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Friday, October 09, 2009

Ratatouille's sense of taste, of place

by Ryland Walker Knight

(Part of Pixar Week)




—It starts with a book.

A couple years ago I wrote a comparison review pitching Satoshi Kon's Paprika as, if not an answer to, then a conversant partner with Brad Bird's Ratatouille. You can click right here and read it. Watching the film again while preparing the image-essay to follow, I was struck by a few things in my new, two-years-later (more conceptually refined?) toolkit: (1) this isn't simply a movie about animation and imagination (though those are big), at bottom it's a movie about taste; and (2) that investigating taste, say evaluation, is a project of intentionality—seeing how the mind is directed at objects, and how those tastes were formed. That is, it's about the delight, and the impact, of memory—as a weight, in the body, in the present. Then, what's really cool is that Bird animates those thought processes in thrilling ways: Remy's dreams of flavor, Ego's taste bud time-travel home, Linguini's training. And it's all given proper scale and space. Bird's sense of the image, and of mise-en-scene is another element that separates him from the other house (so-called) "stylists" that direct these pictures. You get a real sense of choreography, and weight, in a Bird film. (This makes the still image a reduction, unfortunately, of the film's fluidity, but every composition—as you'll see below—crackles.) Bird designs worlds with wit, and renders them willfully cartoony—he favors plastic—but every edit counts towards characterization, towards building a feeling. And he can't quit his egalitarian stance, which I love. His movies, though focused on "the exceptional," argue for everybody's worth. Everybody has a place, a role, a value. The trick—with people, with food, with films, with life—is selection; that is, to have good taste.

I.



—Don't hurt yourself.


II.


—Brains, or, shrouded celerity


III.












—See with your tongue with your eyes closed, let it detonate


IV.



—We make our friends


V.


—The price of a pellicle, of fur and of fame


VI.



VII.



—He's a tool


VIII.



—We make a talisman


IX.


—Tiny towering though localized


X.



—Find it: go back, come back, taste everything here


XI.


—Let go, let it fill you


XII.



XIII.


—Not a madeleine

______________________________________
HND Contributing Editor Ryland Walker Knight is the creator and editor of VINYL IS HEAVY. He's on twitter, too, @ryknight.


Pixar Week will run Oct. 4-10 at the House. For more information on the event, please see here.

1 comments:

rob humanick said...

Love. It. Love it. Luuuurve it.