Song of the Day #4,487: ‘Hay un amigo en mi’ – Gipsy Kings

Continuing my countdown of every Pixar movie…

#1. Toy Story 3 (2010)
(up one spot from previous ranking)

I’ve written about this film twice on the blog already, once when it first came out and again earlier this year, as part of my countdown of favorite films of the 2010s (it was #9).

I’m providing links to both of those posts above and won’t bother repeating all of my points here.

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Song of the Day #4,486: ‘The Glory Days’ – Michael Giacchino

Continuing my countdown of every Pixar movie…

#2. The Incredibles (2004)
(down one spot from previous ranking)

Even after a decade of Marvel releases, Brad Bird’s The Incredibles remains the greatest superhero movie ever made.

This tale of a family of “supers” forced to live underground by a government that doesn’t appreciate them is just as thrilling and inventive 16 years after its release as it was the day it came out. And the marital and family dynamics that set it apart from typical action fare are just as resonant.

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Song of the Day #4,485: ‘Un Poco Loco’ – Anthony Gonzalez & Gael García Bernal

Continuing my countdown of every Pixar movie…

#3. Coco (2017)
(up seven spots from previous ranking)

Coco was the film that made the biggest jump from my original Pixar ranking to this one. While I enjoyed it the first time, for some reason it didn’t click with me the way it did now.

It took Pixar 19 years to have a non-white protagonist (granted, toys, cars, monsters and fish aren’t white, but the actors portraying them all were). They made up for it beautifully in Coco, not just casting an entirely Hispanic cast, but diving into Mexican culture in ways both big and small. It reminds me of the care and respect the creators of Moana showed in depicting that film’s Polynesian culture.

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Song of the Day #4,484: ‘Married Life’ – Michael Giacchino

Continuing my countdown of every Pixar movie…

#4. Up (2009)
(up five spots from previous ranking)

My revisit of Up was one of the most rewarding surprises of this exercise. I hadn’t seen the film since its 2009 release, and my memory was that the film didn’t live up to its famously powerful opening.

And yes, that opening sequence is astounding. After Carl and Ellie meet as children, a wordless montage traces their entire lives together, through good times and bad, until death ultimately does them part. One of the top five Pixar sequences ever, no question, and possibly number one.

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Song of the Day #4,483: ‘Ratatouille Main Theme’ – Michael Giacchino

Continuing my countdown of every Pixar movie…

#5. Ratatouille (2007)
(down two spots from previous ranking)

Brad Bird’s Ratatouille is a triumph of both concept and execution.

The premise — a rat with a gift for cooking — is both comically simple and curiously profound. Imagine if your very existence was uniquely horrifying in the very setting you felt most at home.

The visuals of this movie are breathtaking, with Bird taking full advantage of his Paris setting, and Michael Giacchino’s score is among my very favorites in a Pixar movie.

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