Big Hero 6 is a 2014 American 3D mputer-animated superhero comedy film produced by Walt Disney
Animation Studios and
released by Walt Disney
Pictures. The 54th film in the Walt
Disney Animated Classics series,
the film is inspired by the Marvel Comics superhero team of the same name[5] Directed by Don Hall
and Chris Williams,
the film tells the story of a young robotics prodigy named Hiro Hamada, who forms a superhero team to
combat a masked villain.
Big Hero 6 is the first Disney
animated feature film to feature Marvel Comics characters, whose parent
company was acquired
by The Walt Disney
Company in 2009.[6] Walt Disney Animation
Studios created new software technology to produce the film's animated visuals.[1][7] The film features the
voices of Scott Adsit, Ryan Potter, Daniel Henney, T. J. Miller, Jamie Chung,Damon Wayans, Jr., and Génesis Rodríguez.
Big Hero 6 premiered at the Tokyo
International Film Festival on
October 23, 2014 and at the Abu Dhabi Film
Festival in 3D on
October 31, 2014. It was theatrically released in the United States on November
7, 2014, and received generally positive reviews.[8][9]
Hiro Hamada is a
14-year-old robotics genius who lives in the futuristic city of San Fransokyo,
and spends his time participating in back-alley robot fights. His older
brother, Tadashi, worried that Hiro is wasting his potential, takes him to the
robotics lab at his university, where Hiro meets Tadashi's friends, GoGo
Tomago, Wasabi, Honey Lemon and Fred, as well as Baymax, a personal healthcare
companion Tadashi created. Amazed, Hiro decides to apply to the school. He
presents his project—microbots, swarms of tiny robots that can link together in
any arrangement imaginable—at an annual exhibition to gain admission. Professor
Callaghan, the head of the program, is impressed, and Hiro gets in. When a fire
breaks out at the university, Tadashi rushes in to rescue Callaghan but the
building explodes and both are killed. As a result of losing his brother, Hiro
secludes himself from others.
One day, Hiro
accidentally activates Baymax. Baymax follows one of Hiro's microbots to an
abandoned warehouse, where he and Hiro discover that someone has been
mass-producing Hiro's bots; they are attacked by a masked man called Yokai, who
is controlling the bots. Realizing this man has stolen his project, Hiro
decides to catch him and upgrades Baymax with armor and a battle chip
containing various karate moves. After Yokai attacks Hiro, Baymax, GoGo,
Wasabi, Honey, and Fred in a car chase, the six form a superhero team.
The group discovers
that a former lab of Krei Tech, a prestigious robotics company, was experimenting
with teleportation technology. The test went awry when the human test pilot
vanished inside an unstable portal. Yokai is revealed to be Professor
Callaghan, who explains that he stole Hiro's bots and used them to escape the
fire. Realizing that Tadashi died in vain, Hiro angrily removes Baymax's
healthcare chip, leaving him with only the battle chip, and orders him to kill
Callaghan. Baymax almost does so until Honey manages to insert the healthcare
chip back in. Angry at his friends, Hiro goes home but breaks down when Baymax
asks him if killing Callaghan will make him feel better. To soften Hiro's loss,
Baymax plays humorous clips of Tadashi's running tests on him during Baymax's
development. Hiro realizes that killing Callaghan is not what Tadashi would
have wanted and makes amends with his friends.
The group discovers
that the test pilot was Callaghan's daughter Abigail; Callaghan is seeking
revenge on Alistair Krei, the president of Krei Tech, whom he blames for her
death. They save Krei and destroy the microbots, but the portal remains active.
Baymax detects Abigail from inside the portal and he and Hiro rush in to save
her. On their way out, Baymax's armor is damaged and he realizes the only way
to save Hiro and Abigail is to propel them through with his rocket fist. Hiro
refuses to leave him, but Baymax insists until Hiro tearfully gives in. Hiro
and Abigail make it back, and Callaghan is arrested.
