Operação Big Hero - "Soco-bate... Tra-lá-lá-laah"
Quando vi o trailer fiquei muito interessado em assistir essa animação. E quando o fiz adorei. E dessa vez fui ler um pouco sobre ela, geralmente não faço isso para não ser influenciado, e descobri que era uma adaptação de uma HQ da Marvel de mesmo nome criada em 1998 por Steven T. Seagle e Duncan Rouleau!!! Fiquei surpreso e pouco encontrei sobre o quadrinho original, então fico somente com o filme.
Outra surpresa foi ver que “Operação Big Hero” conta com um super-herói fofucho. Ou para os corações mais peludos, um gordo. E não, o jovem Hiro Hamada não é o mais importante do filme. Ele é apenas o protagonista humano que faz do grande robô médico inflável Baymax um “lutador”.
Vamos ao início e tentarei não ser todo truncado com as informações. O começo é bem tradicional como uma típica história de heróis. São dois irmãos, Tadashi e Hiro Hamada (não falarei das vozes originais, assisti dublado) que por coincidência são gênios robóticos. Porém o mais velho já vai a uma espécie de universidade, ou seja, tem propriedade para fazer e ser o que se propõe, e o mais novo é um bostinha prepotente e que “se acha” só por conseguir fazer uns robozinhos de lutas ilegais. Até o Tadashi gongar com a cara dele provando que perto de todo mundo na "universidade" ele era apenas uma titica de rolinha espalhada com a sola do sapato na calçada debaixo do sol... Éhhh, o que uma instituição de ensino formal pode fazer por alguém não é? E lá conhece todos os demais personagens que lhe farão parceria na história, inclusive o Baymax, um projeto do seu próprio irmão. Depois que Hiro percebe que será um “Zé-Manéh”, se não estudar lá, desenvolve um projeto para ganhar uma bolsa. No dia que vai apresentá-lo tudo é perfeito até que ocorre um acidente e o prédio vai pelos ares junto com seu irmão Tadashi.
Esse é um dos heróis mais interessantes que vi surgir ultimamente nas levas de filmes que nos assolam. Ao contrário dos anabolizados e machos alfas que existem por aí, Baymax, apesar de ser um robô com programação, acaba sendo mais palpável e mais “humano” que um “Homem de Ferro” ou até mesmo um “Capitão América”, ambos ideais de virilidade americana. Baymax é só um robô gorducho que quer ajudar, faz parte de seu programa (ou consciência?). Desenvolvido para ser, obviamente, fofo e acolhedor. Ele acaba dando muito constrangimento a Hiro, típico adolescente “macho” que não quer ter emoções ou expressá-las preferindo ser um babaquinha. Então, Baymax não se transforma num guerreiro ele transforma e humaniza o próprio Hiro. Mesmo o garoto tentando, após descobrir que a morte do irmão não foi acidental, fazer do foforucho um gigante vingador lutador. Realmente quem se transforma é Hiro. E Baymax, só aumenta sua fofice.
Bom, sem entregar mais da animação, só falo que foi um dos melhores desenhos que vi este ano, e olha que eu adorei Frozen. Que é tão fofo, tão fofo, mas tão fofo que faz chorar quando Anna canta “Do You Want To Build A Snowman” música mais legal que a oscarizada “Let it go”, que também adoro. “Operação Big Hero” é um filme mais “moleque”. Um público que ficou meio de lado em Frozen, segundo os grandes fiscais de gênero. Só esquecem que criança é criança e ponto.
Vale muito à pena assistir. Não é pretensioso e brinca com muitos clichês dos heróis de HQs. E uma coisa que pode ser um “plus”, pois muitos não gostam: não tem personagens cantantes e ululantes se esgoelando em músicas chicletes... Que eu gosto, só para constar.
Ahhh, o "Soco-bate... Tra-lá-lá-laah" é uma cena muito legal, prefiro que assistam e por favor, desconsiderem que a cidade é “San Franstokio”! Sem mais comentários!
******************************************************************************************************Obrigado por prestigiar o blog. Deixem comentários, sejam quais forem, e, quem sabe, sugestões. Fiquem à vontade.
Pix: vinimotta2012@gmail.com
(que também é meu e-mail de contato)
Banco Inter — Vinícius Motta
Instagram: @vigamo500
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EnglishThe original text was written without the use of any AI tools; however, the translation was carried out by ChatGPT, as the author does not yet master English grammar. Perhaps one day.
If there is anything that may be difficult to understand or that seems unclear to the reader, this may be due to certain textual constructions, sentence structures, or even references specific to regional Brazilian Portuguese and the culture of Brazil.
All subsequent texts will include this notice.
Contact: vinimotta2012@gmail.com
Instagram: @vigamo500
Big Hero 6 – “Fist bump… ba-la-la-la-la.”
