ShyViolet wrote:What about Frog Princess? Don't they have to re-do the whole plot now that it's in New Orleans? (I guess it's been going on earlier than when we first heard, of course.)
Hasn't the project always been set in New Orleans?
I wasn't aware Ben was working on the film!No--originally it was set to echo the traditional, Russian fairy tale setting.
I know Ben mentioned it earlier here:
http://www.animated-news.com/forum/view ... 43&start=0
He said it elsewhere too....ahh, can't remember where...
Even before Pixar came, Ben said that Ron and Jon were working on a TRADITIONAL Disney-type film with Alan Menken. This was it.
My guess is it was set in New Orleans before Lassy came on board. After all, this isn't the first time Ron n' Jon have taken a well-known story and given it a completly different setting...
This will be a fantastic hit.
People, whether they know it or not, are absolutely itching for a traditional traditional Disney movie, and a princess musical is as about as pure as it can be.
Funnily enough, by the time Enchanted hits, we won't really have missed Disney feature animation as much as we thought we had.
It won't even have quite been three years between Home On The Range and Enchanted, and less if you include some of the better DTVs, which is nothing compared to the years and years waiting between Robin Hood in 1973 and The Rescuers in 1977, or The Fox And The Hound in 1981 and The Black Cauldron in 1985 - four years between them each!
And with The Frog Princess on the way (any bets that Schwartz is Menken's lyricist again on that one?), and more shorts, we're looking good!
Exactly. He just acts like those films were always "intended" to be that way and puts out this party line that they were....John Lasseter, at the end of the day, is a very good salesman.
Cool!
See...I can see the future. Smile
Actually I was talking about Treasure Planet.Not just because of what Ben said, but the fact that: yes, it's true that Ron 'n Jon like to put "different" spins on fairy tales but with films like Little Mermaid, Aladdin and Hercules (sure, there were quips and jokes) they all were in their "traditional" fairy-tale/myth environment, not modern day.
Yes, they had better!
Actually I was talking about Treasure Planet.
Well, they say it is (although it did start out more "Shrek-like" years ago, not Keane's choice I don't think) so I hope they stick to their word.And hey, isn't Rupunzel supposed to be a classic fairy-tale sort of film?
It's true Meg, none of us really "know" anything for sure (well, Ben knows more than most ) we just get pieces of info and go by that.I dunno - I don't think it's realy justified to say that unless you know that for a fact. *shrug*
At one time, Jeanine Tesori and Amir Khalifa were writing the songs for Rapunzel. In case you're unfamiliar with her, Tesori penned the tunes for such Broadway musicals as Thoroughly Modern Millie and Caroline, or Change. Likewise, she wrote the song "Feel Like A Million" for Kronk's New Groove.ShyViolet wrote:Also, for all the talk about Rapunzel, no one has answered these questions yet:
1.) WHO is scoring the film?
2.) Are there songs?
3) Who is writing the songs????