The DVD arrived in PERFECT condition! I think it is one of Disney's ALL TIME CLASSICS & I LOVE it from beginning to end. The price was super great, Thank you!
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Replacing movie lost in California wildfire, but the disc was defective it stopped and pixelled all through the movie. hard to watch. Replacing movie lost in California wildfire
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
"Ratatouille" continues Pixar's golden streak, the likes of which Disney hasn't seen since the early 1990s. Even given a challenge — sell a cute story about rats (!) — Pixar can beat the odds and produce something wonderful. The film follows Remy, a French rat with over-developed tastebuds who is sick of eating garbage. When Remy is marooned in Paris, he befriends Linguini, a restaurant garbage boy with aspirations of filet mignon, not dinner scraps. Building on previous work, the animation in "Ratatouille" is simply amazing, each hair on Remy's body rendered with life-life precision. Coupled with a delightful story and first-rate voice talent (Peter O'Toole plays a menacing food critic whose reviews make or break eateries), "Ratatouille" is an excellent film for young and old. Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed this review, please vote "yes" at the bottom of this entry. Thanks again, and happy viewing!Read full review
What an amazing film! From the producers of Toy Story, Cars, Monsters Inc. and Finding Nemo comes an epic story that goes straight to the dinner table. Ratatouille is a film that is a throwback for Disney to the films of yersteryears. Through the storyline and diolouge, one could even say that if Walt was still alive - this would be something that HE himself would have rattled around in his brain. The Disney creators take you deep into the heart of Italy where some of the finest restaurants are. This story is about a young boy by the name of Linguini and a rat named Remy. Together they mix and create food, as being their specialty. With Remy's help, anything is possible, which follows the phrase used throughout the film that can inspire anyone in the kitchen - "Anyone can cook"Read full review
This is a Review I saw in the New York Times and thought you might want to see it. "The moral of “Ratatouille” is delivered by a critic: a gaunt, unsmiling fellow named Anton Ego who composes his acidic notices in a coffin-shaped room and who speaks in the parched baritone of Peter O’Toole. “Not everyone can be a great artist,” Mr. Ego muses. “But a great artist can come from anywhere.” Quite so. Written and directed by Brad Bird and displaying the usual meticulousness associated with the Pixar brand, “Ratatouille” is a nearly flawless piece of popular art, as well as one of the most persuasive portraits of an artist ever committed to film. It provides the kind of deep, transporting pleasure, at once simple and sophisticated, that movies at their best have always promised. Its sensibility, implicit in Mr. Ego’s aphorism, is both exuberantly democratic and unabashedly elitist, defending good taste and aesthetic accomplishment not as snobbish entitlements but as universal ideals. Like “The Incredibles,” Mr. Bird’s earlier film for Pixar, “Ratatouille” celebrates the passionate, sometimes aggressive pursuit of excellence, an impulse it also exemplifies." — A. O. Scott, The New York TimesRead full review
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