Touche - I should have said left WDFA.Ben wrote:It didn't leave Disney. It will just be issued by their Miramax division (like Roger Rabbit and Nightmare went out through Touchstone).
Disney Pixar's Cars
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OMGosh! The WP is only 1 week from today! Squeeeeeee!
Brandon and I will most likely already be in line by this time next Friday. Heheheh. I wanted to get there even earlier, but I guess noon would be ridiculously early. *shrugs*
~~=oP
Brandon and I will most likely already be in line by this time next Friday. Heheheh. I wanted to get there even earlier, but I guess noon would be ridiculously early. *shrugs*
~~=oP
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Haha.
Well, how early do you guys think people will start showing up? And I don't mean the Pixar crew and everyone else, but the spectators?
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Well, how early do you guys think people will start showing up? And I don't mean the Pixar crew and everyone else, but the spectators?
~~=oP
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And believe me, I'd be there the day before if I knew it would help my chances. LOL But yeah, that's kind of on the verge of unnecessary, isn't it?Meg wrote:Depends. I think the bigger the fan they are, the earlier they'll be there.
According to the pamphlet that came with my ticket, it's first come, first serve as far as seating goes. And yet, there seems to be a number on my ticket. ??Ben wrote:Is it free seating or fixed/numbered?
Well, it doesn't matter. We're getting there really early anyways.
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Well...I actually don't think they can. Enchanted is mostly live-action (just fifteen minutes of animation) and they have no juristiction over that. And Rupunzal is being animated by Glen Keane's company for Disney, not WDFA.And how about Rupunzel and Enchanted? They're going to be musical love stories but I don't see Lasseter and co. trying to change that.
I honestly don't know, to tell the truth, what they would have done with these projects if they actually did have the power.
I'm not blaming Pixar for not making Disney films, just saying that I get the impression, from things they've said, that they don't particularly care for the "new" Disney films via the 1988-1998 boom. One example is how Brad Bird has said in numerous interviews that the reason he didn't go back to Disney in the late 80's and went to work on The Simpsons instead was because he really didn't care for what was being developed at Disney. (which, at the time, was Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, and Aladdin.)
From Wired.com:
In other words, Pixar's philosophy seems very different from the Disney-80s/90s-heyday philosophy, especially the Broadway angle. If Pixar loves the Broadway angle, well maybe they do, but it just doesn't feel that way to me."But once Walt died, watching Disney films get made, as Mike Barrier said in Funnyworld, was like watching master chefs cook hot dogs," Bird says. A Disney scholarship sent him to CalArts, where he studied animation and met Lasseter (Stanton and Docter graduated a few years behind them). After school, Bird faced a tough choice: return to Disney and "do beautiful, full animation of really lame ideas," or work on The Simpsons and "do really fast, write-some-instructions-and-send-it-to-Korea stuff with great ideas." He chose the latter.
It didn't matter that they weren't making "Disney" films when they were "Pixar," but now they're not "Pixar" anymore. They're Disney. And their experiences with making animation up till now has been quite different than the usual Disney template. One way or another, they'll have to adjust. How much of an adjustment is anyone's guess.Pixar doesn't make Disney movies, they make Pixar moves!
I admit that I'm no insider, just an observer. And I'm sure there are a lot of people who know more about this than I do. LIke I said, these are just my observations.
Last edited by ShyViolet on May 23rd, 2006, 12:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
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Also, if Pixar doesn't care for musicals, (and I'm saying they don't, it's just my impression) they're not the only ones. "Merlin Jones" on the now-defunct website www.savedisney.com wrote frequently how the "fall" of Disney animaton could all be traced back to the infusion of the musical into Disney's never-fail cartoon world. (He likes Aladdin, Mermaid and Beauty, but because they were still "cartoons" that simply had songs in them, not Broadway musicals. Except for the fact that well,yeah, they basically were broadway musicals. That's what saved a dying company that was crushed under the tired legacy of cartoons, cartoons, cartoons. Why do you think the well kinda dried up after Aristocats?)
Every film following Lion King was bad because it was too much musical and not enough "cartoon." In other words: Broadway killed Disney Animation. Because Pixar only made "cartoons" and left issues like deformed, abandoned babies, brave Indian princesses and Chinese heroines alone, they are the "true" Disney.
O.K., now that I've probably offended many, many hard-core fans out there, I'll give it a rest and let people respond.
Every film following Lion King was bad because it was too much musical and not enough "cartoon." In other words: Broadway killed Disney Animation. Because Pixar only made "cartoons" and left issues like deformed, abandoned babies, brave Indian princesses and Chinese heroines alone, they are the "true" Disney.
Clearly, it was a definite choice of management to change direction in the
types of stories that would define "Disney." Beginning with Pocahontas,
Disney's animation unit left Neverland for the world of the "sophisticated,"
serious, strident, and sassy. These new works would be closer to animated
children's theatre or live-action films than cartoons at heart. The intent:
to be more "grown up", diverse, "relevant."
.
Unlike Howard Ashman, many of the newcomers had little enthusiasm
for cartoons or the Disney tradition, and tried to remake the business in
their own image. Pocahontas and Hunchback (and the development project Aida,
initially targeted for animation) seemed more appropriate for the stage than
for the cartoon screen. Racism, intolerance, genocide, and sexual repression
became appropriate subtext for this new breed of charming children's musical
films.
If anyone wanted a new Dumbo, they would be out-of-luck.
Starting with the very stagy Pocahontas, the box-office grosses subsequently
declined with each picture, even as Pixar came on the scene and made a
fortune taking the mantle of the Disney-style heartwarming, funny, whimsical
cartoon.
He gets a little mixed up here IMO, because what the heck does "Shrek" have to do with Hunchaback of Notre Dame or Pocahontas? They're two completely different paradigms. (Doesn't Shrek actually ridicule the musical more than once during the film?) The epic, emotional animated film was thriving years before Shrek ever came out. The only thing Shrek and Pocahontas have in common is that Merlin Jones doesn't like them.Prediction: These films will be "emotional." They will be "relevant," They
will imitate Shrek's sarcasm. They will have wall-to-wall smartass dialogue.
They will be loudly marketed. They will be sequels and remakes and franchise
extensions. They will be "3-D."
But they won't be Pixar. They won't be cartoons.
They won't be Disney.
And the audience will know.
O.K., now that I've probably offended many, many hard-core fans out there, I'll give it a rest and let people respond.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!
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