Pixar's Good Luck Charm: John Ratzenberger
The first of our articles celebrating Pixar, officially kicking off June's Obsessed With Pixar campaign. As a kid watching Cheers my favourite character was always know-it-all barfly postman Cliff Clavin, his wise-cracking delivery usually signalled by a drawled murmur reminiscent of the sound someone might make when trying to remember their lines would always have me laughing. It was most probably this performance - and a knack for casting just the right voice to fit a role that is undoubtedly key to their film's success - that led Pixar to pick John Ratzenberger for the role of Hamm the piggybank in their debut feature film Toy Story.
Ratzenberger's Role #1: Hamm the Pig in Toy Story (1995)
Perhaps something that can be overlooked, specifically in the first Toy Story film that primarily riffs on a mismatched buddy movie dynamic, is how strong a supporting ensemble Pixar gathered around their lead players. Don Rickles, Jim Varney, Wallace Shawn, Annie Potts, R. Lee Ermey, their voices all slot so beautifully into the mouths of what are - essentially - very familiar looking objects. I mean, could a Mr. Potatohead toy sound any other way now? Even better than that Pixar had made no compromises in giving each toy a neatly subverted, humourous and relatable character that made sure that their films are as appealing to adults as they are to, well, every single age group. In his initial role as Hamm, Ratzenberger made the pink bellied porcelain porcine a rather world weary character, riffing on his buddy persona from Cheers, he's still - even in miniature animated form - most guy's ideal drinking partner. It's his off-beat, technically minded reaction though to Buzz's arrival that begins to hint at what will make this character inparticular a personal favourite:'Wow. Impressive wing-span. Very good.'
Ratzenberger's Role #2: P.T. Flea the flea in A Bug's Life (1998)
A part that Ratzenberger has cited as his favourite role (thus far) for Pixar, telling SCI-FI Wire:"P.T. Flea was just so unpredictable and nuts, and in real life I always get a kick out of those kinds of character, people who just go into a rage for explicable reason."Sure enough P.T. Flea's circus is one of the comedic highlights of the film, buoyed immensely by Ratzenberger's manic performance which is somewhere between Jerry Stiller as George Costanza's father in Seinfeld and a family-friendly version of Cheech Marin's barker in From Dusk Til Dawn.
Ratzenberger's Role #3: Hamm the Pig in Toy Story 2 (1999)
This sequel is a wealth of pristine Ratzenberger quotes, with the character of Hamm clearly refined to a tee in the intervening years between this film and its predecessor. What was expanded upon by the writers was Hamm's blue-collar qualities, when the gang hijack a Pizza Planet truck Hamm's straight to the owner's manual shaking his snout and exclaiming to himself; 'I seriously doubt he's getting this kind of mileage.' Or adopting the comically linear mental trajectory of any couch potato in charge of a remote, dismayed at Rex's snail's pace channel hopping Hamm takes the reins and when his high-speed clicking goes straight past the target station and everyone implores him to go back, Hamm matter-of-factly replies:'Too late, I'm in the 40's, gotta go around the horn!'
Ratzenberger's Role #4: Aogaeru the Assistant Manager in Spirited Away: English Version (2001)
Not a Pixar film, but part of Pixar co-founder and Disney chief creative officer John Lasseter's championing of contemporary animation has seen him working with legendary Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki in executive producing and dubbing his films to help achieve a wider audience (indeed Miyazaki character Totoro crops up as a plush in Toy Story 3). So, it was inevitable, with Lasseter key in casting the English language cast for the film that ol' Ratzenberger would end up somewhere, and it was in this Oscar winning treat that he cropped up as Aogaeru the assistant manager delivering such charming dialogue as: 'Welcome the rich man, he's hard for you to miss. His butt keeps getting bigger, so there's plenty there to kiss!'Ratzenberger's Role #5: The Abominable Snowman in Monster's Inc. (2001)
It was by this point that, for me, Ratzenberger's appearance in a Pixar film had changed from a nice bonus into something closer to Hitchcock's cameos in his films, it was a necessity and something eagerly awaited throughout the film's running time. Here, we were kept waiting until the film's 3rd act where lovable blue monster Sulley finds himself banished to a snowy region when all of a sudden an imposing figure looms into view only to lean, grinning right into camera undoubtedly Ratzenberger. Here Pixar gave him some brilliantly off-the-wall dialogue about yellow snow and his buddy bigfoot being banished and making 'an enormous diaper out of poison ivy. Wore it on his head like a tiara. Called himself "King Itchy".'Ratzenberger's Role #6: Fish School in Finding Nemo (2003)
With Ratzenberger's Pixar presence firmly cemented in the minds of fans they gave the faithful a treat in their 2003's mega-blockbuster; not one, not two, but a whole school of tiny little fishies voiced by Ratzenberger in a sequence that provided key exposition and a daffy game of underwater Pictionary in a wonderuflly Pythonesque fashion.Ratzenberger's Role #7: The Underminer in The Incredibles (2004)
Those cheeky monkeys kept us waiting for this one, it's not until the very final seconds of Brad Bird's masterpiece that we get our taste of Ratzenberger and in some ways it's made all the sweeter for it, because, at that point, once the ground rumbles and the gigantic drilling machine emerges from the ground there's only one voice that could possibly come from the lips of hard-hat wearing evil genius the Underminer. In fact, most of the comedic value of this sequence stems more from the fact that it's John Ratzenberger than the bad puns in the Underminer's one and only villainous line:'Behold, the Underminer! I'm always beneath you, but nothing is beneath me! I hereby declare war on peace and happiness! Soon, all will tremble before me!'