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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, June 27, 2008

MOVIE SCENE
At Pixar, 'doing lunch' means making movies

By Dixie Reid
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

"WALL-E," a love story about two robots, was generated at a historic lunch meeting of animated-film creators in 1994.

Walt Disney Pictures, Pixar

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EMERYVILLE, Calif. — The lunch meeting grew into something of a legend over the years. It's gotten "mythified," says Andrew Stanton, who was there.

And little wonder, since "A Bug's Life," "Monsters, Inc.," "Finding Nemo" and the newest film from Pixar Animation Studios, "WALL-E" (in theaters today), all were dreamed up that day.

It was 1994, the year before Pixar delivered its first feature-length film, "Toy Story," the first animated movie made entirely on computers. At the table with Stanton were John Lasseter, Pete Docter and Joe Ranft, four of Pixar's earliest creative minds who together wrote the story for "Toy Story." Lasseter also directed it. (Ranft, who wrote "A Bug's Life" and 2006's "Cars," died in a 2005 automobile crash.)

"There was something special that happened when John, Joe, Pete and I would get in a room," says Stanton, who's now sitting in a glass-walled conference room above Pixar's four-star company cafe. "Whether it was furthering an idea or coming up with something, we just brought out the best in each other. It was like a band."

Most of the talk, Stanton recalls, was about Pixar's second feature film, "A Bug's Life," which would be released in 1998. An animated film takes four years to make.

Stanton went on to write and direct the Oscar-winning "Finding Nemo," released in 2003. He often thought about the little trash-compactor character he and Docter came up with over lunch in 1994.

"I remember this half-baked character of a robot being left on Earth and not being turned off. That's about the extent of it," Stanton says. "All we had was a sad, lonely character, and that's where we just kind of left it.

"I never forgot him. I immediately cared about him. So to have something just on the conceit to be that strong, I knew there was something there. It took for me to have all that experience that came before and be finishing up 'Nemo' to have the confidence to try something like this."

Stanton co-wrote (he shares story credit with Docter and screenplay credit with Jim Reardon, story supervisor and director of "The Simpsons") and directed "WALL-E," a sci-fi love story about a couple of robots.

"We went with opposites," says Stanton. "She's clean, white, floating, and he's dirty, boxy, touching the ground.

"WALL-E is this little dump truck, a little compactor, and he's like a bicycle or lawn mower or motorcycle, because you look at him and can figure out how he works. What would be the most attractive thing to him? We thought (it would be) something that floats, something that doesn't touch the ground, something that's so high-tech and white and pristine that you can't even figure out how it works. We're not immune to realizing that probably the most attractive machines in the world right now are Apple products, so we were definitely influenced by that aesthetic."

Pixar, which merged with the Walt Disney Co. in 2006, has delivered eight consecutive hits, including "Toy Story 2," "The Incredibles" and "Ratatouille," since 1995. The films earned a total of $4.3 billion worldwide.

All the ideas generated at that epochal 1994 lunch have been made into movies, Stanton says. "But there have been lots of lunches and dinners since then."