• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Peanuts (2015)

During one of the earlier shows I though they 'showed' the Red Baron when they would cut back and forth from Snoopy on his dog house in normal color and then switch to an all red version reacting...
 
From the YouTube description: "The Peanuts Movie where Snoopy, Charlie Brown and the rest of the gang will make their big-screen debut." Jesus Christ, does anyone do even cursory research anymore?

I'm OK with the look of the animation, it seems like it fits the look of the strip and cartoons, but updated. Showing Snoopy's imaginary world looks like a transparent attempt to compete with Pixar et al in terms of CGI spectacle. It doesn't feel like it fits with previous "Peanuts." What was seen in "It's The Great Pumpkin" seemed to be Snoopy's imaginative interpretation of neighborhood houses and spaces, nothing near comparable to what was shown in that trailer. It detracts from the grandness of Snoopy's imagination, because the viewer is not imagining along with him.

What I didn't get a feel of, from the trailer, was the sensibility of Charles Schulz. "Peanuts" without Schulz is a non-starter for me, you can't go back. Not interested.
 
That was a fun little teaser. I do agree seeing Snoopy's fight with the Red Baron is a little weird, but it's not enough to ruin it for me.
 
What was seen in "It's The Great Pumpkin" seemed to be Snoopy's imaginative interpretation of neighborhood houses and spaces, nothing near comparable to what was shown in that trailer. It detracts from the grandness of Snoopy's imagination, because the viewer is not imagining along with him.
I have to agree with this sentiment. The WWI Flying Ace scenes in the "Great Pumpkin" show scared me when I was a child, and I still have a particular fondness for them precisely because they evoke such strong emotion. I did eventually figure out when I was older that this was all Snoopy's imagination, but the scenes are no less impressive.
 
Noah Berlatsky of The Atlantic didn't like the trailer:

The trailer is all goofy hijinks, with Charlie Brown as the straight-man to Snoopy's manic-pixie-dream-puppy -- there's no hint of the weird beagle so committed to his schizophrenic dream world he can't even remember his owner's name and simply views him as a "round-headed kid" who fills his supper bowl. The stills are equally alien to the spirit of Schulz's strip. Charlie Brown stands in a movie theater dispensing popcorn happily to the delighted laughter of his peers; Charlie Brown and his trusty dog are lifted heroically on the shoulders of their friends; Charlie Brown casts a knowing, happy, confident glance over his shoulder as he carries a flower through the snow. It's like Peanuts got turned into a series of poorly designed Hallmark cards.

I don't entirely agree with his article, but it is a thoughtful take on what Schulz's Peanuts was and how the trailer and released stills don't live up to that.
 
The look of this movie is almost kind of weird, but in a good way. They took the look of the characters from the old cartoons and comic strips, but added textures and 3D.
 
New trailer dropped.. a full trailer.. with more of the story.. not a teaser.

I grew up with these characters. I'd like to say that Schultz taught me how to read. He also didn't talk down to his audience. There is so much that looks right about this film.

linky
 
I saw the new trailer. I'll quote what I said on Facebook about it...

I have thoughts. I'm still trying to formulate all of them.

My read on the trailer is that this is an origin story of sorts -- the origin of Charlie Brown's unrequited crush on the Little Red-Haired Girl. A new girl moves into Charlie Brown's neighborhood, she's seen a few times in shadows or at a distance in the trailer, no matter what he does Charlie Brown can't work up the nerve to talk to her, she has red hair. Seems straightforward to me.

Eagle-eyed viewers will note that the new neighbor, what little of her we see, does not resemble Heather from the animated specials. The one time that the Little Red-Haired Girl appears on panel (a storyline in late May 1998 when Snoopy was the "F. Scott Fitzgerald Hero"), she resembles Lucy rather than Heather. There is a vague Lucy resemblance to the new neighbor in this. (Of course, I could be imagining that because that's what I want to see...)

There are a couple of moments in the trailer that I think are there to reassure older fans, like myself, that this is the Peanuts we remember. There's a cute sequence that recreates some moments from the animated specials, and then there's a CGI recreation of the ice skating from A Charlie Brown Christmas. No sign of 3 and 4 doing their head-bopping dance, though.

The look of the trailer is fine. Even though I'd prefer 2-d cel animation, the CGI animation works for me.
 
New trailer dropped.. a full trailer.. with more of the story.. not a teaser.

I grew up with these characters. I'd like to say that Schultz taught me how to read. He also didn't talk down to his audience. There is so much that looks right about this film.

linky
Is this something only Americans are allowed to watch? It's a black rectangle that doesn't do anything.
 
Thanks, but apparently I don't have the right plugin to play it (not sure what I'm supposed to have, since it doesn't say).
 
I just watched it and I couldn't help but tearing up a bit. This looks like exactly the kind of movie I am going to enjoy. I've loved Peanuts all my life, and despite the move to 3D, it still feels like the Peanuts I know and love.

I can't wait for this movie. This is definitely a theatrical outing for me.
 
It looks good, but I see no reason to actually see it in 3d. In fact, the trailer in 2d makes it look more like the traditional art style than I am guessing a 3d viewing would.
 
It's A New Peanuts Movie, Baba O'Riley.

It looks pretty good to me. It would certainly be better if it were animated from Schultz's line art, but the 3D is very faithful to his style. I'd love to see superhero movies take the same approach. But, based on everything we've seen so far, this is going to be very faithful to the source material.
 
I'm impressed with the voice work here. I mean.. obviously these are new voices.. but it's close to what they sounded like. Listen to Linus.

I hope that the teachers "talk" in this
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top