So...You're saying that the film should have focused more on the death and destruction that happened along Route 66.
Well, no...just that I don't know how appropriate it is as a topic in the first place.
nd suddenly Hopper, Randall, Syndrome, Sid, Al, Mr. Waternoose, and the Prospector AREN'T bad guys?!?!?
Of course they're bad guys but ask yourself this:
Have any of them ever had to grapple with being passed over for King because of their nephew?
Have any of them ever had to struggle with their hatred of a people combined with a consuming lust for one of them?
Have any of them ever had to decide between losing a brother with losing their crown and empire?
What I'm saying is that although the Pixar villains are definetely villains and cool in their own way, they don't have a lot of range or complexity. Which basically narrows the Pixar "world"...yes, there is good and evil but sort of like the good and evil in old black and white films with the villain who twirls his mustache...the bad guy is the bad guy and the good guy is the good guy...
HOWEVER, the bad guy is only as "bad" as a family-friendly, Disney afternoon movie like the Apple Dumpling Gang or The Love Bug would allow him to be. Nothing more. (Walt thrilled his audiences by showcasing REAL villains in his films, such as the Stagecoach master who kidnaps the children to Pleasure Island.)
Randall is evil but somewhat incompetent, even Mr. Waternoose isn't totally "evil", just misguided. Syndrome is perhaps the exception to this (with Bird influence and all) but as it's been pointed out before we never really see him hurting civilians directly, (hey, he even helps one of them) and even when he kidnaps Jack-Jack the suspense is very short lived--Jack-Jack kicks his a** with no problem at all. Even the somewhat more sinister and Predatory Hopper (KUDOS to Kevin Spacey) is a coward at heart, and too stupid to discern between a real bird and a fake one. His end is much more comical than haunting, as say, Scar's attack by the Heyenas.
Al the toy man is, like Hopper, dumb, selfish, bumbling, one-dimensional--definetely more comic relief than a villain. I guess you could say his greed makes him evil, but then he's a collector and collectors tend to want a lot of stuff. By that logic, the Simpson's Comic Book Guy would be a villain too.
The Prospector--misguided, desperate, wants to force Jessie and Woody to go to Japan. Hmmm....evil? Ends up being owned by a "creative" little girl. (Well, wasn't being owned as a toy what he'd always wanted anyway?)
Sid is a twelve year old child that likes to make things explode and break toys. Uh, a villain? Doesn't every 12 year old like to do things like this? It's not like he knows the toys are alive. Yeah, he aggravates his sister, but, then, who doesn't? Maybe if we saw him being mean to Andy there would be more drama, but that would probably have been too dark for Pixar. I'm not saying this to be glib--just that well, yeah, it would have been too dark.
Pixar films are good and fun. They just need, at this point, a little something extra.
They are very smart guys and I'm sure they're more than capable of this. I think the real issue is that they just don't particularly like having dark issues in their films. It's just how it seems to me--it's been eleven years now, and seven films, so I think that's enough to make some kind of judgement.
But hopefully, they will be willing to change.
Ah well...To each their won, I guess.
I agree...to each their "won." (Just kidding.
)
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!