Intensa mente

Cast

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Trailers

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Music

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Trivia

 * This is the third Pixar film where the dubbing credits appear replacing the credits of the original cast in English. The first was Brave and the second is Monsters University.
 * This is the tenth Pixar film to include Startalents in the dubbing, in this case, Fábio Acevedo.
 * Erika Ugalde had previously dubbed Mindy Kaling in Wreck-It Ralph as Taffyta Muttonfudge.
 * In the dubbing credits it is mentioned that the actor Mario Filio played the emotion Joy of the clown Jangles. However you can tell when listening to his dialogue "Seis años en la escuela de arte para esto" that it is performed by another voice actor.
 * Elsa Covián and Rebeca Gómez participated in the casting to play the character of Sadness; However, in the end Kerygma Flores was selected.
 * Cristina Hernández would voice Joy again in the game: Disney Infinity and in all her appearances so far, including the trailers for the film, being the only voice of the character. This is the second time this has happened, the first was with the actor Sergio Bonilla, with his character Remy in Ratatouille.
 * In a scene when Bing Bong starts crying sweets, the Englishman tells Joy to try one of the sweets because it is delicious. In the dubbing, it mentions that one of them is a dulce de leche, a traditional sweet of Latin American origin.
 * In two scenes, both Joy and Sadness mention a movie about a dog: first in the argument scene, and then in the Long Term Memory scene. In the original version, both mention that in said film the dog dies at the end, this being a reference to the film Old Yeller, which was also produced and distributed by Disney, but in the dubbing, they say that the dog cries, which causes the reference to be lost.
 * At the climax of the film, a character says the phrase "Forget it Jake, it's Cloudtown." This is an obvious reference to the final sentence of the movie Chinatown. In Spanish, however, this was translated as "Olvídalo Jake, es Nuberia", because Cloudtown had been named Nuberia in the dubbing, which means that any possible reference to the film is lost, since no translation of the itself resembles this name.

Smoothed dialogues
The dubbing softens or censors any reference to foul language, death or religious expressions to make the film more appropriate for children, these dialogues being the most notable: However, some references such as these were also left translated:
 * 1. Original Fear Line: "Alright. We did not die today. I call that an unqualified success." Translated line: "Genial. Riley sigue aquí, yo lo considero un rotundo éxito." (Brilliant. Riley is still here, I consider it a resounding success.)
 * Second original line: "What the heck is that?" Translated line: "¿Qué es esa cosa?" (What is that thing?)
 * 2. Original Disgust Line: "I'm telling you, it smells that something died in here." Translated line: "Huele como si algo se pudrió adentro." (It smells like something is rotting inside.)
 * 3. Original Sadness Line: "Remember the funny movie where the dog dies?" Translated line: "¿La película feliz de sobre el perro que al final llora?" (The happy movie about the dog who cries at the end?)
 * 4. Original Joy Line: "Don't obsess over the weight of life's problems! Remember the funny movie where the dog dies!" Translated line: "¡No te obsesiones sólo en los problemas de la vida! ¡Piensa en el perro que llora!" (Don't just obsess over life's problems! Think of the crying dog!)
 * 5. Original Bing Bong Line: "Well what the heck are you doing out here?" Translated line: "¿Pero qué cosa estás haciendo aquí?" (But what are you doing here?)
 * Second original line: "Who the heck is that?" Translated line: "¿Y quién es él?" (And who is he?)
 * 6. Original Anger Line: "This new console is a sh-" Translated line: "Esta nueva consola es una-" (This new console is a-)


 * "¿Puedes morir por mudarte?" (Can you die from moving?) - Fear
 * "Chicos, no exageren. No morirá nadie". (Guys, don't exaggerate. No one will die.) - Joy
 * "Ay, Dios. Se acabó". (Oh my God. It's over.) - Disgust

Localization
This localization was used for its theatrical release, TV broadcasts, and DVD and Blu-Ray releases in the United States and Latin America.