Note my exact words: "just about every single film they have released this decade". There was one big hit this decade and that is why I qualified my statement.
I know what you mean. Still, what about Emperor's New Groove? Chicken Little? Those films did reasonably well at the box office ( or at least on DVD/video) and have their fans. They have "quirky" humor too...especially Groove.
Somehow I don't think Pixar would have liked Groove as a "quirky" comedy (which was quite funny) OR the epic/broadway song/coming-of-age film it was SUPPOSED to be in the first place. And that yes, they probably would have killed that project too. (kind of why the fact that Mark and Randy left as soon as said team walked into the studio never surprised me much.)
Ditto for Atlantis and yessssss Treasure Planet. Like I said, maybe those films have their "issues" but they also have positive qualities and quite a number of fans as well. (as someone might want to tell Steve Jobs, who dissed both Groove and Planet when sparring with Eisner two years ago in the press--yeah, he was doing it to show Eisner up, but I still don't think it was very nice. He could have taken the high road and just said "We believe that Pixar films like Incredibles are a work of art which doesn't necessarily need "realism" and wish Disney well in whatever ventures they're plannning.") NOOOOO, he had to be a jerk, because he's Steve Jobs and can do whatever he wants. Someone should tell him that there's this thing some people have...it's called integrity.
Anyway to get back to Pixar....maybe Treasure Planet, Brother Bear, Atlantis, Chicken Little and Emperor's New Groove have things that could be improved, but they're decent, well-made films with quite a few "quirky" ideas that would not, I repeat would not, have survived the Pixar cut had John and company gotten to Diz earlier. Treasure Planet in space? A "witty" (read; quirky) modern update of Chicken Little? A David Spade comedy? (Or I'll even go out on a limb and list "Cats Don't Dance" even though it's not Disney, because it's also kind of a Dindal-ish"quirky" film with some adult ideas, dark components, and a "different" type of feel. Exactly what Pixar loves, right?) And Brother Bear? An
epic-y type of film with an environmentalist message? Yes, John and Ed would have said: "Brilliant! Stick with it!"
I think they would have done more than just make "suggestions" or "improvements" on these films. They would either have edited them and inserted random cuteness until the films would have been completely unrecognizable, or, as in the case of Empereor's New Groove/Kingdom of the Sun, they would have killed this project in EITHER stage it was in. I truly believe that they would have.
But then if you believe that these were all basically bad ideas inspired by executive meddling and should have been killed anway, well, that's another story.
So let's go back earlier....to say, Mulan. They wouldn't have liked it. Too different. Too weird. Too "quirky". Tarzan? Too live-action. Too "quirky". Hercules? Old Greek Tale with pop/blues chorus? Same. Pocahontas? Same. Beauty and the Beast? They would have taken one look at the fairy tale in its original form and said "Too dark" and that would've been that. Aladdin? With the relatively exotic material it would have been too far removed from what they do--too "quirky." Little Mermaid? Story too sad, even with possible changes to original (unhappy) fairy tale. Too much scary stuff and intense stuff like Ursela's bargain and Ariel's losing her voice. Next. Oliver and Company. What, dogs with Oliver Twist? Bette Middler? Billy Joel? A scary villain who almost strangles someone with his limo car window going up? A little girl getting kidnapped, guard dogs threatening her, subway chase with the villain getting his head cut off? Not in this lifetime, baby.
Oh, but what about Brad Bird? you ask. He believes in doing different types of stories. HE would have supported them. Uh, yeah. May I remind everyone that in WIRED interview done around 2004, Brad called everything that was being done at Disney in the late 80s/early 90s to be "beautiful, full animation of really lame ideas" which was why he opted to go for Simpsons, not WDFA. No help there, unfortunately.
No, what Pixar does is safe, cute little kiddie stuff that's usually quite entertaining and sure looks good. Like....the Great Mouse Detective. And they'd have stopped pushing the envelope at that. Trust me, if it had been John and Ed, not Jeffrey, who'd taken over WDFA in 1985, we would NEVER have seen the films we did. I challenge anyone to deny this point.
Here's something Ed Catmull said in that same WIRED story:
"I used to say for years that story was the most important thing to us," says Catmull. "Then I realized that all the other studios were saying the same thing. They say that and then they go and produce c**p. What you say doesn't mean a damn thing. It's what you do that matters."
Yes, it is. Unfortunately, based on Pixar's mission statement, I don't think what they would have done with Disney, had they been given that power earlier, would have been anything like what we ended up seeing.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!