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Inside Out 2

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Inside Out 2
The emotions are crowded together in a dark room.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byKelsey Mann
Screenplay by
Story by
  • Kelsey Mann
  • Meg LeFauve
Produced byMark Nielsen
Starring
Cinematography
  • Adam Habib
  • Jonathan Pytko
Edited byMaurissa Horwitz
Music byAndrea Datzman
Production
company
Distributed byWalt Disney Studios
Motion Pictures
[a]
Release dates
  • June 10, 2024 (2024-06-10) (El Capitan Theatre)
  • June 14, 2024 (2024-06-14) (United States)
Running time
96 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$200 million[2]
Box office$295 million[3][4]

Inside Out 2 is a 2024 American animated coming-of-age film produced by Pixar Animation Studios for Walt Disney Pictures. The sequel to Inside Out (2015), it was directed by Kelsey Mann (in his feature directorial debut) and produced by Mark Nielsen, from a screenplay written by Meg LeFauve and Dave Holstein, and a story conceived by Mann and LeFauve.[5][6] The film stars Amy Poehler, Phyllis Smith, Lewis Black, Diane Lane, and Kyle MacLachlan reprising their roles from the first film with Tony Hale (replacing Bill Hader as Fear), Liza Lapira (replacing Mindy Kaling as Disgust), Maya Hawke, Ayo Edebiri, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Paul Walter Hauser, and Kensington Tallman (replacing Kaitlyn Dias as Riley) joining the cast. It tells the story of Riley's emotions as they find themselves joined by new emotions that want to take over Riley's head.

Inside Out 2 was first announced in September 2022 during the D23 Expo announcement, with Mann, Nielsen, and LeFauve attached as director, producer, and writer, respectively, while Poehler was revealed to reprise her role in the film, along with Smith, Black, Lane, and MacLachlan. Hale, Lapira, and Hawke joined the cast in November 2023, while Edebiri, Exarchopoulos, Hauser, and Tallman's roles were confirmed in March 2024. That same month, Holstein was confirmed to have co-written the screenplay with LeFauve. The film features Pixar chief creative officer Pete Docter's "five to 27 emotions" idea from the first film that Mann pitched during its production to utilize "truthful" worldbuilding.

Inside Out 2 premiered at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles on June 10, 2024, and was released in theaters in the United States on June 14. The film received positive reviews from critics, and has grossed $295 million worldwide. It held the title of becoming the second-biggest opening day debut for an animated film domestically, only behind Pixar's own Incredibles 2 (2018),[7] and sits as the eighth-highest-grossing film of 2024.

Plot

Set one year after the first film, Riley has just turned 13 and is about to enter high school. Her emotions, Joy, Sadness, Fear, Anger and Disgust, have since created a new section of Riley's mind called her Sense of Self, which houses memories and feelings that make up Riley's core personality. Riley goes to hockey camp so that she can apply for a team at her designated high school, the Fire Hawks. Wanting to make a good impression, the emotions use a mechanism Joy has created to launch any negative memories to the back of Riley's mind. On the night before she leaves, the emotion console sounds off a "Puberty" alarm. After the emotions get rid of the alarm, a group of mind workers barge into headquarters and upgrade the console, making a mess of the place in the process. Before leaving, they warn the emotions that "the others" are coming.

Immediately after, morning arrives and the emotions discover that whenever they interact with the console, it causes Riley to overreact. When Riley is taken to Hockey Camp, she finds out that her friends, Breeanna "Bree" Young and Grace Hsieh, are going to a different high school. Things for Riley become more stressful when she gains four new emotions that come to Headquarters: Envy, Ennui, Embarrassment, and their leader, Anxiety. Despite welcoming the new emotions, Joy and her friends feel that they might disrupt Riley's life, with Anxiety being the stand-out example due to her need to make Riley think up any negative scenario. Joy and Anxiety clash on how to have Riley act during Hockey Camp, with Joy wanting Riley to have fun while Anxiety thinks Riley should focus on practice to get on the Firehawks.

Feeling that a change is in order, Anxiety dumps the Sense of Self into the back of Riley's mind. She also considers the old emotions redundant and has Embarrassment put them in a giant glass jar, which is then taken to a vault below Riley's mind where a group of fictitious characters, as well as a deep, dark secret, are being held. They help the old emotions escape. Meanwhile, Anxiety and the other new emotions create a group of negative memories to create a more corrupted Sense of Self for Riley for her to have what Anxiety sees as a better future. The old emotions use a recall tube to send Sadness to Headquarters while the others go to the Back of the Mind to retrieve Riley's Sense of Self.

