I didn't like the in-jokes in Toy Story II. They did take me out of the movie.
Yeah....all I was trying to say was that Pixar does this too, but people don't generally comment on it. Another thing about that film is that it sends-up the older 1950s shows like Howdy Doody or Tom Terrific or other stuff, I guess, that was part of a certain generation. (Woody's round-up) There was a definete nostalgia going on there. If you didn't grow up around that time, like a lot of the Pixar artists did, then you might be a bit confused, or just left cold. Not saying I was, but some people might be. How "timeless" is something that is deliberately satrizing stuff from forty years ago?
The point is that pop culture references are often main base for DreamWorks jokes, gags, dialogues, funny situations. Nothing bad at all when thing or event they're refering to is regarded as timeless. Not so good when it's just one season music hit, one season pop star, latest summer blockbuster or present political events...
Actually, I've never found that DW's jokes have interfered with my enjoyment of their films. I always felt that the basis for Shrek's humor was the CHARACTERS and their faults, not the occasional quip (although I liked those too.) Shrek was hilarious mainly for the interactions between Shrek and Donkey as well as the tyrennical Lord Faarquad. I still love watching it now and other than the Macarena dance at the end, I don't see anything really "one season" in that film. The Matrix? That's a classic film. Pixar might very well have used it as well.
True, Shrek II and SharkTale incorporated modern in-jokes a little more (the most being Christina A. and Missy Elliot, but that was a very small part of the film, and appeared only at the very end) but the basis for the humor is the stories, not the jokes. Shrek trying to fit into Fiona's world; Oscar's maniacal efforts to get rich quick. A lot of the humor was situation-based, not pop-culture, even though that was part of the film's tapestry. But it wasn't the WHOLE film, not by a longshot.
(I will say that I hated the American Idol ending of Shrek II that was tacked on the VHS, mostly because I hate American Idol. But that's not the offical ending, and never appeared in theaters.)
And Madagascar was funny because of the characters and situations...it certainly didn't look much like modern NYC, more like the 1950's. It could have been any time. Over the Hedge makes fun of middle-class American Suburbia....which has prevalently existed in America since the 1940s. (Suburbia has been a target of Disney's since the shorts as well as in Lady and the Tramp.)
Someone else has started using my "The Lamp" thing to describe Pixar
I always thought that was clever, Ben.
If this film is monster hit, will they ever get the drive to someday re-work their never-fail formula?
Ha! I can't believe I didn't even recognize my own pun! "Get the drive".
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!