Reason For ‘A113’ Slinked Into Disney Movies Clarified By Pixar Admirer
Either blended in the background with the cameos or somewhere in the posters on the walls, something similar to previous films can always be spotted. Sometimes paying attention to simple things like costumes, sets, etc. can reveal a lot.
One such similar thing was spotted by the fans who kept on noticing it in Pixar movies repeatedly. This was the usage of code A113. Only the peculiar ones could spot it but it is always there.
The code can be seen in Toy Story when Woody clutches on the bumper of Andy’s mother’s car, ‘A113’ is spotted on the number plate. Yet one more time it was seen in Monster University when Mike and Sully attended a class a shot captured the code on the door of the lecture hall. And as the legacy goes on the code was also featured in Finding Nemo as a model of the camera of the Scuba diver.
Adding to the list are many more films which included A Bug’s Life, The Incredibles, Cars, WALL-E, Up, Inside Out, Onward, etc. All of this featured A113 somewhere throughout the movie. Fans also came up with theories that explained WALL-E is the note to the code WA11-3.
A curious Reddit user was eager to explain the code when he spotted it on the ear tag of Git the rat in Ratatouille. He titled it as a ‘Usually used Pixar Easter egg.’ He revealed in the comment box that A113 goes back to the school days of many Pixar artists. He said that it was the classroom number of Pixar artists at the California Institute of the Arts.
He added to the list of movies in which A113 was spotted. He provided the knowledge that it was used multiple times in Ratatouille. He reminded people in the comment box that it appears in the scene where Remy and Linguini are asleep on the train and the code appears on the TV.
It is featured as a remembrance to the classroom where various animators polished their talent and learned skills that made it possible for them to make such beautiful movies. Therefore, it is carried out as a ritual.
Fans were also peculiar to reveal that the reference of this code is also extended to non-Pixar films like Lilo and Stitch, The Avengers, Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, and also some of the episodes of The Simpsons.
As an appreciation of the school that gets their career going, the artists who learned from CalArts which was founded by Walt Disney, and as Pixar also belonged to The Walt Disney Company the artist appreciated their school by featuring this code in the films.
People had different theories regarding the situation as one said that he is almost 30 and never being able to observe the code in any movie. He said that he missed that chance of having a Pixar scavenger hunt. Another had a viewpoint that such things can be observed only by the meticulous ones and a normal person would generally miss out on it.
The post Reason For ‘A113’ Slinked Into Disney Movies Clarified By Pixar Admirer appeared first on The Nerd Series.