Plot
A father is playing with his infant son, Alex, in the front yard of their house. When the father picks a dandelion and blows off the seeds, Alex starts to floats in mid-air. The father is amazed at first, but after the neighbors notice Alex, he hurriedly takes his son back inside the house. Time passes and Alex grows into a toddler, still floating around the darkened house. When Alex and his father go for a walk, the father keeps him on a lead and places rocks in his backpack with rocks to weigh him down. When they pass a playground, Alex escapes from his bondage and begins floating again. The father tries to drag Alex away from the park, but Alex has a tantrum, and the father reacts in frustration by deeming Alex abnormal (the only moment of dialogue in film). Alex grounds himself and begins to cry. Realizing his mistake, the father holds Alex in his arms and sits on the swing set, swinging back and forth to reinvigorate his son, and launches him into the air. Alex continues to float as his father happily runs underneath him.Cast
* Eli Fucile as baby Alex * Luna Watson as four-year-old Alex * Bobby Rubio as Alex's father * Mika Kubo as additional voicesProduction
''Float'' is a short film that was directed and written by Bobby Rubio, and produced by Krissy Cababa and Pixar Animation Studios; it was distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. It is the fourth film of Pixar's " SparkShorts" program, and it lasts approximately seven minutes. In January 2019, Rubio described the program as "different films from the kinds of films" developed at Pixar, while executive producer Lindsey Collins said that the shorts are referred to as "SparkShorts" because Pixar " antsto discover that creative spark" in its employees. Rubio viewed the program as "a wonderful opportunity to tell isstory". He stated that ''Float'' is inspired by his son, who is autistic, and that he identified with the father from the short. Rubio said that the boy from the short is "different from other children" since he can float. He commented that while "the father loves his son wholeheartedly without restriction" at first, this begins to be altered by what the other people say; as a result, he has to choose between deciding they are right and ignoring their thoughts. Since his son was growing up, Rubio decided he had "to tell this story" and "started storyboarding it". The initial storyboards contained Caucasian characters, but one of Rubio's co-workers told him that he should depict Filipino-American characters instead. While he was initially unsure of this idea, he decided to make this change to "empowerMusic
Barney Jones, who composed the music for the previous "SparkShorts" entry '' Smash and Grab'', composed the music for ''Float''. The score was released on February 28, 2020.Track listing
Release
''Float'' was released on Disney+ on November 12, 2019, alongside fellow "SparkShorts" entries '' Purl'', ''Smash and Grab'', and '' Kitbull''.Reception
''Float'' has obtained a generally positive critical response, with writers deeming it "touching", "moving", and "spot on". The child on whom the short is centered was characterized as "extremely cute", and as "adorable". Alex Abad-Santos of '' Vox'' described the short as "one of the best new things on Disney+". He commented that "facial expressions and body language carry the story" despite the general lack of dialogue, adding that "a small shift in posture or the way a frown sharpens an entire face wields so much emotion". Abad-Santos stated that the short's "core story could be a story about assimilation and growing up as a minority" or "it could be about what t islike to feel different from those around you". He said that "''Float'' taps into the human instinct to fiercely protect someone you love, the worry that the world out thereReferences
External links
* * {{Navboxes , title = Articles related to Float (film) , list1= {{Pixar Animation Studios {{Disney+ original series 2010s Disney animated short films 2019 computer-animated films 2019 films American animated short films Films about autism SparkShorts 2010s English-language films Animated films about father–son relationships