{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "Oh, let's talk about the children's movie previews I saw before Cats:\nHarrison Ford and a Dog - I'm sorry dude, even if he does...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/189785654383/", "html": "<p>Oh, let&rsquo;s talk about the children&rsquo;s movie previews I saw before Cats:</p><p><b>Harrison Ford and a Dog</b> - I&rsquo;m sorry dude, even if he does seemed trained so his reaction gestures aren&rsquo;t that broad, you&rsquo;re co-starring in a kids&rsquo; movie with a dog, and the story beats sound blunt as hell. No one you care about will even notice and you&rsquo;ll use the paycheck to build a weed plantation on a Colorado mountaintop, though.</p><p><b>Movie where a tough Russian-ish spy mook has to mentor a little girl</b> - still really cliche and treacly in a way I have to assume is pitched more to earnest parents. If this is the alternative I prefer the Shrek-style dumb knowingness over this dumb carebear shit, but I guess that&rsquo;s my thesis on culture in general for the last few years. </p><p><b>Dr. Doolittle (with RDJ)</b> - when I saw the title I was like &ldquo;oh yes, that classic British kids&rsquo; property, where\u2026 ah\u2026 yes, animals! Where he does\u2026 some verbs\u2026 with animals!&rdquo; The bit where the whole trailer&rsquo;s all appealing to parents like &ldquo;sense of wonder! an authority figure saying it&rsquo;s okay to be scared!&rdquo; and then a 3 second tag for boys &ldquo;look, intense music and a dragon!&quot;\u2026</p><p><b>Lin-Manuel Maranda movie about the &quot;dreamers&rdquo; of Washington Heights defending themselves from evil gentrificationers, the dialogue was wretch-inducing diversity cliches </b>- I rolled my eyes so hard and repeatedly I had to close them. It did highlight that all those &ldquo;we gotta save our scrappy camp from the snobs across the lake!&rdquo; stuff was narrativizing the white ethnic breakup of WASP hegemony, even tho by then WASPs were more outdoor-enthusiast totebaggers driving Volvos into the ground. <i>Sorry</i>, WASPs.</p><p><b>Trolls</b> - from a culture war standpoint, this is more interesting. It opens with like, the Techno Troll as rave DJ playing Daft Punk&rsquo;s One More Time, which 1) ugh 2) alllll flashing colors 3) sets up a hilarious contrast with Interstella 555</p><p>But then it turns out the plot is the Rock Troll (a mohawked-denim 80s type) is the villain, trying to claim the &ldquo;5 strings&rdquo; of music to secure supremacy. So at least\u2026 the Rap Troll and the Smooth Jazz Troll have to stop her?</p><p>I&rsquo;m sure the climax is she thought she had to do this to survive and there&rsquo;s some sort of reconciliation, probably as a loud party, but that &ldquo;Rock is the oppressive villain Rap and Smooth Jazz have to defeat&rdquo; is a viable take for youth media, hm.</p><p>Of course it looks excruciating, I hear the Angry Birds movie was interestingly xenophobic, but I&rsquo;m not gonna watch that either.</p><p><b>New Pixar Movie</b> \u2013 unlike the others looks quite competent in that Pixar way. Don&rsquo;t approve of feelings for your dead relatives, esp. ones you never even met and I wish they didn&rsquo;t apply their competence to that low shit, so. Speaking of Rock, is &ldquo;fat friendly denim-jacket-and-patches guy with an airbrushed van&rdquo; still a meaningful type to anyone? I feel like I&rsquo;ve only ever encountered him in representations, like Br\u00fctal Legend and Day of the Tentacle, I&rsquo;ve never actually met that guy in person</p>"}