San Francisco Chronicle

Spared from extinction

- By Chad Jones

years after its original release date came and went, Disney Pixar’s “The Good Dinosaur” is back from the brink of extinction.

The second movie to come from Emeryville’s Pixar Studios this year, following the summer success of “Inside Out,” “The Good Dinosaur” had originally been announced for Thanksgivi­ng 2013. The evolutiona­ry path of this particular “Dinosaur” proved to be bumpy, with the original director, producer and much of the voice cast being replaced and the movie reconceive­d by a new team.

Director Peter Sohn replaced Bob Peterson, who remains credited (with Enrico Casarosa) for original story, and producer Denise Ream replaced John Walker.

One of Ream’s first tasks as producer was to shut the whole movie down.

“Once Pete had come on because Bob was stuck, everyone came to the realizatio­n that the movie needed more time,” Ream says. “That was in 2013, and we spent the rest of that year going all the way back to research and to focus on the story. It turned out that the research part was a big turning point for Pete.”

Research trips to the Grand Tetons and Yellowston­e — filled with hiking, horseback riding and whitewater rafting — persuaded the creative team to set the movie amid the vastness of giant mountains and plains of the American West. This is where the story of Arlo, an 11-year-old apatosauru­s, unfolds as he is separated from his family and must make an epic, lifechangi­ng journey home.

The twist here is that the asteroid that is thought to have caused the extinction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago has missed the Earth, so dinosaurs have the power of language and have settled the land. The herbivores, like Arlo’s family, are farmers, and the carnivores are ranchers. The humans are wordless beasts, and a little human, 6-year-old Spot, befriends Arlo and accompanie­s him on his journey like a faithful dog.

“When we were rethinking the movie, Denise said, ‘Let’s go to the frontier and get lost,’ so we all jumped on a plane,” director Sohn says. “I felt a real charge from what we saw in Idaho and WyoTwo

ming. I thought, ‘I can see the movie now. I can see what it can be.’ I knew I wanted the landscape to be more than scenery. It had to be a character, an emotional character and sometimes a threatenin­g character.”

The overriding theme of the movie involves fear, embracing it and getting through it. Arlo is a fearful child who finds himself in the most frightenin­g of situations: alone and very far from home.

Simplified, quiet

“Once we started to simplify the story — a simple boy and dog story where the boy is a dinosaur and the dog is a boy — we realized there wouldn’t be a lot of dialogue,” Ream says. “It would be kind of quiet out in the wilderness. When we pitched that concept to the Pixar brain trust, the moment they said yes, I can’t tell you how relieved I was. I went into the bathroom and wept. I was so happy because I really wanted to make this movie. It really felt like our movie. That’s why I came to Pixar, to make movies like this, movies that feel risky.”

For screenwrit­er Meg LeFauve, who also worked on “Inside Out,” that level of simplicity was a true challenge. “All great art, from ballet to paintings, looks simple. That’s why it’s so hard to do,” LeFauve says. “It’s easier to throw more at it. In clarity and simplicity, you have many layers all working toward the same note. The theme, characters, relationsh­ips and emotional point of view have to culminate in a singular vision and emotional experience.”

Story supervisor Kelsey Mann says the challenge of simplicity, where there’s nothing to hide behind, was exciting. “I feel like a lot of animated family fare is full of stuff,” he says. “It’s very challengin­g to do the opposite. Fewer elements need to do a lot more. As Meg described it the other day, this story has the profound simplicity of a poem.”

Getting through fear

Director Sohn is credited by his creative team as being the vision behind that simple and direct approach to storytelli­ng. For him, it all comes down to fear.

“My own fears as a child, as an artist and later as a father are all still there,” he says. “That was the therapy of making this movie. You have to find a way to get through fear. I can’t tell you how scared I was to step up and direct this movie. This is a huge film, and Pixar makes amazing movies. Could I do that? I had to find what I loved about the movie and let that keep pushing me through.”

Sohn says he hopes “The Good Dinosaur,” Pixar’s 16th feature film, has a similar effect on audiences. “I would love it if my 5-year-old daughter, if she was going through something scary, has something she loves enough in her life to help her. It’s as simple as that. Arlo the dinosaur discovers what he loves, and that’s what gets him through.”

 ?? Pixar ?? In “The Good Dinosaur,” Arlo, separated from his apatosauru­s family, makes an epic journey to get back home and finds an unlikely companion along the way — a human boy.
Pixar In “The Good Dinosaur,” Arlo, separated from his apatosauru­s family, makes an epic journey to get back home and finds an unlikely companion along the way — a human boy.

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