“Inside Out,” January 24, 2016 (2015), DVD. This Pixar/Disney look at childhood, its normal but real traumas, memory, and the functioning of the mind is often funny, kind, and astoundingly top 10%- if not 5%-income oriented. It brings us Riley’s attempt to cope with a new and ‘challenging’ setting that disrupts her perfect Minnesota world of family (two-parent household with a mom and dad who learned it all from Ward and June Cleaver), house, yard, friends, and hockey with a new home/school in that backwater, San Francisco. Things become challenging when her parents relocate so that Dad can run a startup, and Joy (Amy Poehler) and the rest of her internal psychic monitors including Sadness (Phyllis Smith from “The Office”), Disgust (Mindy Kaling), Fear (Bill Hader)—Lewis Black is (I wonder why?) very good as Anger—and her old imaginary friend Bing Bong (Richard Kind) try to help her resolve these problems. But events spin beyond their control, and chaos and dark times rule. A nice Disney look at changes experienced as a child. But it’s a very limited view of the powerfully disruptive forces that children face. Its showing how even benign changes can be painful and harsh and create intense disruption, and they can. But imagine a braver film that balances lots of happy with dollops of: death, unemployment, eviction and foreclosure (as in an especially powerful scene in “The Big Short”), violence, or heightened familial disruption. Or where parents are less perfect, like, say, in our house. If this is the internal life of the perfect, what must this say to a child with Asperger’s, high order physical imperfections, or depression?. Anyway, it was fun to watch, but I’m not sure why it’s being praised as much as it has been. If they’re going to deal with emotion, well, have at it with greater risk-taking