Sometime later, Hiro
discovers Baymax's healthcare chip, which contains his entire personality, clenched
in his rocket fist. Delighted, Hiro rebuilds Baymax and they happily reunite.
The six friends continue their exploits through the city, staying unknown, and
fulfilling Tadashi's dream of helping those in need.
In the post-credits
scene, Fred accidentally opens a secret door in his family mansion and finds
superhero gear inside. His father arrives and embraces him, stating that they
have a lot to talk about.
Voice cast
Main article: Big Hero 6 § Team roster
- Ryan Potter as Hiro Hamada, a 14-year-old robotics prodigy who has already graduated high school. His older brother Tadashi inspires Hiro to gain admission to San Fransokyo's Institute of Technology. Speaking of the character, co-director Don Hall said "Hiro is transitioning from boy to man, it's a tough time for a kid and some teenagers develop that inevitable snarkiness and jaded attitude. Luckily Ryan is a very likeable kid. So no matter what he did, he was able to take the edge off the character in a way that made him authentic, but appealing."[10][11][12]
- Scott Adsit as Baymax, an inflatable robot built by Tadashi to serve as a healthcare companion. Hall said "Baymax views the world from one perspective—he just wants to help people, he sees Hiro as his patient." Producer Roy Conli said "The fact that his character is a robot limits how you can emote, but Scott was hilarious. He took those boundaries and was able to shape the language in a way that makes you feel Baymax's emotion and sense of humor. Scott was able to relay just how much Baymax cares."[10][11][13]
- Daniel Henney as Tadashi Hamada, Hiro's older brother and Baymax's creator. On Hiro and Tadashi's relationship, Conli said "We really wanted them to be brothers first. Tadashi is a smart mentor. He very subtly introduces Hiro to his friends and what they do at San Fransokyo Tech. Once Hiro sees Wasabi, Honey, Go Go and even Fred in action, he realizes that there's a much bigger world out there than [sic] really interests him."[11][12][14]
- T. J. Miller as Fred, a laid-back comic-book fan who also plays the mascot at San Fransokyo Institute of Technology, who also gave GoGo, Wasabi, and Honey Lemon their nicknames. Speaking of Miller, Williams said "He's a real student of comedy. There are a lot of layers to his performance, so Fred ended up becoming a richer character than anyone expected."[10][11][15][16]
- Jamie Chung as GoGo Tomago, a tough, athletic, adrenaline junkie who is developing electromagnetic wheel axles at San Fransokyo Institute of Technology. Hall said "She's definitely a woman of few words...We looked at bicycle messengers as inspiration for her character."[10][11][17][18][19]
- Damon Wayans, Jr. as Wasabi, a smart, slightly neurotic, largely built neat-freak and an expert on laser cutting at San Fransokyo Institute of Technology. On the character, co-director Chris Williams said "He's actually the most conservative, cautious—he [sic] the most normal among a group of brazen characters. So he really grounds the movie in the second act and becomes, in a way, the voice of the audience and points out that what they're doing is crazy."[10][11][20]
- Génesis Rodríguez as Honey Lemon, a quirky chemistry whiz at San Fransokyo Institute of Technology. Williams said "She's a glass-is-half-full kind of person. But she has this mad-scientist quality with a twinkle in her eye—there's more to Honey than it seems."[10][11][21]
- James Cromwell as Professor Robert Callaghan, the head of a robotics program at San Fransokyo Institute of Technology and Tadashi's professor and mentor. He is later revealed to be the masked villain Yokai.[11][14]
- Alan Tudyk as Alistair Krei, a pioneer entrepreneur and tech guru. Also one of the most distinguished alums of San Fransokyo Institute of Technology and owner of the biggest technology company in the world, Krei Tech Industries.[11][14]
- Maya Rudolph as Aunt Cass, Hiro and Tadashi's aunt and guardian, who owns a popular San Fransokyo coffee shop.[11][14][18]
- Stan Lee as Fred's father, secretly a retired superhero.(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
Watch
Download
Single link (gannol)
0 comments:
Posting Komentar