Speaking at the Cannes Film Festival this week, Pixar head John Lasseter revealed some interesting details about their upcoming slate.

Following next month’s new Pixar film Inside Out (it’s really good), the studio will be releasing a second film come November: The Good Dinosaur. Pixar has yet to release a trailer or clip from the movie despite its release being six months away, but that didn’t stop Lasseter from dropping a few tidbits to the Cannes audience.

“This is a boy and a dog story, but the roles are reversed,” Lasseter said (via Variety). “Arlo, the dinosaur, is the boy in the story and Spot is the dog [but a human]” — meaning Arlo stands upright and speaks, while Spot travels on his hands and feet and grunts.”

Lasseter also shared footage with the audience, and according to Variety, “the early clips from this movie played like a cross between Tarzan and Lilo & Stitch. The story centers on Arlo (Lucas Neff), an Apatosaurus, who after losing his father in a tragic accident, falls into a river, gets knocked out by a rock and finds himself in a land far away. As he makes the trek back home to the Clawed-Tooth Mountains, he befriends a human cave-boy named Spot.”

Interestingly, Lasseter dropped big teasers concerning the visuals in The Good Dinosaur. “It’s unlike anything we’ve had before,” he said. “The level of believability we’re striving for in this film is going to be breathtaking.” Variety describes one scene he shared by saying it “looks more real than any scene from a Pixar production.”

On the subject of Finding Dory, no footage was screened at Cannes but Lasseter described a couple of scenes coming in the Finding Nemo sequel: “A dip through the Pacific Ocean where shipping containers have fallen off boats; a frightening encounter with a giant squid; wading past a kelp forest on California’s northern coastline; and new friends in the form of an octopus and a whale-shark named Destiny,” according to Variety. Said Lasseter, Destiny “thinks she’s a whale, but she’s actually a shark.” (Destiny sounds like a very entertaining character.)

Lasseter also very briefly touched on Toy Story 4 which arrives in theaters June 2017. He reiterated previous comments about the film’s place in the Toy Story universe, describing it as “not as much a continuation of the past films, but a brand new chapter in the Toy Story world.”

All in all, Pixar has a very exciting slate in the pipeline. Looking beyond these four movies, we also know that The Incredibles 2, Cars 3, and a film inspired by the Mexican holiday Dia De Los Muertos are in development.