2007年VOA标准英语-Animated film 'Ratatouille' Brings Cooking Fad(在线收听) | ||||||||||
By Alan Silverman Hollywood 04 July 2007 A rat in the kitchen: to most people, that would be awful, but in the animated world of the new film from Disney's Pixar Studios and director Brad Bird, it can be a wonderful thing for the whole family. Alan Silverman has a look at Ratatouille. Just as "Ratatouille" can be more than just a hearty French vegetable stew, Remy is no ordinary rat. While his family and the rest of the colony scramble for scraps, Remy savors every bite.
A sudden turn of events and a madcap ride downriver (actually, through the fabled sewers of Paris) and Remy is deposited at the kitchen door of the once great Gusteau's restaurant where he finds himself guided (or, perhaps, haunted) by the spirit of the late chef as he sees the lowly clean-up boy, named Linguini, starting to tinker with a boiling pot.
With Remy hidden under his toque tall chef's hat, Linguini becomes the new master chef; but, of course, it has to be their secret. "Initially everybody says 'oh, that's funny ...' and then they go 'ugh,' " says writer and director Brad Bird, who created the Oscar-winning Pixar hit The Incredibles. Bird says he loved the Ratatouille story originally written by his colleague Jan Pinkava; but Bird also knew that, even in animation, a rat in the kitchen could be a tough sell.
Comic actor Patton Oswalt worked with the animators to create the voice and personality of Remy and he jokes that studying 'rat-like' behavior was no help at all. "I remember I was in a pet store buying food for my dog and I saw some rats in cages. I thought 'I should go over and look at them.' Then I thought 'what, am I (Robert) DeNiro? I'm not going to learn anything from looking at these rats.' It has nothing to do with being a rat, so I just avoided that altogether," he says.
In what has become a Pixar tradition, "Ratatouille" sparkles with visual excitement and the latest innovations in computer animation; but director Bird says the philosophy is that the technology must be just a tool to help tell the story.
"Ratatouille" also features the voices of Lou Romano, Ian Holm, Janeane Garofalo and Peter O'Toole (as a bitter restaurant critic named 'Ego'). The exuberant, French-tinged musical score is by Michael Giacchino. | ||||||||||
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/7/39850.html |