Ben wrote:But as has been stated (I think) above, these were not the most flattering of years for Disney. True, you picked the competing years, but it would be fun to compare Disney's topflight tariff with Pixar's.
But that is the point. If we're debating who should take the lead at the combined Disney/Pixar we have to compare the competing years not look to decades past to compare the best of the past.
Ben wrote:And, as we all know, the money a film makes has no indication on how good that film is! ... As with the money aspect, awards don't necessarily mean the right things.
So money doesn't matter, critics, don't matter, awards don't matter! Is there any criteria I can use to compare the two?
Ben wrote:Yes, a loose definition, which makes most of your resulting list redundant. Prince Of Egypt is not a buddy movie. Most of the list you provided feature standard character relationships - ANY and ALL films do this, or people wouldn't talk to each other!
The definition of a "buddy movie" is usually the result of just two characters - usually an "Odd Couple" double act - on some sort of journey, either physical or symbolic, though usually a quest that takes them out on the road. They bicker, they fight, they get into a scrape that brings them together, they bond, they end up - if not friends - then in grudging admiration of each other.
Apply that to many on your list and it doesn't work in this commonly accepted way. Apply it to the majority of Pixar movies, and it works perfectly.
I was hoping someone would take the bait and give me a definition!
Let's apply that then. At Pixar:
<tt>Toy Story 1 - Definite buddy movie
A Bug's Life - Definitely not
Toy Story 2 - Not with your definition
Monster's Inc - two buddies but that is the only similarity - not a buddy movie
Finding Nemo - Definite buddy movie
The Incredibles - definitely not.
Cars? McQueen takes a journey on his own, Mater is around. But the rest doesn't really fit your definition.
Ratatouille - Doesn't seem like one from the previews</tt>
My point about "loose definitions" was that unless you take it at its very loosest - two buddies in a movie - it does not apply to most Pixar films as always claimed.
The rest of the list? Most still seem to match your defintion MUCH BETTER than any of the other Pixar movies!
<tt>The Road to El Dorado - two buddies on actual journey
Titan AE - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
The Emperor's New Groove - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Shrek - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Ice Age - three people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Lilo and Stitch - odd couple on symbolic journey who end up family
Treasure Planet - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Sinbad - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Brother Bear - two people on actual journey who end up friends
Home on the Range - three people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Shrek 2 - two buddies on actual journey with someone they don't like who end up friends
Shark Tale - two people on symbolic journey who don't like each other but end up friends
The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie - two buddies on actual journey
Madagascar - two buddies on actual journey
Ice Age 2 - three buddies on actual journey with someone they don't like but end up friends
The Wild - four buddies on actual journey
Over the Hedge - two people on symbolic journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Everyone's Hero - three people on actual journey two of which don't like each other but end up friends
Open Season - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Flushed Away - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Arthur and the Invisibles - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Meet the Robinsons - two people on actual journey who don't like each other but end up friends
Shrek 3 - three buddies on actual journey with someone who doesn't like them but end up friends</tt>
My only point with this list is this "buddy movie" thing that Pixar has been labeled with seems to be a way for people to find SOMETHING to complain about with Pixar since there is really so little. Buddy movies are an animation staple as this clearly shows, and Pixar is unfairly singled out.