posted by fenzel on Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009 at 10:16am
Up 2: Next Year in Jerusalem
“He caught him up, and, without wing
Of hippogrif, bore through the air sublime,
Over the wilderness and o’er the plain,
Till underneath them fair Jerusalem,
The Holy City, lifted high her towers . . .
. . . There, on the highest pinnacle, he set
The Son of God.”
– John Milton, Paradise Regained, Book IV
The kindness of the world toward your existence turns out to be an illusion of youth, and all love dies. Man must keep his faith and promises, even as he ages toward death — find a place to stand firm, even as he falls.
Pixar’s Up and John Milton’s great poems Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained are about more than what they have in common. A laundry list of their similarities would hardly be interesting (especially if you haven’t read the poems). But they meet at a critical and compelling place in what I like to call the Artistic Project.
This balloon is about to get heavy, so if at any point you need a little extra lift, bookmark this.
Now, let us go, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow, to find our solitary way —
posted by Think Tank on Friday, May 29th, 2009 at 7:25am
In tribute to this weekend’s release of Up, the latest sure-fire hit from Pixar, we’ve asked our Think Tankers about one of the modern world’s most enduring and picturesque fantasies:
“What is your favorite instance of somebody or bodies getting carried away by a balloon or balloons?”
And they have been, dare I say it, Up to the task. Make sure you weigh in with your choice in our poll or the comments — careful, not too much!