Sadness makes it back, but the new emotions capture her just as she steals Ennui’s phone to stop Riley from peeking into her coach’s journal. Discovering that Coach doesn't consider Riley ready to become a Firehawk, Anxiety determines to take further control over her. While trying to get to the back of the mind, Joy and the other emotions see that Anxiety is corrupting Riley with negative feelings, including trying to make friends with popular hockey player Val by copying her, which strains her friendship with Bree and Grace even more. Soon, the emotions make it to the back of Riley's mind and get her Sense of Self from the top of a mountain of bad memories that were stored there. With no other way to get back to Headquarters in time, the emotions summon Pouchy (a character from a children's TV show locked in the Deep Vault), and extract a large pile of explosives from him. They use them to cause an avalanche that takes them back to Headquarters, where chaos is running on account of Anxiety's new corrupted Sense of Self and Anxiety herself who has been frantically controlling Riley during her final hockey game; leading Riley to have an anxiety attack after being sent to the penalty box with little time left to play. The old emotions manage to make it back before any more damage can be done, and Joy convinces Anxiety that she doesn't need to make Riley change herself to have a better future.

Joy's encouragement causes Anxiety to relent, but Riley's attack and the windstorm Anxiety created around the console in her panic persist, even as Joy returns the original Sense of Self to its pedestal. After learning from the repentant Anxiety that not even she can decide on Riley's personality, and understanding the part her memory-dumping device has played in her breakdown, Joy removes the first Sense of Self again, allowing a new, complex and varying one, assembled from the beliefs spawned by many of the negative memories from the avalanche as well as the positive memories Joy had emplaced, to take its place. Together, the emotions embrace this third Sense of Self, stabilizing it and enabling Riley to finally calm herself down. Riley reconciles with Bree and Grace and continues the game.

The new school season begins with Riley now at High School and Val and the Firehawks as her new friends, while she continues to keep in touch with Bree and Grace. At lunch, the team waits around Riley's phone for Coach to post her list of new recruits. Now living in peace, the first and second generations of emotions work together to protect Riley's forever-changing Sense of Self. The film ends with Riley receiving Coach's list, a look of Joy spreading across her face.

Voice cast

Additionally, television personality Sam Thompson cameos in the UK version of the film as Security Man Sam, a character who finds himself on a chase with the emotions.[17]

Production

Development and writing

After the success of Inside Out (2015), the seventh-highest-grossing film of 2015, Entertainment Tonight and The Guardian considered a sequel to be "inevitable".[18][19][20] Inside Out director Pete Docter was germinating ideas for a sequel while the original film's nominations were unveiled at the 88th Academy Awards in January 2016.[21] Pixar officially confirmed the sequel's development during the D23 Expo announcement in September 2022, with Amy Poehler coming on stage to discuss the film alongside Docter.[22] Kelsey Mann was announced as the director of the sequel (making it his feature directorial debut as he previously directed the short film Party Central in 2013), with Mark Nielsen producing, while Meg LeFauve was announced to write the film's screenplay, returning from its predecessor.[23]

To utilize "truthful" worldbuilding, Mann used Docter's "five to 27 emotions" idea from the first film that he pitched during its production.[24] Mann's first pass included nine new emotions to make Joy feel overwhelmed with all the new emotions showing up, but felt that the story could not keep track with so many emotions taking the spotlight or not adding to the story, so after the first screening he decided to simplify the number. Among those emotions was Schadenfreude (having joy at someone's expense), Jealousy and Guilt, but the latter two influenced the film despite being removed, with Mann feeling that Envy could relate to Jealousy and how remnants of Guilt could be found within Anxiety's introduction, even giving Anxiety some of Guilt's baggage, which was inspired by that of Disneyland hotels.[25]

To assist with the development of the film, Pixar enlisted a group of nine teenagers, which were dubbed "Riley's Crew", to provide feedback on the film to ensure it accurately portrayed modern teenage life. Their input led to the inclusion of the emotion Nostalgia and influenced various scenes, including everyday elements of the emotions' lives and the transition from middle school to high school.[26][27]

Casting

Poehler accepted an offer of $5 million with lucrative bonuses to reprise her role as Joy from the first film. Phyllis Smith and Lewis Black also reprise their roles from the first film, voicing Sadness and Anger, respectively.[9] Following a dispute over pay, both Bill Hader and Mindy Kaling declined to reprise their respective roles as Fear and Disgust; they and the rest of the returning cast were reportedly offered $100,000 each, equivalent to two percent of Poehler's salary.[28] On November 9, 2023, with the release of the teaser trailer, it was revealed that Tony Hale and Liza Lapira would replace Hader and Kaling as Fear and Disgust, respectively, while Maya Hawke joined the cast as Anxiety, a new emotion.[8] Mann auditioned Hawke via Zoom at the office of a back room in Epcot during a family vacation with his kids after Nielsen told him that Hawke was available to audition just then, with her anxious performance driving him to tears.[29] On January 16, 2024, it was revealed that June Squibb had joined the cast in an undisclosed role,[16] later revealed to be Nostalgia.[15]

On March 7, 2024, Disney revealed that Ayo Edebiri, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Paul Walter Hauser, Kensington Tallman, Diane Lane, and Kyle MacLachlan joined the cast, with Edebiri, Exarchopoulos, and Hauser playing the other new emotions, Envy, Ennui, and Embarrassment, respectively.[9] In addition, Tallman replaces Kaitlyn Dias as Riley Andersen, while Lane reprises her role as Mrs. Andersen, and MacLachlan also reprises his role as Mr. Andersen.[9] Also joining the cast in supporting roles are Lilimar, who plays a hockey player named Valentina, and Yvette Nicole Brown, who plays the coach of the hockey team, while Sumayyah Nuriddin-Green and Grace Lu play Bree and Grace, Riley's friends.[9][10]

