El equipo de sofbol de una escuela se prepara para un campeonato.El equipo de sofbol de una escuela se prepara para un campeonato.El equipo de sofbol de una escuela se prepara para un campeonato.
Explorar episodios
Resumen
Reviewers say 'Win or Lose' uses a unique narrative structure, focusing on various characters' perspectives before a middle school softball championship. It explores personal growth, friendship, and emotional complexities with Pixar's signature animation. Each episode provides a fresh experience with imaginative visuals reflecting characters' emotions. The show balances humor and emotion, tackling serious topics like stress and relationships. Despite some criticisms about theme maturity and episode consistency, many praise its heartfelt message and universal resonance.
Opiniones destacadas
I've seen a lot of reviews saying Win or Lose is unsuitable for children. While the themes are certainly more mature, the animation is fantastic, and much of the deeper context will likely go over younger viewers' heads. That said, the show does an incredible job of visualising emotions in a way that younger audiences can understand and relate to.
As a young adult, I really struggled with rage. I had no idea where it came from and found it hard to articulate. Seeing something like this when I was 12 or 13 could have made a huge difference in my life.
I love that Pixar is creating stories that help young people understand and express their emotions, offering visuals that make these complex feelings more accessible. It's a wonderful thing, and I truly believe this show will help a new generation not only process their own emotions but also develop compassion for the adults in their lives.
It's a beautiful show-heartbreaking at times-but ultimately delivers an important and necessary message.
Thoroughly enjoyed it.
As a young adult, I really struggled with rage. I had no idea where it came from and found it hard to articulate. Seeing something like this when I was 12 or 13 could have made a huge difference in my life.
I love that Pixar is creating stories that help young people understand and express their emotions, offering visuals that make these complex feelings more accessible. It's a wonderful thing, and I truly believe this show will help a new generation not only process their own emotions but also develop compassion for the adults in their lives.
It's a beautiful show-heartbreaking at times-but ultimately delivers an important and necessary message.
Thoroughly enjoyed it.
I know this show is meant for kids, but after seeing clips of it on tiktok it seemed very compelling and I thought I'd at least try and watch it because why not. After watching the first 5 episodes, I have realized that this show is beyond amazing. The way it utilizes perspective intertwined with storytelling is better than any other media that I can recall. The symbolism used in this show is unlike any other for conveying details in a simple yet detailed manner. As a 17 year old, I think this show is teaching me a lot about the right way to live day to day. It has valuable lessons that I think even adults could learn from. Although rated PG, it does seem a little mature for kids below middle school and I wouldn't understand this show until 8th grade honestly and that's just being able to grasp the basic overall concept of this show. I cannot understate how memorizing this show is. It incorporates such such good storytelling at the level of movies like inception and interstellar but manages to put that into a show with an intended audience of around 11-14 years old. This show is absolutely fantastic.
Pixar's newest show "Win or Lose" is a refreshing breath of fresh air from the recent other projects from Pixar such as Toy Story 4, Elemental and Lightyear, but Win or Lose brought back a sense of Pixar's old creativity and skills at making good stories.
The whole little show was a beautiful and masterful tale of several characters on a softball team. They're an unlikely bunch, but putting their differences aside they work so well together. Splitting the series so that every episode follows a single character was a brilliant idea. It's even better when you can see events from other episodes unfolding in the background. The attention to detail and how well the story wraps itself together was simply excellent. By the end of the show everything seemed to have been in a much better place than they were before. The actual ending of the Championship is unknown whether the team won or not was possibly a nod to the title as we're left to decide whether the team won or lost.
The animation was gorgeous and was further enhanced by superb voice acting from Will Forte, Rosa Salazar and Josh Thompson. The majority of the cast were children, and for the most part they were actually pretty good.
Overall, this show delves deep into sensitives themes such as mental health, stress and pressure. It amounts to a neat and well rounded little show that's definitely worth your time to watch.
