This book is delightful. The concept art is creative and engaging, and I enjoyed the different quotes and longer reflections on how the characters and story evolved over time, even as the creators still stayed faithful to their original concept. Because The Incredibles is pitch-perfect in every way, I experience it as an organic whole and rarely think about the creative process, but I found it fascinating to consider how different the movie could have been.
Edna Mode was originally going to be a tall, sexy, and mysterious character. Then one of the artists drew a gag image of her as three feet tall, and the idea stuck.
Syndrome made a small appearance by attacking the Parr family's home near the beginning of the movie, and the main villain was a completely different character. Then the creators decided that really, Syndrome was a lot more interesting!
On a historical note, a scene were Bob and Frozone relive the glory days together had to be scrapped and rewritten after 9/11, because it was no longer feasible for the movies to show a building's structure collapsing in the way that they had planned.
I'm so glad that I read this, because it gave me a glimpse behind the scenes and gives me a whole new appreciation of how well-crafted this favorite movie is. The text throughout the book is fairly minimal, so it's mostly just gorgeous, interesting, and dramatic concept artwork, but there is just the right amount of text to make this a fully informative and satisfying reading experience.