Music

Inside Out 2: Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
Andrea Datzman
ReleasedJune 14, 2024
Recorded2023-2024
StudioEastwood Scoring Stage, Warner Bros., Los Angeles
Length67:00
LabelWalt Disney
Producer
  • Andrea Datzman
  • Michael Giacchino
  • Benjamin Rice
Pixar film soundtrack chronology
Elemental
(2022)
Inside Out 2
(2024)
Elio
(2025)

On March 7, 2024, with the release of the second trailer and poster, it was revealed that Andrea Datzman had composed the film's score, taking over for Michael Giacchino.[30] The soundtrack album was released on June 15, 2024, the same day as the film.

Inside Out 2: Original Soundtrack
No.TitleLength
1."Outside Intro"0:55
2."Go Team!"2:26
3."The Life of Riley"2:32
4."Thread the Needle"1:06
5."Riley Protection System"2:46
6."Creating a Sense of Self"1:30
7."Demo Day"1:57
8."Ride and Prejudice"2:18
9."Anxious to Meet You"2:21
10."Seeking Val-idation"1:44
11."Sending Out an S.o.S."2:45
12."Bloofy & Co."2:59
13."Flight for Fighting"2:48
14."Fawn of a New Day"0:55
15."Return to Imagination Land"1:08
16."To Protect and Disserve"3:19
17."What's the Big Idea?"2:30
18."Red Hairing"1:17
19."Recovering a Sense of Self"2:54
20."Joyless"1:53
21."The Puck Stops Here"2:58
22."A Mind at Freeze"2:43
23."Growing Up Is Hard to Do"4:18
24."Glide and Joy"2:00
25."Every Messy, Beautiful Part of Her"2:43
26."Inside Outro"2:21
27."Done Track Mind"8:15
Total length:67:00

Release

Inside Out 2 premiered at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles on June 10, 2024,[31] and was released in theaters in the United States on June 14, 2024,[22] with screenings in RealD 3D, IMAX and Dolby Cinema.[32] It also screened at the 2024 Annecy International Animation Film Festival that same day.[33]

Marketing

The teaser trailer for the film, along with the poster, was released on November 9, 2023. James Withbrook of Gizmodo and Inverse's Rotem Rusak highlighted the introduction of three other emotions in the poster: Embarrassment, Ennui, and Envy.[34][35] The teaser was viewed over 157 million times in the first 24 hours across all social media platforms—including over 78 million from TikTok—becoming the most-watched animated film trailer launch in the Walt Disney Company's history, surpassing the previous record holder, Frozen II (2019).[36] A clip from the film was also aired during the Super Bowl LVIII, named "Team".[37] The second trailer, along with a new poster, was released on March 7, 2024.[30] This trailer also marked the debut of the "standard" variant of the 2023 Walt Disney Pictures logo, which was introduced the year before for the studio's centennial anniversary.[38] The first 35 minutes of the film were screened during The Walt Disney Studios' presentation of first looks at their 2024 theatrical release slate at CinemaCon on April 11, 2024.[39] As part of a partnership with airbnb, a new rental home in Nevada just outside of Las Vegas modeled after "headquarters" in the film was listed on the website beginning June 12, 2024.[40]

Reception

Box office

On a budget of $200 million, Inside Out 2 was initially projected to gross $80–90 million in its domestic opening weekend. The sub-$100 million industry projections were partially due to the notion that general audiences remained hesitant to return to theaters, given the direct-to-streaming releases of previous Pixar films on Disney+, the underperformance of Pixar's Lightyear (2022) at the box office, and the lackluster box office results of several films in 2024.[2][41][42] After making $62 million on its first day, including $13 million from Thursday night previews, projections were raised to $140–150 million for the weekend.[43] It ended up grossing $155 million domestically and $295 million worldwide on its opening weekend.[44]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 92% of 210 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.7/10. The website's consensus reads: "Spicing things up with the wrinkle of teen angst, Inside Out 2 clears the head and warms the heart by living up to its predecessor's emotional intelligence."[45] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 74 out of 100, based on 54 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[46] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale (the same as the first film), while those surveyed by PostTrak gave the film an average of 4.5 out of 5 stars, with 72% saying they would definitely recommend it.[47][48]

Moira Macdonald of The Seattle Times awarded the film 3+12 stars out of four, commending the voice cast and the film as "a happy head trip, for any age."[49] Robbie Collin of The Daily Telegraph gave the film four stars out of five, praising the animation, metaphors, and wit while saying "the cast-iron ontological brilliance of Docter's original premise bears expansion well".[50] Owen Gleiberman of Variety praised Hawke's performance as Anxiety and the film's emotional impact, calling it "the most poignantly perceptive tale of the conundrums of early adolescence since Eighth Grade".[47]

Notes

  1. ^ Distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures through the Walt Disney Pictures banner.

References

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External links