Movie:brave
- EntertainmentYahoo Movies
To 'Toy Story' and beyond: Permanent Pixar player John Ratzenberger takes us through all his roles
John Ratzenberger talks about many of his 21 roles in Pixar movies, from "Toy Story" to "Incredibles 2."
2 min read - NewsYahoo Movies
The Disney Princesses Assemble: See the Actresses Reveal How They All Came Together for Upcoming 'Wreck-It Ralph' Sequel
Disney broke the Internet Friday at the D23 Expo when it showed footage for the upcoming film Ralph Breaks the Internet: Wreck-It Ralph 2 that revealed the sequel would unite many of its most famous animated princesses. Backstage, Yahoo Movies talked to a handful of the women behind the famous voices — Mandy Moore (Rapunzel in Tangled), Paige O’Hara (Belle in Beauty and the Beast), Anika Noni Rose (Tiana in The Princess and the Frog), Kelly Macdonald (Merida in Brave), Auli’i Cravalho (Moana),
- NewsEntertainment Weekly
'Inside Out' Meets 'Finding Dory' and More Pixar Easter Eggs Revealed in New Video
Eagle-eyed Disney-Pixar fans have been noticing Easter eggs in their favorite movies for years, making fans wonder if all of Pixar’s beloved characters exist in the same universe. Or that Sully from Monsters, Inc. is etched into a piece of wood owned by Merida in Brave?
- NewsMarcus Errico
Photographer Meticulously Re-creates Classic Disney Princess Movie Moments With Dolls (Exclusive)
Brian McCarty likes playing with dolls. And the results are epic. The photographer has become famous for his work with toys over the past two decades, filling books and exhibit halls with elaborately staged images of action figures, dolls and other playthings. His latest subject matter: Disney Princesses, the toons replaced by toys.
- NewsMeriah Doty
'The Little Mermaid' Isn't as Empowering for Girls as it Seems, Linguists Discover
Are Disney princesses the best role models for little girls? Carmen Fought, a professor at Pitzer College in Claremont, Calif., and Karen Eisenhauer, a graduate teaching assistant at North Carolina State University, have gathered up all the dialogue from Disney’s decades of princess movies and discovered something interesting: The oldest of the films, dating back to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937, give more speaking time to female characters than male ones (as also reported in The Wash