Movies | June 18, 2009 | 39 comments

Pixar grants girl's dying wish to see ‘Up’

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HUNTINGTON BEACH – Colby Curtin, a 10-year-old with a rare form of cancer, was staying alive for one thing – a movie.

From the minute Colby saw the previews to the Disney-Pixar movie Up, she was desperate to see it. Colby had been diagnosed with vascular cancer about three years ago, said her mother, Lisa Curtin, and at the beginning of this month it became apparent that she would die soon and was too ill to be moved to a theater to see the film.

After a family friend made frantic calls to Pixar to help grant Colby her dying wish, Pixar came to the rescue.

The company flew an employee with a DVD of Up, which is only in theaters, to the Curtins’ Huntington Beach home on June 10 for a private viewing of the movie.
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39 comments // Pixar grants girl's dying wish to see ‘Up’

  • oddjob007
    • 0
      oddjob007  
    • I love that company. I did before, and I do more so now. A fantastic group of talented and creative folks, who apparently have a heart as well. Too bad there aren't more like them.

      Keep up the great work, Pixar!

      Thank you.

    • 2 years ago
  • lvp
  • divinesunshine
    • 0
      divinesunshine  
    • Lol..what if she thought the movie sucked! I can just see her little dissapointed face now..I must be evil cuz that would be hilarious..she's in a better place now where only original films come from and when something great comes out they never dare to make a remake.

    • 2 years ago
  • idea999
  • SupaDawg
    • 0
      SupaDawg  
    • "Colby died with her mom and dad nearby at 9:20 p.m."

      The first time i read this story that hit me pretty hard. It's not the headline, but it is the real story. In the end, this little girl got what very few people do, she died happy.

    • 2 years ago
  • blink180
  • allietime
  • cztheday
    • 0
      cztheday  
    • Bigdog,

      First, there are a lot of companies with "giant loot stacks" that would never even consider doing something like this -- Pixar is to be commended...and I doubt VERY much that this was a publicity stunt.

      Second, the movie up was not sad, it was...uplifting (pun intended). The woman in the beginning dies of old age after a long, happy and fulfilling life. Gee, I hope MY life is that sad! Then her surviving husband goes on an adventure, saves the weird bird, comforts a kids whose father is falling down on the job, beats the bad guys (and bad dogs) and saves the day. It was a wonderful move, full of hope, and when I think of all of the horrible, hopeless and frightening experiences that must have crowded that little girl's short life, I am so glad she spent a couple of her final hours doing this.

      I don't know about the rest of you, but the best moments of MY life so far aren't just the bungee-jumping, mountain-climbing, award-wnning variety. In fact, the two hours I spent with MY kids at this movie were GREAT! None of us knows what is going to happen tomorrow or next week or next year. Just sitting and laughing (or even crying) with my healthy kids today, right now, is something to be deeply appreciated...this little girl's story reminded me of that important fact. She is no longer scared or suffering, so THAT is a blessing. But somewhere out there her parents are suffering terribly...my heart goes out to them...

    • 2 years ago
  • Bigdog_mike
    • 0
      Bigdog_mike  
    • Someone from the Giant corporation took some time out of their day for a dying little girl, good. Companies with giant loot stacks should be doing that all the time. Not for nothing, if I was that girls mother I woulda pirated it for her.... and the really sad thing is, that movie was fucking sad as hell, sadness + sadness + death = more sadness... and they took the movie back. Fuck

    • 2 years ago
  • emaeve
  • ashcatash
  • LemonHarangue
  • seanalyn
    • 0
      seanalyn  
    • LemonHarangue:

      Because she was a 10 year old girl who knew she would die soon and was not healthy enough to go to the theater. Of course seeing a movie she was excited about was her last wish! What else would you expect from a child?

    • 2 years ago
  • lvp
  • Slinky25252
  • Bigdog_mike
  • GodsnLiberals
  • lvp
  • crazy3dman
  • ylaviolencia
  • Mikeysfake1
  • lvp
  • ocanada
    • 0
      ocanada  
    • That's beautiful. A company built on childhood dreams, doesn't disregard the dreams of a sick child. Its how it should be. Disney and Pixar's job has always claimed to be making dreams come true. With a very simple action they were able to do that.

      Forgive the interjection of religous thought, but I can only hope that the little girl is making her own journey up, to a happier place.

    • 2 years ago
  • MissAmanda
  • Bigdog_mike
  • rockstarmillionaire
  • Noire
  • rahoskins
  • BOBALOB
  • shutter318
  • Systematik
  • Betico
  • jh64487
  • lrmj
  • seanalyn
    • 0
      seanalyn  
    • Wow that story made me cry a lot (granted it evoked some deep personal emotions due to recently losing someone to cancer).

      When I read that the young girl knew she was going to die and even said "“I’m ready (to die), but I’m going to wait for the movie," I broke down. I just cannot imagine being so young and so aware of your mortality. The fact that she died 7 hours after seeing the film just shows that she really was hanging on for this one dream. Im glad she and her family got to see that wish come true.

    • 2 years ago
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