Adventure Movies

Inside Out 2 review: surreal comedy family movie with adventure

June 14, 20244 Mins Read


Pixar’s brilliant 2015 animated movie Inside Out brought a young girl’s growing pains to life with dazzling wit and tender wisdom — and immediately established itself in the top rank of the studio’s films. A hard act to follow, then. Nine years on, the sequel pulls it off. 

Inside Out 2 reprises its predecessor’s vivid central conceit that five personified emotions live inside the head of a girl named Riley, guiding her feelings from a knob-laden control desk and processing her new memories as they arrive at their headquarters in the form of bowling-type balls colored according to mood. In the previous story, wide-eyed, permanently buoyant Joy (marvelously voiced by Amy Poehler) and her colleagues, Fear, Anger, Disgust and Sadness, were plunged into crisis after 11-year-old Riley found herself uprooted from Minnesota to San Francisco. The turmoil of the move to a new home and school triggered a crisis that led to Joy and droopy, owlish Sadness (Phyllis Smith) being ejected from their headquarters and faced with the challenge of making their way back from the outer reaches of Riley’s mindscape in order to prevent further disaster.

The new film raises the stakes still higher as Riley (now voiced by Kensington Tallman) turns 13 and wakes up with a zit on her chin. Puberty has struck. Cue panic stations in HQ for Joy and co. as a siren sounds, a red light flashes and a crew of construction workers arrives to tear down the old headquarters and install a new console to handle the tumult of adolescence. Even more alarmingly, a new set of personified emotions — Anxiety, Envy, Embarrassment and Ennui — now turns up in Riley’s hormone-surging brain.

Anxiety, an orange-coloured, frazzled looking emotion

(Image credit: Disney Pixar)

Riley, an ice-hockey star on her middle-school team, is about to move up to high school and hopes to make a good enough impression at a forthcoming three-day hockey camp to make her new school’s team, the Fire Hawks. She has just learned, however, that her best friends, Bree (Sumayyah Nuriddin-Green) and Grace (Grae Lu), will be attending a different school. At the hockey camp, should she disloyally cut her old friends loose and strive to ingratiate herself with the older Fire Hawks girls? Is she cool enough to be their friend? And is she a good enough player to make their team?



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