First Look at Pixar's La Luna
Check out the La Luna clip at AWNtv!

It's fitting that we get multiple shorts this year in honor of Pixar's 25th anniversary (Gary Rydstrom's Hawaiian Vacation, which launches the Toy Story Toons brand, bows with Cars 2 on June 24; the second will play with The Muppets on Nov. 23). However, La Luna, the wistful coming of age fable, which debuts at Annecy this week, is the real Oscar contender. In fact, the lovely illumination motif harkens back to Luxo, Jr. Although it's not currently attached to a feature, the most likely prospect is next year's Brave (opening June 22). Prior to leaving for Annecy, Enrico Casarosa (who's been promoted to head of story after working on Cars, Ratatouille, Up and Cars 2) discussed his unique Italian-flavored short, in which a young boy who rows out to sea in an old wooden boat with his bickering Papa and Grandpa as they await some lunar adventure.
Bill Desowitz: What's the genesis of La Luna?
Enrico Casarosa: I've been working on the idea since 2008 and pitched it to John [Lasseter] at the beginning of 2009 and started it later that fall. The core idea has two parts: A personal story about me growing up by the sea in Genoa, and how my father and grandfather rarely speaking to one another. I can remember being 11 or 12 and getting caught in the middle at the dinner table with these very uncomfortable conversations. My grandfather lived with us, which probably had a lot to do with it.

EC: My biggest ones are The Little Prince and Miyazaki and his sense of the fantastic; there's also Italo Calvino's story, "The Distance of the Moon," about building a ladder to the moon. When I read that, I wanted to do a story like that and invent a myth about what happens up there. There's also La Linea by Osvaldo Cavandoli with lots of gibberish from the protagonist. I thought it would go well with Italian gesturing. So I came up with a coming of age story about a little boy stuck between these two personalities and finding his own way around a very strange and fantastic place. The setting felt right with these characters from the 1920s or '30, peasants or farmers or miners. I liked the juxtaposition.
BD: What was Lasseter's best advice?
EC: This should be the first day that this boy goes on this adventure and we experience this special day with the boy. John embraced the uniqueness of this and there was never talk of adding humor. He kept saying, "I want to be there!"
BD: At nearly 7 minutes, this is the longest Pixar theatrical short, isn't it?
EC: Yes, the shape of the story was very much there. It was a matter of sculpting it; we tightened it with everyone's help as we went along. The one element that got refined was the gibberish language that the grandfather and father speak. If anything, that was something that we had to slowly sell because it didn't sell immediately. We had to find our tone and not make it too annoying. They realized that a little gibberish goes a long way. And not everybody can do it, so it was also about finding the right performer. We had a helper in [John Gilkey] a clown with great gibberish from Cirque du Soleil, who was a consultant on Ratatouille. We called him in again and he was one of the first to help us.























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It IS wonderful. I had the chance to be at the premiere, and I loved it, it was just magical, amazing, marvelous, magnificent... <3
I for one am glad to see the meld of traditional and CG in such a beautiful execution. I'm really looking forward to this short!
it looks and sounds wonderful. Im really looking forward to seeing this one.
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