Jun 18, 2015
The life of the mind - that inner voice that guides us all, that either perks our days up or drags us down into doubt and despair – is an intriguing one that movies have rarely managed to fully explore. "A Beautiful Mind" won a Best Picture Oscar for providing a tragic depiction of genius gone awry, and "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" also took home top honors for its surreal portrait of life in an insane asylum.
But neither of those put their entire focus on what goes on in the highly sensitive tissues and nerves that steer every aspect of our existence. But two new movies – "Inside Out", which opens Friday, and "Love and Mercy," which is slowly expanding nationwide – take distinctly different looks at what goes on between our ears, and each has its own rewards.
"Inside Out" is the more inventive of the pair, the latest creation to come out of the magic Disney Pixar movie factory. The problem is that, despite its frequently funny moments and a heart-tugging finale, most of this animated wonder feels like it was factory-assembled rather than sprung from creative passion.
The story follows the life of Riley (voiced by Kaitlyn Dias), an 11 year old girl whose parents (Diane Lane and Kyle McLachlan) relocate from middle America to San Francisco. What originally was an exciting trip for the young girl quickly turns sour, when she finds that her new house is tiny and has no yard to play in, that the furniture has been mis-routed by the moving trucks and won't arrive for several days, and that she cries while introducing herself to new classmates, seemingly dooming her to a life of social failure.
But inside her mind, a storm of feelings is constantly brewing with the glowing Joy (Amy Poehler) trying to keep her as happy as possible for as long as she can. Competing with Joy for emotional control of Riley are Anger (Lewis Black), Sadness (Phyllis Smith) and Fear (Bill Hader): in other words, perfect casting on all fronts.