For The Lolz

Hello everyone. Check out my Sound Collage I put together for my music class. Pretty strange stuff, but enjoy anyways.

this was definitely my favorite part of the episode.

pixarmovies:

thedailywhat:

Early Bird Special: Two and a half minutes from Pixar’s thirteenth feature film, Brave.

In theaters June 22.

[disneyblog.]

askjdhaskjdahskdjasd

seriously. This movie blew me away already.

(Source: thedailywhat)

hahaha.

(Source: elijahwooddaily, via funnyassstuff)

Yeah, I’m not too sure if everyone knows what day it is today. But judging by all the posts and negative attitudes and disappointment, I can tell it is Valentines day. According to one incredibly reliable source, Valentine’s day is the most important day for any girl’s life. More important than their wedding, or prom night, or having a child, NOTHING is more important. But I digress.

I am one of the lucky ones to have someone special in my life to share this day with. Even though we are both not in the same city and can’t spend the day together, we do our best to make the most of our time together. Hopefully I’ll see her this weekend, but I digress again. This girl has made my life one of the craziest roller coasters ever, and I loved every minute of it so far. We have gone through so much together, and we have gotten through every little bit of it together. I don’t know how I could I have dealt with a lot of SHIT if she wasn’t around to make me feel so much better, and I don’t know how she’s gotten through most of it if I wasn’t there. She is one of the most important people in my life, and I love her so much.

So I’m telling you right now, tumblr world, and whoever cares to read this, I LOVE THIS GIRL. She is everything that I wished for in a girl. She’s hardworking, driven, hilarious, plays an instrument, and just plain fun. She makes me happy no matter what.

I always find it so weird that this one day out of the entire year that we are supposed to love people more than we usually do, but every day is Valentine’s in my eyes. But I’ll humor her and make it seem like I love her more today than any other day. So I love you hun. You are the greatest thing that has happened to my life, and I wouldn’t ever let it go. Happy Valentine’s Day.

erotomania1928:

miguelthrashes:

DT in suits

of course Hordan is in velvet.

And of course JMX is in all black still.
Too bad we lost, but still an honor to get nominated

erotomania1928:

miguelthrashes:

DT in suits

of course Hordan is in velvet.

And of course JMX is in all black still.

Too bad we lost, but still an honor to get nominated

(Source: miguellguerreiro)

the Octavarium animation is just perfect.

(via erotomania1928)

xydashza:

Still going strong :) (Taken with instagram)

xydashza:

Still going strong :) (Taken with instagram)

Brilliant.

Brilliant.

iloveblaine:

Entertainment Weekly’s Top 10 Pixar Moments

 

1. Toy Story 3 — Andy plays with his toys one last time

This scene still gets me just thinking about it. In a shrewd last-minute decision, Woody writes the address of Bonnie — a young neighborhood girl — on the box containing Andy’s toys. Andy assumes his mother wrote the note, so the college-bound teenager stops by Bonnie’s house to hand over his toys. One by one, Andy introduces each toy to Bonnie, giving every character his or her moment in the spotlight. But then Andy realizes that Woody is buried at the bottom of the box. Bonnie reaches for Woody, and in a moment that’s remarkably animated, Andy flinches. Here Andy sits, on the precipice between childhood and adulthood, having to decide whether he’ll be able to let go of his own childhood so that another kid can have a slightly happier one.

Andy opts to give Woody to Bonnie, and the two play with the toys for a few minutes. At this point, the ending had already entranced me — hook, line, and sinker. But the shot that truly sent me overboard comes a few seconds later. Andy waves goodbye to Bonnie. She, in return, waves Woody’s hand. Upon seeing this, Andy lets out a small gasp. ”Thanks guys,” he says before driving off. ”So long, partner,” Woody replies as the camera soars above Bonnie’s house to reveal a cluster of clouds shaped exactly like the ones on Andy’s bedroom wallpaper.

It’s a flawless ending — one that allows Andy (and the audience) to say farewell to a group of characters we’ve grown to love, while also letting him take a rite-of-passage step toward maturity.

