Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pixar tunes up its Cars franchise, keeps it going

- JOSH ROTTENBERG

In Hollywood, as it is everywhere, no one escapes from the ravages of time. Not the beautiful people who walk the red carpets. Not the power players who pull the strings in the executive suites.

And evidently not even the animated talking cars.

In Disney/Pixar’s Cars 3, the hard-charging race car Lightning McQueen (voiced by Owen Wilson) finds himself grappling with the automotive version of a midlife crisis as a younger, faster car named Jackson Storm (Armie Hammer) emerges on the racing scene and threatens to force him into involuntar­y retirement. With the help of a plucky, tech-savvy young trainer named Cruz Ramirez (Cristela Alonzo), Lightning tries to get his mojo back.

Middle-age angst may seem like an unusual plot driver for a kids’ movie whose core audience is still in elementary school. Even Wilson admits it took him by surprise at first.

“I was like, ‘Wow, even my animated characters — they’re making them get older?’” the actor, 49, says with a laugh. “I’m aware that, as an actor, you’re probably not doing romantic comedies or buddy comedies as much in your late 40s as you would in your early 30s. But I thought this one was kind of safe.”

With the Cars franchise itself now over a decade old, though, this grown-up-oriented storyline offers a way for the series to appeal to parents and to the kids who fell in love with the first Cars movie in 2006, many of whom are now approachin­g adulthood themselves. At the same time, Pixar and Disney are working hard to cultivate a new generation of Cars fans — and, in particular, bring more young girls into the fold with the introducti­on of a major female character in Cruz.

Pixar has never shied away from incorporat­ing grown-up themes into its films, of course, whether it’s the fear of mortality in Toy Story 3, parental anxiety in Finding Nemo, environmen­tal destructio­n in Wall-E or accepting life as it comes in Up.

Indeed, the animation studio plumbed the indignitie­s of middle age once before in its 2004 film The Incredible­s, which centers on a pair of married superheroe­s in the suburbs trying to adjust to the sometimes spirit-crushing struggles of work and parenting.

“We really don’t make our movies for a particular age group or gender — we truly make them for everybody,” says John Lasseter, chief executive of Pixar Animation Studios and Walt Disney Animation Studios, who directed the first two Cars films. “If someone is breathing, they’re our target. That’s my philosophy.”

Lasseter says the initial inspiratio­n for McQueen’s emotional journey in Cars 3 — which sees him transition from hotshot racing champion to elder statesman and mentor — came from his friendship with NASCAR racer Jeff Gordon, who announced his retirement from the sport in 2015 at age 43.

“In the last few years of his racing career, Jeff would talk to me a lot about the young drivers coming in,” Lasseter says. “There was this energy they had and he realized, ‘That’s the way I was when I was younger.’ I started thinking, ‘Well, that could be where Lightning McQueen is.’”

That said, Cars has proved a particular­ly potent series with very young kids and, as Cars 3 director Brian Fee acknowledg­es, kids don’t, as a general rule, suffer from midlife crises.

“Hopefully they don’t,” Fee, making his feature directoria­l debut, says with a laugh.

“But while kids don’t understand midlife crisis, they do understand that McQueen can’t race anymore. They do understand the thing they want to see, the thing that makes their favorite character happy, is something that he can’t do anymore.”

The power of the franchise’s appeal to young kids — and especially boys — is evidenced by the merchandis­ing bonanza it has spawned over the years, which rivals those of juggernaut­s Harry Potter, Star Wars and Pixar’s own Toy Story.

Though the first two Cars films are only the 10th- and 15th-highest-grossing Pixar movies at the domestic box office, respective­ly, and have not been as widely embraced by critics as many of the animation studio’s other films, they have powered a booming industry in everything from Cars-branded toys and school supplies to apparel, bedding and video games.

In just the first five years after the release of Cars, the franchise generated $10 billion in global retail sales. In 2012, Disney opened Cars Land at its California Adventure theme park to further capitalize on the appetite for all things Cars.

But while a beast of that size clearly needs to be continuall­y fed, Fee says he did his best to tune it out while making the film.

“I don’t think or care about merchandis­e,” he says. “The thing is, if we make a good film, that machine will have whatever it needs to keep going. But it’s all about the movie for me. If any kid is carrying around a backpack or holding a toy, that’s hopefully because they like the story and the characters — not the other way around.”

“John Lasseter loves all the toys, all the merchandis­e — he’s such a perfection­ist about making sure they’re the best and coolest products possible,” says Cars 3 producer Kevin Reher. “But it’s Brian’s job to tell the story.”

Though Lasseter himself has had a deep passion for cars since boyhood, he says that from the earliest days of the Cars franchise he tried to make something that could appeal to anyone, regardless of their level of interest in cars or their sex.

“When I was working on the first one, my wife, Nancy, said, ‘You can’t make this movie just for yourself and your car-geek buddies — you’ve got to make it for me and your nieces and people who aren’t into cars,’” he recalls. “Through the whole first movie, it became what was known as ‘the Nancy factor.’ There are young boys who really love Lightning McQueen, but there are a lot of girls who love him too. It was a conscious decision to make him red — it’s not the typically quote-unquote ‘boy color.’”

With the introducti­on of Cruz Ramirez, Pixar is clearly hoping to rev up the series’ appeal to girls a few more notches. In advance of the movie’s release, Disney’s online store has been stocked with T-shirts for girls and women emblazoned with the character’s name and the words “My Way or the Highway.”

Fee says he hopes the character — who set aside her racing ambitions because she didn’t see any other female cars on the track — will inspire young girls like his own two daughters to not hold themselves back from pursuing their dreams.

“I’m really hoping kids see themselves in Cruz,” Fee says. “My daughters didn’t want to learn to play guitar because they decided guitar is just a boys’ thing. That broke my heart for them to say that. I’d sometimes watch them be afraid to try things because they didn’t want to fail. We hope Cruz speaks for people who have felt out of place, because I think that’s everybody — more often than they’d probably admit.”

With an Incredible­s sequel and a fourth Toy Story film already in the Pixar pipeline, Lasseter suggests that the Cars franchise could have more gas in its tank. But for now he isn’t getting ahead of himself.

“I love these characters and I love the world, and there are so many other stories that you could tell,” he says. “But we don’t decide that we’re going to do it until we have a story that we think would make a great movie.”

On some level, of course, the future of the Cars franchise is not entirely up to Pixar and Disney — the audience will ultimately determine how many miles end up on the odometer. To the question of how one knows when it’s time to stop and retire, one character in Cars 3 offers a blunt answer: “The youngsters will tell you.”

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