Whether you’re rewatching for nostalgia or showing it to your kids for the first time, the offers gorgeous animation, a heart-wrenching story, and a final race that will have you cheering.
But he didn't take tires or fuel. He rolled to a stop in front of Cruz. “Get in.”
After a devastating crash that leaves his future in question, Lightning must decide if he’s ready to hang up the racing tires for good or if he has one more comeback left in him. New Characters and a New Mission
Pixar pushed technical boundaries to achieve a high level of "believability" in the film's visuals.
Unlike its predecessor, Cars 2 (2011)—a globe-trotting spy parody— Cars 3 returns to the core themes of the original: competition, identity, and purpose. Directed by first-time feature director Brian Fee (a veteran storyboard artist for Pixar), the film addresses an unusual topic for children’s animation: the inevitable decline of an aging athlete. This paper will explore how Cars 3 uses the iconography of stock car racing to dramatize the anxieties of a new generation of technology (symbolized by the “Next-Gen” racers) overwhelming traditional talent.
Whether you’re rewatching for nostalgia or showing it to your kids for the first time, the offers gorgeous animation, a heart-wrenching story, and a final race that will have you cheering.
But he didn't take tires or fuel. He rolled to a stop in front of Cruz. “Get in.”
After a devastating crash that leaves his future in question, Lightning must decide if he’s ready to hang up the racing tires for good or if he has one more comeback left in him. New Characters and a New Mission
Pixar pushed technical boundaries to achieve a high level of "believability" in the film's visuals.
Unlike its predecessor, Cars 2 (2011)—a globe-trotting spy parody— Cars 3 returns to the core themes of the original: competition, identity, and purpose. Directed by first-time feature director Brian Fee (a veteran storyboard artist for Pixar), the film addresses an unusual topic for children’s animation: the inevitable decline of an aging athlete. This paper will explore how Cars 3 uses the iconography of stock car racing to dramatize the anxieties of a new generation of technology (symbolized by the “Next-Gen” racers) overwhelming traditional talent.
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