when a director breaks all of Pixar's rules...
Brad Bird's 2004 Pixar masterpiece 'The Incredibles' was a landmark in animation, as well as a the superhero genre. Here's why. ATTRIBUTIONS: This video contains copyrighted material from the feature films/TV shows listed below. I believe all content used falls under the remits of Fair Use (see below), but if any content owners would like to dispute this I will not hesitate to remove said content. It is not my intent in any way to infringe on their content ownership. Contact: [email protected] The Incredibles (2004) - dir: Brad Bird. The Incredibles 2 (2018) - dir: Brad Bird. The Iron Giant (1999) - dir: Brad Bird. Monsters Inc (2001) - dir: Pete Docter. Finding Nemo (2003) - dir: Andrew Stanton. Ratatouille (2007) - dir: Brad Bird. OTHER SOURCES USED: Making of The Incredibles (2004) [DVD special features], Pixar Studios. The Incredibles: Director's Commentary and Introduction (2004) [DVD special features], Pixar Studios. TIFF YouTube channel (2018) [interview], 'In Conversation With... Brad Bird | TIFF 2018': • In Conversation With... Brad Bird | TIFF 2018 SplineDoctors (2007) [podcast], Interview with Brad Bird. St James, Emily (2018) [article], 'Why Incredibles director Brad Bird gets compared to Ayn Rand — and why he shouldn’t be', Vox. Moore and Maloney (2018) [article], 'The Incredibles movies have a weird relationship with technology', The Verge. Desowitz, Bill (2004) [article], 'Brad Bird & Pixar Tackle CG Humans Like True Superheroes', AWN. Subscribe for more vids each week here: / @sceneitreviews _______________________________________________________________________ Come say hi on my social media feeds: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/scene_it_re... Songs from Soundstripe: Youtube Content ID Code: The Incredibles Mr Incredible Elastigirl Violet Dash Jack-Jack Syndrome Pixar Elemental Brad Bird The Iron Giant Ratatouille ________________________________________________________________________ FAIR USE DISCLAIMER: As the original material is transformative in nature, uses no more of the original than necessary, and has no negative effect on the market for the original work, the copyright material has been used in accordance with the Fair Use Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act (1976): Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. FAIR DEALING DISCLAIMER: This video constitutes "Fair Dealing" and does not violate Australian copyright law. As outlined by the Australian Copyright Act of 1968, Division 3 Section 41: "A fair dealing with a literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, or with an adaptation of a literary, dramatic or musical work, does not constitute an infringement of the copyright in the work if it is for the purpose of criticism or review, whether of that work or of another work, and a sufficient acknowledgment of the work is made." The video is transformative in nature, uses no more of the original than necessary and has no negative effect on the market for the original work.

The Movie That Broke Animation Forever

The Studio That Went Extinct

The Incredibles 2 Is Still a Terrible Sequel - 8 Years Later

The Genius of Actors Playing Actors in The Truman Show

RANGO: THE $135 MILLION FEVER DREAM THAT CHANGED ANIMATION

when the director happens to be an expert in CGI

The Incredibles Saga — The Very Best & Worst of Pixar

Why Obi Wan's Lightsaber Style Was the DEADLIEST in Star Wars (And Nobody Realized)

I Miss the MCU

Why Jake Was A Perfect Terrifying Villain - Rango

The Point People Missed About Cars

Why Rango Made People So Mad

Why BATMAN BEGINS Still Feels Different

What happened behind BEE MOVIE was WEIRDER than the film itself

What Makes Dreamworks Villains so Good?

How Disney Ruined Hyperspace

The Dark Psychology of Pixar's Greatest Villain.

How Spider-Man's Web Swinging Changed

Chef Gusteau Was A FRAUD (And One Word Proves It) | Ratatouille

