Jack-Jack Attack

Jack-Jack Attack is a 2005 computer animated short film produced by Pixar and written and directed by Brad Bird. The short film is a spin-off on his 2004 film The Incredibles.

Jack-Jack Attack
Poster for Jack-Jack Attack
Directed byBrad Bird
Produced byOsnat Shurer
Written byBrad Bird
Story byMark Andrews
Rob Gibbs
Teddy Newton
Bosco Ng
StarringBret Parker
Bud Luckey
Eli Fucile
Jason Lee
Music byMichael Giacchino (opening titles)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Edited byStephen Schaffer
Production
company
Distributed byWalt Disney Home Entertainment
Release date
March 15, 2005 (with The Incredibles DVD)
Running time
4 minutes, 44 seconds
LanguageEnglish

Unlike many of their previous shorts, it was not given a theatrical release, but was included on the DVD release of the film.[1] The idea for this short came from an idea for a scene originally considered for inclusion in the film The Incredibles; it was cut from the feature and subsequently expanded into this short. The short is based on the baby, Jack-Jack, and takes place at around the same time as the events of the main film. From The Incredibles, the audience knows that Jack-Jack's babysitter Kari McKeen started experiencing difficulty with him shortly after hanging up the phone with his mother, Helen Parr (also known as Elastigirl).

Plot

This short film shows Rick Dicker, a government agent assigned to aid "supers" in maintaining their anonymity, interviewing Kari McKeen (the babysitter the Parr children hired to watch Jack-Jack during the events of The Incredibles) about the events unfolded while she was babysitting Jack-Jack Parr, the youngest of a family of supers.

Kari begins by stating that she received a call from Helen Parr, who expresses reluctance about allowing Kari to babysit. Kari attempts to re-assure her that she is more than capable of taking care of Jack-Jack, but the conversation is cut off by Helen's jet being fired upon. Thinking nothing is wrong, and that they were simply cut-off, Kari turns her attention to Jack-Jack. She begins by playfully asking Jack-Jack if he is ready for some "neurological stimulation"". She begins by playing Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 11 for him, which results in Jack-Jack having an epiphany about his latent superpowers.

When Kari's back gets turned around, Jack-Jack seems to disappear and reappear in the kitchen drinking a baby bottle. Finding this odd, Kari tries to call Helen again. While she is leaving a message, Jack-Jack floats onto the ceiling and spills milk onto Kari's face. When the fourth movement of Eine kleine Nachtmusik plays in the background, Kari put him in his playpen, flipped upside-down so that he doesn't float away, and tries calling Helen again. Jack-Jack promptly escaped the playpen, leaving a perfectly circular hole, and appears on a high bookshelf. Just as he falls, Kari dives in and tries to catch him, but fails when Jack-Jack passes through the floor into the laundry room. Running down to find him, Kari sees Jack-Jack passing through the walls and floating around, babbling happily, before she finally catches him.

Kari takes Jack-Jack back upstairs and ties him to a barbell. To calm everything down, Kari tries showing him flashcards. This works well until she shows him a card of a campfire, at which point he suddenly burst into flames while Dies irae from the Requiem mass plays in the background. Horrified, Kari picks up Jack-Jack with the pair of fireplace tongs and rushes into the bathroom, where she douses him in the bathtub.

The next day, all appears well from outside. Inside, the house is in shambles and Kari is teetering on the verge of madness, desperately struggling to stay awake, but having since learned to anticipate and counter the spontaneous outbursts of Jack-Jack's newly emerged (and quite numerous) powers. There is a knock at the door; Kari answers it and meets Syndrome, who asks if this is the Parrs' residence. Kari thinks he is the new babysitter come to relieve her, but wonders what the "S" on his costume stands for. He claims it stands for "Sitter", because if he calls himself "Babysitter", his uniform will have to say "BS" on it.

Cutting back to the interrogation scene, Dicker's incredulous that Kari believes Syndrome and left the baby in his care, while Kari defensively shouts that she is not in a sound state of mind at the time and that the baby is not normal. Dicker asked Kari if she tells anyone else about the incident, to which she replies that she told her parents, who did not believe her and thought she was joking. As Kari expressed her wish to forget the thing, Dicker promised that she will, and activates a device to erase her memory.

Cast

  • Bret Parker as Kari McKeen, the babysitter for Jack-Jack.
  • Eli Fucile as Jack-Jack Parr, who, as Mr. Incredible and Elastigirl's infant son, initially shows no sign of super power but is later revealed to have a wide range of abilities including shape-shifting, teleporting, laser vision, elemental transmutation, flight, etc.
  • Bud Luckey as Rick Dicker, the government agent overseeing the Relocation Program.
  • Jason Lee as Buddy Pine / Syndrome, an evil genius who uses advanced technology to give himself superpowers. He plays along as the frantic Kari mistakes him as the "replacement babysitter".

Home video release

Pixar included the film on the DVD release of The Incredibles in 2005, and as part of Pixar Short Films Collection, Volume 1 in 2007.

Awards

  • 2006: Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation - Short Form (Nominated)[2]

References

  1. "Smash Box-Office Success Comes Home March 15!". Pixar. January 18, 2005. Archived from the original on April 28, 2012. Retrieved May 10, 2012.
  2. "2006 Hugo Awards". The Hugo Awards. Archived from the original on April 1, 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
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