Английская Википедия:Boundin'
Шаблон:Infobox film BoundinШаблон:' is a 2003 American animated short film, which was shown in theaters before the feature-length superhero film The Incredibles.[1] The short is a musically narrated story about a dancing lamb, who loses his confidence after being sheared. The film was written, directed, narrated and featured the musical composition and performance of Pixar animator Bud Luckey.
Plot
In the American North, a lamb’s elegant dancing is popular with the other animals. One day lamb-shearers arrive and shear him for wool. The other animals mock his skinny, bare state and he becomes shy and loses the confidence to dance. As the lamb mourns, a benevolent jackalope comes across him, and teaches him the merits of "bounding", not just dancing (that is, getting up whenever you fall down). The lamb is converted and his joy in life is restored. The lamb's wool eventually grows back in the winter, only for it to be cut again, but his confidence is now completely unshaken and he continues to "bound."
Voice cast
- Bud Luckey as Lamb, Jackalope and Narrator
Production
Writer-director Bud Luckey designed and voiced all the characters, composed the music and wrote the story. According to the director's commentary for The Incredibles, Brad Bird wanted to introduce the animated short by having Rick Dicker, (the superhero relocator from The Incredibles, also voiced by Luckey) enter a room, sit down, and pull out a bottle of "booze" and a banjo.
This is the first Pixar short with a theatrical release that included vocal performances with words (Bobby McFerrin did an acapella song for Knick Knack). All prior films included only music and sound effects.
The Cars DVD contains a version of Boundin' with Mater as the jackalope, Lightning McQueen as the lamb, and Guido as the gophers as an Easter egg.
Theatrical and home media release
To qualify for the 76th Academy Awards, Pixar debuted in December 2003 special screenings of the short at the Laemmle Theatres in Los Angeles.[2]
Boundin' was released on March 15, 2005, on The Incredibles two-disc DVD collector's release, including commentary from Bud Luckey and the short clip titled Who is Bud Luckey?.[1] The film was also released as part of Pixar Short Films Collection, Volume 1 in 2007.
Awards
- 2004: Annie Award — Best Animated Short Subject (Won)[3]
- 2004: Academy Award — Best Animated Short Film (Nominated)[4]
References
External links
Шаблон:Pixar Шаблон:Annie Award for Best Animated Short Subject Шаблон:The Incredibles
- Английская Википедия
- 2000s English-language films
- 2003 computer-animated films
- 2000s American animated films
- 2003 animated short films
- Animated films about rabbits and hares
- Best Animated Short Subject Annie Award winners
- Cars (franchise)
- Animated films about sheep
- Animated films set in deserts
- Pixar short films
- American children's animated musical films
- American folk songs
- American animated short films
- Animated films set in North America
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- Страницы с телепортом
- Википедия
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- Статья из Английской Википедии