The whole little show was a beautiful and masterful tale of several characters on a softball team. They're an unlikely bunch, but putting their differences aside they work so well together. Splitting the series so that every episode follows a single character was a brilliant idea. It's even better when you can see events from other episodes unfolding in the background. The attention to detail and how well the story wraps itself together was simply excellent. By the end of the show everything seemed to have been in a much better place than they were before. The actual ending of the Championship is unknown whether the team won or not was possibly a nod to the title as we're left to decide whether the team won or lost.
The animation was gorgeous and was further enhanced by superb voice acting from Will Forte, Rosa Salazar and Josh Thompson. The majority of the cast were children, and for the most part they were actually pretty good.
Overall, this show delves deep into sensitives themes such as mental health, stress and pressure. It amounts to a neat and well rounded little show that's definitely worth your time to watch.
I am 31/F and thoroughly enjoyed all the episodes!! Though, I wish some characters had a little bit more of development. I was so interested in how the storylines all played together and how they animated the different people's emotions!! I have two small kiddos who are not into it, but honestly was watching it just for myself. It was so refreshing to finally have some quality content come out on Disney+ instead of storyline that they just slapped together.
I'm hoping that there's going to be another season that deals with something similar or uses the same intertwining story technique. Well done Pixar!!
I'm hoping that there's going to be another season that deals with something similar or uses the same intertwining story technique. Well done Pixar!!
I am not one to watch many series, nor have I seen much of Disney+'s offerings after having been a subscriber from the company's inception. Imagine my surprise when I casted this onto my TV to keep as background noise while I got some work done. Whether fortunate or unfortunate (depending on who you're asking), I got very little work done, as I was immediately drawn by this show's warm sensibilities, and dialed-in art style. After two episodes, I can frankly say that this truly came out of left field (pun unintentional, but welcome). The show's patiently reliable Pixar style seems to be riskier than films from eras past-with safe, predictable choices forfeited for visual gags and endearingly awkward punchlines that seem to come a mile-a-minute. This seems to be a show with a lot of hearts. Plural is apt here, as it seems to take the approach of unfolding the lead-up to a single calamitous event by unfolding the trajectories of each character's week leading up to the night in question. This, I believe, is where the show seems to take shape and really shine. As a watcher, I get the sense that one of the most challenging things to do for movies/series in the vein of "Win or Lose" lies in striking a correct tonal balance between being complex, sincere, and dynamic enough to win over mature audiences, whilst being simple and funny enough to not alienate the children who may be watching. Thus "family" humor seems to be something that is very hit-or-miss (there are the surprise baseball puns again). The subject matter of the episodes seem to draw from previous offerings like Inside Out-with an anthropomorphic depiction of insecurity and anxiety in one character's vignette-and Onward-with an unapologetically nerd-core game approach to "love" and "building up walls" as with another character. It seems to swing for the fences in every regard, oscillating between painfully human encounters with magical realism punchlines that blur the lines between what one person is experiencing in their inner world and what is actually happening. In this sense, it reminds me very much of Apple TV's "The Afterparty", to any of those who managed to find the stylings of that show appealing, if not varied in quality.
The cast of characters even seem to have adopted the successes of "Turning Red", opting for characters who ooze a winsome kind of awkwardness that feel neither forced, nor derivative. Episode 2 ends with an overture, rather than a crescendo-Billy Holiday's "No Regrets". After just two episodes, I decided to create an IMDB account, if merely to add my voice to the choir about how much I enjoy this show, after just two episodes. They hit it out of the park, bases loaded, with this one.
The cast of characters even seem to have adopted the successes of "Turning Red", opting for characters who ooze a winsome kind of awkwardness that feel neither forced, nor derivative. Episode 2 ends with an overture, rather than a crescendo-Billy Holiday's "No Regrets". After just two episodes, I decided to create an IMDB account, if merely to add my voice to the choir about how much I enjoy this show, after just two episodes. They hit it out of the park, bases loaded, with this one.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaPixar's first tv series to not be based off any of their films.
- ConexionesFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Disney+ Day & Disabling Dislikes (2021)
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
- How many seasons does Win or Lose have?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Win or Lose
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución20 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1(original & intended ratio)
- 16:9 HD
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Ganes o Pierdas (2025) officially released in Canada in French?
Responda