![]() This, along with the innocence of Baymax, a robot healthcare companion built by Hiro's brother, gets you emotionally invested in the movie. Things are just going too well for Hiro.ĭespite knowing there is some impending doom on the way, once it does hit, you can't help but feel the emotions Hiro is going through. We see things starting to build up in a positive direction and are introduced to even more likable characters. ![]() In the early half of the movie, it almost felt as if the story was too cookie-cutter. In order to make the transition from an average fourteen-year-old robotics prodigy to a full-fledged superhero, something big has to happen. He's a fourteen-year-old genius and doesn't seem to have a care in the world. Hiro is a likable character right from the beginning. Living with their aunt, they've already gone through some of the natural stages of the superhero origin journey having lost their parents years ago. ![]() In a typical Disney animated fashion, we get a great introduction to Hiro Hamada ( Hiro Takachiho in the comics) and his older brother. With the Disney logo front and center, it was clear this was going to be something unlike what we were familiar with in the comics. Comic readers are probably aware that these characters exist in the Marvel Universe-although in a completely different form. Going into Big Hero 6, it was hard to know what to really expect.
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