For TheBirds ▪ The Short Film For The Birds is an animation created by Pixar, which shows discrimination by appearance. To make him let go of the wire, the little birds start pecking on his toes. Take a closer look at this Academy Award®-winning short film and you'll notice each bird has countless feathers. They mimic and tease him, but he goes on the wire, anyway. For the Birds is a Pixar short film written and directed by Ralph Eggleston. Since the big bird is heavier than the smaller ones, the wire drops under his weight. It would later premiere in the United States at the 27th annual Siggraph conference on July 24 of that same year, and was attached to the theatrical release of Monsters, Inc. in 2001. "For the Birds" is deceptively simple. They successfully get him off, but when the big bird falls off, the birds are flung away into the sky when the wire snaps bac… A similar appearance occurred in Inside Out, while Riley and her family are driving to San Francisco at the beginning of the movie. IN the beginning we see several birds that all … A reference to For the Birds was put in the 2006 Disney–Pixar movie Cars. Its worldwide debut occurred at the Annecy Film Festival in France on June 5, 2000. Fifteen blue birds land one-by-one on a power line, where they encounter a huge and goofy-looking bird. When Lightning McQueen is in the back of Mack, they drive down the freeway and pass a section of power line with the birds resting on top, which is accompanied by the squeaks the birds made to communicate with each other. It's not easy to digitally create feathers that look natural and move like they would in real life, but Pixar was able to …