2. The Incredibles — 100 Mile Dash

On top of everything else The Incredibles is — a madcap comedy, a marital-strife drama, a commentary on society’s tendency to embrace mediocrity at the cost of greatness — it’s also a kickass action movie. In just three minutes, Dash’s chase through a tropical jungle does more things right than many action features. The scene’s pacing is impeccable — a full-throttle sprint that still finds moments to breathe, such as when Dash lets out a chuckle upon discovering his ability to run on water. And keep track of how many shots here couldn’t have been achieved in a live-action film. Computer animation allows the camera to go wherever you want, and I’ve never seen a sequence take advantage of that freedom quite like this one.

3. Up — Carl and Ellie’s ”married life” montage

Many of Pixar’s greatest moments rely not on snappy dialogue, but on a harmonious relationship between visuals and music. That couldn’t be truer of this breathtaking montage, which — in the span of four wordless minutes — recounts Carl and Ellie’s marriage as they grow old together. ”I’ll never forget sitting in a meeting when [director] Pete Docter and [co-director] Bob Peterson were reading the first treatment of Up,” Pixar honcho John Lasseter told EW. ”Bob read the beginning of the film, and I had tears rolling down my face.” Toss in Michael Giacchino’s Oscar-winning score, and just try not to be moved.

4. WALL-E — WALL-E and EVE dance together in space

Pure poetry. Again, Thomas Newman’s score clinches the deal here. The composer mixes electronic and acoustic sounds, which is appropriate because WALL-E and EVE’s waltz through space represents an instance where something artificial (robots) partakes in a human custom (dancing).

5. Ratatouille — Anton Ego eats the title dish

Something as simple as the sound of an instrument, a smell in the air, or the taste of food can resurrect a memory you had forgotten was even there. Elitist food critic Anton Ego (deliciously voiced by Peter O’Toole) is teleported to his rural childhood simply by taking a bite from a ”peasant dish” of ratatouille. It’s an insightful moment that made every adult in my theater laugh with recognition. And Ego’s subsequent review, which exalts the discovery and defense of the ”new,” could have just as easily been about Ratatouilleitself.

6. Monsters, Inc. — The Door Vault chase

One of the selling points of computer animation is its ability to massively replicate characters and objects. We got a dose of that capability with the hundreds-strong ant colony in A Bug’s Life. But it was Monsters, Inc.’s chase sequence among thousands of moving doors that really showed off the medium’s cloning prowess.

7. Toy Story 3 — Andy’s toys hold hands while bracing for death

While this scene may have caused nightmares for the youngest of moviegoers, it brought tears to many people’s eyes. Andy’s toys find themselves in a landfill incinerator, seconds away from death. ”What do we do?” cries Jessie to Buzz, who, after a brief pause, gently extends his hand to the cowgirl. One by one, the toys grab hold of one another. They realize that if this is going to be their final moments alive, at least they’ll meet their fate together. Any other movie would have had the characters scream for their lives until they were rescued, but Pixar used this as an opportunity to contemplate how one goes about accepting death.

8. Finding Nemo — Riding the East Australian Current

Where to begin? Crush the sea turtle — who’s voiced by Nemo director Andrew Stanton and reminds me of an aquatic Jeff Lebowski — may be the coolest animated character around. Thomas Newman’s calypso-infused score is a thing of beauty. And that wild ride through the EAC makes my Six Flags roller coasters seem dinky by comparison. Righteous, indeed.

9. Monsters, Inc. — Sulley revisits Boo

Less can be more, as the just-about-perfect ending to Monsters, Inc. demonstrates. Mike Wazowski has reconstructed the door to Boo’s room, and Sulley slowly opens it to see if his 2-year-old pal is waiting inside. Sulley quietly calls out, ”Boo?” Then we hear Boo respond, ”Kitty!” Sulley’s face lights up with joy, and fade to black. Director Pete Docter wisely resisted the urge to show the two characters embracing one another. We don’t need to see them reunited — it’s enough simply to know that they will be.

10. Toy Story 2 — Jessie’s song, ”When She Loved Me”

The first time Pixar broke your heart was with this simple Oscar-nominated song written by Randy Newman and sung by Sarah McLachlan. Chronicling the multi-year friendship between Jessie the cowgirl doll and her owner, Emily, the tune ends with a poignant shot of Jessie abandoned in a donations box. Pixar trusted that children wouldn’t fidget during this melancholy and deliberately paced flashback. And due to the scene’s success, we received some even more affecting moments later on, such as our next entry.

(via fuckyeahtoystory123)