When I saw the trailer, I was really interested in watching this animated film. And when I finally did, I loved it. This time I decided to read a little about it — I usually don’t do that so I won’t be influenced — and I found out it was based on a Marvel comic book of the same name created in 1998 by Steven T. Seagle and Duncan Rouleau!!! I was surprised and couldn’t find much about the original comic, so I’m sticking with the movie.
Another surprise was seeing that Big Hero 6 features a chubby superhero. Or, for the more sensitive hearts, a big soft guy. And no, young Hiro Hamada isn’t the most important character in the film. He’s just the human protagonist who turns the big inflatable medical robot Baymax into a “fighter.”
Let’s start from the beginning, and I’ll try not to get too tangled up with information. The opening is pretty traditional, like a typical hero story. There are two brothers, Tadashi and Hiro Hamada (I won’t talk about the original voices — I watched it dubbed), and by coincidence both are robotics geniuses. The older one is already attending a kind of university, so he actually has the skills and maturity to do what he sets out to do. The younger one, on the other hand, is a cocky little brat who thinks he’s amazing just because he builds tiny robots for illegal bot fights. That is, until Tadashi puts him in his place and shows him that next to everyone at the “university,” he was basically nothing — completely out of his league. Yeah… that’s what formal education can do for you, right? It’s there that he meets the other characters who will join him in the story, including Baymax, a project created by his own brother. After Hiro realizes he’ll be a total nobody if he doesn’t study there, he develops a project to win a scholarship. On the day he presents it, everything goes perfectly — until an accident happens and the building explodes, taking his brother Tadashi with it.
Hiro is left “alone” with his aunt, who had already been raising them as the only remaining family member. It’s interesting how Disney loves orphan characters… Makes you think… But not now! Back to the story: Hiro becomes inconsolable. He locks himself in a kind of “post-loss traumatic depression,” until he lets out an “Ow!” after hurting his toe — which activates Baymax. That only makes him even sadder, because Baymax was his brother’s “great” project. And before we all choke on our own hearts bursting out of our chests, we see how unbelievably adorable Baymax is — and then we really are in danger of emotional suffocation.
He was designed to be a medical healthcare companion robot, programmed to identify and treat physical and psychological conditions. He also has adaptive memory, constantly learning like a human being. At first he doesn’t seem smart — or at least that’s what we think — but little by little he absorbs information and starts applying it. He has no malice; he’s pure and innocent. Which makes him even cuter. Just so you know, I’m going to use the word “cute” and every possible synonym I can think of to convey the magnitude of this. So don’t judge me.
It’s interesting to notice that before the “hero” transformation, the animation scenes are fast-paced and dynamic — except when the focus is on Baymax’s actions. There’s a scene where he’s patching up holes in his body with tape while slowly deflating in front of a bored police officer at a station, and it feels almost endless. But those are exactly the moments that show the care and tenderness that radiate from him — part programming, part reflection of Tadashi’s personality. And instead of becoming irritating, those scenes give us that “Awwww!” moment we all have — even if we don’t admit it — when we see something super ultra ridiculously cute.
This is one of the most interesting heroes I’ve seen emerge in the recent wave of films that keep flooding us. Unlike the steroid-packed alpha males out there, Baymax — despite being just a programmed robot — feels more tangible and more “human” than Iron Man or even Captain America, both symbols of American virility. Baymax is just a chubby robot who wants to help — it’s part of his programming (or consciousness?). Designed, obviously, to be comforting and adorable. He causes a lot of embarrassment for Hiro, the typical teenage “tough guy” who doesn’t want to show emotions and prefers acting like a jerk. So Baymax doesn’t transform into a warrior — he transforms and humanizes Hiro himself. Even when Hiro tries, after discovering his brother’s death wasn’t an accident, to turn the big soft marshmallow into a giant revenge machine. In the end, it’s Hiro who truly transforms. And Baymax just becomes even cuter.
Without giving more away, I’ll just say it was one of the best animated films I saw that year — and I loved Frozen. Which is so cute, so cute, so incredibly cute that it makes you cry when Anna sings “Do You Want to Build a Snowman,” which I find even better than the Oscar-winning “Let It Go” — which I also love. Big Hero 6 is a more “boyish” movie. A demographic that, according to the self-appointed gender police, was somewhat sidelined in Frozen. They just forget that kids are kids. Period.
It’s absolutely worth watching. It’s not pretentious and plays with many superhero clichés. And something that might be a plus for some people: there are no loud, over-the-top singing characters belting out catchy musical numbers… which, just for the record, I actually enjoy.
Ahhh, and “Fist bump… ba-la-la-la-la” is a great scene — I’d rather you watch it yourselves. And please, just ignore the fact that the city is called “San Fransokyo”! No further comments.




amei o filme mostra como ser msmdasdasdasdasdadfsdfçmkdl~ja~;sldksdfjpsdfjs0dfshdfdfdfdfads
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