I saw Pixar's latest, Up, with my sons this weekend. Excellent movie . . . and perhaps one of the most "Jungian"/archetypal films ever. This movie will delight and fascinate any analytical psychologist. Symbolism galore. It shows just like a dream (well, an epic dream, at least).
Very nice portrayal of the hero/Demon/anima dynamic (although the anima figure is absent throughout the latter 4/5 of the film, she remains in spirit as the protagonist's house . . . and the old dream of the hero/anima couple moving to Paradise Falls in South America. Wonderful metaphor that developmentalists especially would eat up . . . as they might also the fatherless boyscout, Russell). The house in the film could also correspond with my Core Complex construct.
The individuation paradigm in the subtext of this film is very, very rich . . . and arguably extends beyond the usual Jungian construct (as the narrative of the film could be seen as post-anima work or even "second opus"). It seemed to me more like a mid to late life individuation event . . . and not the prolonged-adolescence-as-midlife that is part of the conventional Jungian construction.
The film's portrayal of the Demon (as lost explorer, Charles Muntz) is superb. All the right notes and nuances of the Demon are captured.
The young boy, Russell, is a charming child-Self figure (an emblem of the Work or individuation event the film portrays), a kind of filius philosophorum that combines Carl (the hero) and his wife Ellie into a perfectly blended New Birth cable of change.
Up is so dense with archetypal symbolism that it stands as a living testament that the archetypal imagination is far from dead, despite our general inability to recognize it for its psychological subtext. Perhaps the most deeply and "perfectly" (i.e. untainted by egoic intrusions) archetypal film (portraying an individuation event) since the Coens' Barton Fink and Cronenberg's Naked Lunch.
Highly recommended. Every Jungian should see this film.