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Up ver2

Cameos, in-jokes, re-used animation and other trivia from Up.

Cameos

  • The Pizza Planet truck appears three times in the film, once early when the house first takes off and is
    Toystory3-lotso-431-1-
    floating over town. When Carl lowers Russell out the window, you can see it parked outside. You can also see it parked by the curb right after the house passes the window washer. At the end, when they are eating ice cream, you can see it off to the left in the parking lot.
  • The theater from the short film Presto is used when Charles Muntz reveals the bird's skeleton.
  • The ball from the short film Luxo, Jr. is seen when Carl's house passes by a little girl's bedroom.
  • If you look really hard at some of the construction equipment on the construction site surrounding Carl's house, you might notice the Buy n Large logo, the fictional corporation from WALL•E. Also, the numbers on one of the machines reads L-R 1572, which is Up art director Lou Romano’s birthday (April 15, 1972).
  • Carl wears a cap from a Grape Soda bottle. The same brand of soda was featured in Toy Story during the Buzz Lightyear commercial.
  • Sunny Miami has a cameo in Up, when Carl goes to buy tickets for Venezuela.
  • Lotso appears by Dee's bed.
  • The shotgun Charles uses to shoot Carl's house looks similar to the shotgun used by Mabel in the beginning of Ratatouille.
  • When Carl is buying tickets to Venezuela, The Font "Burbank" (commonly used in Disney Canada's Club Penguin) appears in a sign in which reads "Brazil" and another identical one next to it reading "Peru" in a gold color.
  • The Anglerfish from Finding Nemo appears during Carl and Muntz's fight when Muntz strikes one of his exhibits with his sword.

In-Jokes

  • A113 is the number of the courtroom that Carl is summoned to.
  • Dug's knocking the controls over and tilting the blimp is a direct shadowing of WALL•E, in which AUTO rotates the Axiom in an attempt to stop him from sending the ship to Earth. The Up version makes more sense, because there is gravity on Earth. Tilting a blimp will topple stuff over, but tilting a spaceship which clearly has its own gravity field, should have no effect in zero-gravity.
  • In real life, hunters prank each other by challenging them to kill a snipe, which doesn't exist, but sounds real enough to be some kind of bird. It's even a common Boy Scout rite-of-passage. That was also the standard fake "snipe" call. Normally, the victim is given a bag or pillowcase to catch it in. Kevin, however, bears no resemblance to a snipe.
  • The dogs check their communication similar to the Rebels on the start of the attack on the Death Star.
    Screen Shot 2011-12-07 at 8.12

    Dogs Playing Poker

    Though instead of "Red Leader, standing by," it's "Gray leader, checking in," due to the fact that dogs are colorblind. Also, Star Wars is shown on a movie theater marquee during the end credits.
  • The computer shown in the end credits bears an uncanny resemblance to an Apple computer. Steve Jobs is a co-founder of Pixar.
  • When Russell is trying to break onto the Spirit of Adventure, he passes a window where a bunch of dogs are playing poker. This is a reference to the painting "Dogs Playing Poker."
  • Director Pete Docter voices Kevin, as well as Campmaster Starch, whereas co-director Bob Peterson voices Dug, as well as Alpha.
  • In one scene, when the dogs fall into the river while attempting to capture Kevin the bird, a "robotic" version of the Wilhelm scream can be heard.

Other Trivia

  • At the beginning of the film, Carl is 9 years old while Muntz is 23. At the end of the film, Carl is 78 and Muntz is 92.[1]
  • Kevin is probably an animated version of a prehistoric bird that lived about 6 to 10 thousand years ago.
    • Pixar employees visited Sacramento Zoo and sketched the Himalayan monal pheasant, due to its colorful feathers, for future references in the creation of Kevin.[2]
  • In Japan, the film is called カールじいさんの空飛ぶ家 (meaning "Grandpa Carl's Flying House").[3] The name bears an uncanny resemblance to Miyazaki's Howl's Moving Castle.
  • The license plate of the ambulance at the start of the film is "1934," which is the year Disney began work on its first feature length animation, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
  • The tree Carl Fredricksen and Ellie go to is the same one in Toy Story 2 and A Bug's Life.
  • According to the director's commentary, there are 10,297 balloons used to lift Carl's house. In actuality, the Pixar folks calculated it would take over 26.5 million balloons to lift such a house.
  • The plates and silverware found in Charles Muntz's blimp came from Ratatouille.
  • Gazerbeam's skull from The Incredibles can be seen in Muntz's blimp.
  • When Carl pushes the stuff from his house onto Paradise Falls, the stuff remains there to the remainder of the movie. However, when the last shot of Up is showing Carl's house on Paradise Falls, the stuff is nowhere to be found. There is some speculation that the house landed in front of the stuff, since it was in a pile.
  • Up is the second animated movie to be nominated for the Best Picture Academy Award (the first was Beauty and the Beast).
  • The names Carl and Ellie Fredricksen appear on a postcard attached to a board in Andy's room in Toy Story 3.
  • This is the first Pixar film to be in 3D.
  • The commercial that Carl is watching on his TV right before we first meet Russell is a real commercial, and a funny one too because the man talking mistakes a butterfly for a horse.
  • Carl's line "Take a bath, hippie!" is similar to Sarge's line "Take a car wash, hippie!"
  • In the credits, some of the pictures relate to the crediting (Directed By: Russell walking Carl accross the street; Music By: Dug howling, Carl playing glasses, Russel playing trumpet; Story Supervisor: Carl telling a scary story at a campfire; Film Editor: Russell and Carl go to see Star Wars in theatres; Production Designer: Dug and Russell drawing with chalk; Supervising Technical Director: Russell trying to teach Carl how to use a computer; Production Manager: Dug and his mate and all their children, of whom they PRODUCED; Directors of Photography, Camera, Lighting: pictures from a picture booth of Carl, Russell, and Dug; Shading Art Director: Carl and Russell making shadow puppets; Sound Designer: Carl and Russell talking through tin cans)
  • The Itchy and Scratchy Show short "P.U." from The Simpsons episode "Loan-A-Lisa" is a parody of this film.
  • Up has the simplest DVD release features of any Pixar film, consisting of just the film, and its two tie-in shorts, Partly Cloudy and Dug's Special Mission, and nothing else. The Blu-Ray version, however, contained more bonus material.
  • The priest at Carl and Ellie's marriage has the same character model as the gynecologist who diagnosed Ellie as infertile.
  • SpongeBob SquarePants parodied this movie in one episode of the series by having balloon-shaped bubbles attached to Patrick Star's rock, thus lifting his house.
  • The special collar used on pets with an injury to stop them injuring themselves further is formally known as an Elizabethan collar, but because of Up, it is now more commonly called a "Cone of Shame".
  • Up single-handedly changed the meaning of "squirrel" from "hide" to "be distracted."

References

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