Dan Scanlon directed Pixar’s prequel to Monsters, Inc., which was released in 2013. Starring everyone from
the first film, plus Helen Mirren and Nathan Fillion, Monsters University grossed $743.6 million at the box office. And had
music by Mastodon and Mötley Crüe. While it was nominated for numerous Annie
awards, it only won two for storyboarding and editorial. It also wasn’t
nominated for any Academy Awards and lost its bids for the Kids’ Choice Awards
and Saturn Awards.
Enrolling in Monsters University in the Scarer Program, Mike
Wazowski (Billy Crystal) forms a rivalry with James Sullivan (John Goodman).
Eventually, their rivalry get kicked out of the program and conspire to get
back in by joining the fraternity Oozma Kappa and enter the Scare Games.
Monsters University
is certainly interesting. It has many standard tropes that are in most
prequels, but it still has the charm its predecessor had. Mike and Sully, as
stated above, don’t start out as friends and the rivalry is nothing short of
bitter. And Randall, who is Mike’s roommate, starts out as a guy who just wants
to get in with the popular crowd. But all this really foreshadows who they
become. Randall ends up the weasel who will do anything to make it to the top
and the duo become the well-oiled machine that becomes one of the most popular
Scare Teams.
And that development is really highlighted in the film
showing that being knowledgeable and having the skills to back that up are two
completely different things. Mike has mastered every technical detail, but
makes kids laugh. And Sulley has the ability, but he just uses that to coast
by. But that furthers to show that the two need each other as Mike uses his
knowledge to coach Sulley to become one of the best.
This is also seen in the other members of Oozma Kappa. They’re
complete losers mainly because none of them have utilized their talents. And
Mike helps them all to see that, which brings them to shoot to the top in the
Scare Games. And, even after Mike and Sulley get kicked out, they get into the
Scare Program and use everything they acquired during the games to excel.
It may not be as good as Monsters
Inc., but it’s close.
#17
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