I also saw it and wondered if it's intentional...

EricJ wrote:I've never really been a fan of Chris Sanders, and basically took DIsney's side when they kicked him out--
So knowing that they never wanted to make "American Dog", but are stuck with having to sell the reclaimed project to a real public now anyway, I applaud any attempt to make the "Bolt" version look like a "real" marketed Disney movie we would actually go to see...
It restores a little more sense of comfort.
It just kept reminding me of the time Tim Burton used to work as a middle animator, and was fired from the studio because he spent all his "Black Cauldron" time drawing future "Nightmare Before Christmas" characters rather than working toward the Horned King minions he was paid to work on:CTind wrote:The question I ask is a simple one, EricJ. Do you know Chris Sanders? It's one thing if your simply not a fan of Chris' style or the films he's been a major contributor to (Beauty and the Beast, Lion King, Mulan, Lilo etc.).EricJ wrote:I've never really been a fan of Chris Sanders, and basically took DIsney's side when they kicked him out--
So knowing that they never wanted to make "American Dog", but are stuck with having to sell the reclaimed project to a real public now anyway, I applaud any attempt to make the "Bolt" version look like a "real" marketed Disney movie we would actually go to see...
It restores a little more sense of comfort.
However, when you make a statement like "taking Disney's side when they kicked him out..." it goes beyond one's personal taste and becomes a lot more aggressive. The reason I ask if you know him, is because I think you should know someone or have worked with them, before you start making personal statements about them. And unless you were at Disney when Chris left, I don't think you or anyone is qualified to start "taking sides" about anything involving that production (American Dog/Bolt).
Disney certainly wasn't doing anything noble by continuing production on the film. They're trying to finish and sell a film that had considerable work done on it and had already been announced.
I am a fangirl of Sander's art, but I'm going to have to agree with you there. I was thrown off at the dog's design even when I first saw it as an eight-year old.(And I repeat: Just what the heck WAS that weird cartoony little Stitch-experiment puppy doing in the otherwise realistic-drawn "Mulan" in the first place??)
Although I've finally seen L&S:Movie enough times to realize that there was some actual emotional depth to the characters (it didn't seem that way in the first theater viewing)...CharlieBarkin wrote:From what I've heard, "American Dog" was quirky and weird to the extreme. Whilst this quirkiness worked for "Lilo and Stitch", I doubt if it would have worked a second time, hence the major re-tooling.
Ben, I apologize in advance, and I promise I'll make up for what I respectfully write below, with many postive discussions in the future:)
It just kept reminding me of the time Tim Burton used to work as a middle animator, and was fired from the studio because he spent all his "Black Cauldron" time drawing future "Nightmare Before Christmas" characters rather than working toward the Horned King minions he was paid to work on:
"Genius", maybe, but that's not the same as common sense and the ability to NOT be a diva and to Play Well With Others.
John Lasseter was reportedly facing long, long delays on both Sanders' work on "Dog" and Glen Keane's CGI-paint work on "Rapunzel"--
And yet Rapunzel kept its greenlight and Sanders' Dog was sent packing...Given what we've seen of Lasseter's instinct for a good, coherent, emotional story, I'm guessing HE knows something about Sanders' final product that we don't, and he saw fit to bail on it.
Accdg. to interviews, one of the reasons Sanders was so "disillusioned" over having his project pulled was that he had previously been used to David Stainton's managment style of "Hands off the Resident Geniuses, and let them do whatever strange genius things they want"...And wasn't prepared to discover that the new studio regime prefers a focus on good, clear storytelling than "quirky" self-indulgent pet-projects.
Which is how most of the problems of the Stainton "Chicken Little era" happened in the first place.
Any more professional animator could see the idea of working for the Larger Goal, but if Sanders thought "Dog" was his way or the highway, I can't help thinking the highway would've turned out to be more structured and less indulgent.
(And I repeat: Just what the heck WAS that weird cartoony little Stitch-experiment puppy doing in the otherwise realistic-drawn "Mulan" in the first place??)
Wow, this is the second time I've seen somebody misspell "hearsay" in two days on two different message boards.These "reports", that turn up more and more on the internet are generally nothing more than heresay and gossip.
If it's the ex-Aardman caveman one he's doing for Dreamworks, it's already got a creative handicap against it.CTind wrote:I've only heard nterviews on the usual industry sites right after the bad news occurred...And the message going out then was that Lasseter now wants studio projects to be in "the Pixar way", with stories collectively decided in group sessions, instead of Stainton-esque "pet projects"...And that Sanders hadn't been able to handle the culture-shock well without thinking that the higher-ups at the studio had "turned their back on him" by "claiming to defend creative directors" while taking away his story for other cooks to stir, and for telling him to get his story on the rails by certain deadline or see it axed.Also, I'm not sure where you read that David Stainton was a hands off executive or that Chris referred to "his managment style as Hands off the Resident Geniuses". I'm pretty sure you weren't reading a quote from Chris. It's actually something more akin to what Pixar boasts of. They always refer to themselves as a director's studio; and eventhough they have a "brain trust" to help make the best film possible, they insist it is ultimately up to the director to make the final decision. I believe this is the reason they've made such amazing and diverse films.
All I can really do is speak on the things I know first hand. I happen to know Chris and am currently working with him on his new film. I can tell you that he is an extremely fair and level headed director. He makes decisions quickly and, believe it or not, has not imposed his style on any of the artists during my six months on the production. He has strong opinions , but is certainly not a diva.
Um, sorry Sanders feels that way, but most animation fans see the Pixar group-system as one of the better innovations at the new regime (and quick to point how it saved "Meet the Robinsons" from certain disaster), and that it was "twisted geniuses" under Stainton that gave us so many half-baked and/or cancelled projects in the first place.
All I can say is that Chris' next film will knock your socks off.
What does that even <I>mean</I>?EricJ wrote:If it's the ex-Aardman caveman one he's doing for Dreamworks, it's already got a creative handicap against it.