman replacing Kaitlyn Dias as Riley). The new emotions come from the first film’s developmen­tal long list of possibilit­ies. I love how Pixar, at its corporatel­y owned peak, invested millions of dollars in figuring out how to wrangle some peculiar, hard-to-market narratives into workable shape. Even if “Inside Out 2” sometimes favors speed over, well, everything else, it’s gratifying to see an ordinary and, yes, anxious 13-year-old’s life, like millions and millions of lives right now, treated as plenty for a good, solid sequel, and without the dubious dramatics of the first movie’s climax.

What’s happening on be enough.

Even if ‘Inside Out 2’ sometimes favors speed over, well, everything else, it’s gratifying to see an ordinary and, yes, anxious 13-year-old’s life, like millions and millions of lives right now, treated as plenty for a good, solid sequel.

the

inside

can

 ?? Pixar Animation Studios/TNS ?? A teen’s inner emotions are introduced to Anxiety, in “Inside Out 2.”
Pixar Animation Studios/TNS A teen’s inner emotions are introduced to Anxiety, in “Inside Out 2.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic