Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Docter began developing the film in 1996, and wrote the story with Jill Culton, Jeff Pidgeon and Ralph Eggleston, following the idea conceived in a lunch in 1994 attended during the near completion of Toy Story (1995). Stanton wrote the screenplay with Gerson.

  3. The franchise takes place in a fictional universe where monsters are the primary citizens of society and harness the energy of human children to power their cities. The company known as Monsters, Inc. accomplishes this with doors which lead to their bedroom closet doors.

  4. Monsters, Inc. is a 2001 computer-animated film and the fourth feature-length buddy comedy film produced by Pixar Animation Studios. It was directed by Pete Docter, co-directed by Lee Unkrich and David Silverman, and was written by Jack W. Bunting, Jill Culton, Pete Docter, Ralph Eggleston, Dan...

    • 2 min
    • 4
  5. Monsters, Inc. is the most successful scream-processing factory in the monster world, and there is no better Scarer than James P. Sullivan. But when "Sulley" accidentally lets a little human girl into Monstropolis, life turns upside down for him and his buddy Mike.

  6. Monsters, Inc. is set in Monstropolis, a city inhabited by monsters, some of whom are those who emerge from bedroom closets to scare human children. This is used to collect the screams of kids, which power the city.

    • 2 min
    • 15
  7. Nov 23, 2001 · Monsters, Inc.: Directed by Pete Docter, David Silverman, Lee Unkrich. With John Goodman, Billy Crystal, Mary Gibbs, Steve Buscemi. In order to power the city, monsters have to scare children so that they scream.

  8. The first film in the franchise, Monsters, Inc., introduces the monster world and the main characters, James P. “Sulley” Sullivan and Mike Wazowski, who are employed as “scarers” at Monsters, Inc., the largest scream-processing factory in Monstropolis.

  1. People also search for