Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My 3.5 year old HATED the short film before Inside Out. Made him cry and I think it kind of spoiled the main movie for him. He has been to other movies and never been bothered by them. My six year old liked it but she did cry during a sad scene.
My five year old cried too. I kept thinking, "How can they start off a happy movie with this?" I guess it pretty much set the tone for the actual film. I think Pixar is catering more to its original Toy Story audience. They're all grown now. If you look at the tone of their movies, they seem to be delving into some deep stuff. It started with the Jessie abandonment scene in Toy Story 2. 'Up' was about as emotional as a movie can get in the first ten minutes. Then, the incinerator scene in Toy Story 3. I really thought the message of Inside Out was going to be teenage depression by the end of it. Who knows what they'll do next.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My 3.5 year old HATED the short film before Inside Out. Made him cry and I think it kind of spoiled the main movie for him. He has been to other movies and never been bothered by them. My six year old liked it but she did cry during a sad scene.
My five year old cried too. I kept thinking, "How can they start off a happy movie with this?" I guess it pretty much set the tone for the actual film. I think Pixar is catering more to its original Toy Story audience. They're all grown now. If you look at the tone of their movies, they seem to be delving into some deep stuff. It started with the Jessie abandonment scene in Toy Story 2. 'Up' was about as emotional as a movie can get in the first ten minutes. Then, the incinerator scene in Toy Story 3. I really thought the message of Inside Out was going to be teenage depression by the end of it. Who knows what they'll do next.
they cried coz the singing volcanoes???
Anonymous wrote:It was one metaphor strung out for almost 2 hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I loved it. 4yo DC's attention was held throughout. Everybody wins!
Yes, this is all I want to know! Will it hold the attention of 3-5 year olds?
My 3.5 year old HATED the short film before Inside Out. Made him cry and I think it kind of spoiled the main movie for him. He has been to other movies and never been bothered by them. My six year old liked it but she did cry during a sad scene.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I loved it. 4yo DC's attention was held throughout. Everybody wins!
Yes, this is all I want to know! Will it hold the attention of 3-5 year olds?
Anonymous wrote:It was one metaphor strung out for almost 2 hours. Not funny, not insightful. A little cloying. One funny moment at the very end with a cat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My 3.5 year old HATED the short film before Inside Out. Made him cry and I think it kind of spoiled the main movie for him. He has been to other movies and never been bothered by them. My six year old liked it but she did cry during a sad scene.
My five year old cried too. I kept thinking, "How can they start off a happy movie with this?" I guess it pretty much set the tone for the actual film. I think Pixar is catering more to its original Toy Story audience. They're all grown now. If you look at the tone of their movies, they seem to be delving into some deep stuff. It started with the Jessie abandonment scene in Toy Story 2. 'Up' was about as emotional as a movie can get in the first ten minutes. Then, the incinerator scene in Toy Story 3. I really thought the message of Inside Out was going to be teenage depression by the end of it. Who knows what they'll do next.
Anonymous wrote:
My 3.5 year old HATED the short film before Inside Out. Made him cry and I think it kind of spoiled the main movie for him. He has been to other movies and never been bothered by them. My six year old liked it but she did cry during a sad scene.