Do you believe in love at first sight? Would you risk everything to win that connection?
Back when Disney wasn’t opposed to telling a good story, twelve years ago, they made the short film Paperman. The moment I saw it, I knew this was something special. In just six minutes and with only three colors this little story pulls on all my heartstrings every, single, time. And the closer I look at it, the more it effects me. I’ve shown it to girls I wanted to date and when it was over they all said, “That was cute.”
They didn’t get it.
We never happened.
The story itself is a classic: guy meets girl, guy loses girl, guy makes paper airplanes to get her back. After an awkward encounter at the train station, when the wind plasters one his papers to her face where it leaves a red lipstick impression, George thinks he’s missed his chance. Meg gets on the train, and George is left standing there alone to wonder what might have been. At his dreary, paper pushing job, he looks out the window of his skyscraper office and sees Meg in a meeting at the building across the street.
We know what he wants, and what’s in the way is the chasm between buildings.
Under the eye of his stern supervisor, George is unable to run over and introduce himself. So he begins folding forms into airplanes, trying desperately to get just one through the open window where Meg sits. They miss. They go to the wrong person. A bird collides with one. Finally, George is down to his last paper and it’s the one with Meg’s lipstick.
An impossible choice.
He risks it. And fails.
By this point, George is so invested, he’s put so much into realizing this potential connection, he can't stop and runs out of the office. Maybe he can never go back. Maybe he’s just lost it all. But he has to try. And when he gets outside, Meg once again disappears into the crowd. Now there’s no going back. Dejected, he gives up. And that’s when a little old-school Disney magic intervenes. All those paper airplanes come to life in a way reminiscent of the brooms in The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, but unlike Mickey who sought power, George is man who worked and sacrificed, and now receives a gift.
You can guess how it ends.
Paperman won Disney their first Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film since 1969, and it’s well deserved. Sadly, they could never make it today. Two, attractive, white heterosexual, people falling in love? An ernest story where the main character (a man, no less) has flaws and still gets the girl, without a touch of irony? Meg doesn’t need saving, but George does—from his lonely, meaningless life—and the effort he puts into finding Meg reveals the heart of a fighter.
Meg makes him a better man, without even knowing it.
It’s a true and beautiful story, a story of true love that’s beautifully told.
Happy Valentine’s Day.