Mr. Incredible and Pals
2005 American animated short film / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mr. Incredible and Pals (also known as The Adventures of Mr. Incredible) is a 2004 American animated short film produced by Pixar which was included as a bonus feature on the DVD release of its 2004 feature film The Incredibles.[1] It features the characters of Mr. Incredible and Frozone from the feature, plus a "cute animal" rabbit sidekick named Mr. Skipperdoo, chasing and capturing the supervillain Lady Lightbug.
Mr. Incredible and Pals | |
---|---|
Directed by | Roger L. Gould Brad Bird (commentary) |
Written by | Roger Gould Brad Bird (commentary) |
Produced by | Ann Brilz |
Starring | Craig T. Nelson Samuel L. Jackson Pete Docter Michael Asberry Celia Schuman |
Narrated by | Roger L. Jackson |
Edited by | Steve Bloom |
Music by | Alex Mandel |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Walt Disney Home Entertainment |
Release date | March 15, 2005 (2005-03-15TThe Incredibles DVD) |
Running time | 4 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The film is animated in the style of limited animation that intentionally parodies the low budget and low-quality television Saturday-morning cartoons that aired regularly during the 1950s and 1960s.
During this time, television animation studios were contracted to turn out high quantities of product on low budgets, which resulted in many television cartoons that have been derided and mocked by television critics, film, and animation historians, and audiences in general. Mr. Incredible and Pals uses a number of the cost-saving techniques and tropes found in these shows, such as:
- Still shots of drawn scenes, rather than actual frame-by-frame animation.
- Actual footage of live actors' mouths moving instead of animated lips on the characters, a technique known as Synchro-Vox. The most well-known example of this form of "animation" was the Clutch Cargo series.
- A Cold War era plot pitting true, freedom-loving American superheroes against a stereotypical "Communist" supervillain.
- The sidekick (which Frozone is portrayed as) being ensnared by the supervillain so that complete emphasis can be placed on the main hero, who nevertheless thanks the sidekick for his involvement in stopping the villain.
- Frozone speaking in forced "beatnik" slang, showing the out-of-touch depiction of minority characters in animated works at the time.
- A "cute animal" sidekick only added for "children's appeal." In this film, a glasses-wearing rabbit named Mr. Skipperdoo does nothing but hop up and down, yet his actions are seen as crucial to solving the "mystery" that comprises the plot of the episode.
Mr. Incredible and Pals is the first of three short films produced by Pixar Animation Studios, which were animated in traditional 2D hand-drawn animation rather than computer animation. The second film, Your Friend the Rat, was produced in 2007, and included as part of the DVD release of Ratatouille. The third, Day & Night, produced in 2010, was theatrically released with Toy Story 3. The latter two films feature a combination of hand-drawn and CGI animation.