Of special note is that this project is being written by Ron Clements and John Musker, who brought us The Little Mermaid in 1989.
Posts: 6689 | Registered: Jan 2005
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I need to get crackin' on some drawing classes! :-D
Actually, this is funny, cause just 5 minutes ago I was looking over Laika's job openings and realizing I'm at a disadvantage for not having strong stop-motion skills. Now this! Man, where was I 10 years ago when 3D was hip? ;-)
Posts: 1681 | Registered: Jun 2004
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Its interesting that Lasseter is not the 3D exclusivist that I thought he might be. I hope the 2d features are beautifully drawn as opposed to the cartoons that prevail today on nickolodeon and Cartoon Network that do a very piss poor job, and sacrifice art for stupid cheap gags. Who needs to draw well when we can draw a guy with poping zits, its SO FUNNY!
Posts: 14316 | Registered: Jul 2005
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Lasseter was trained in and worked in 2D animation for many years before Pixar came a-knockin'.
Posts: 1681 | Registered: Jun 2004
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Best of all (heh), the glut of sub-standard CGI flicks in recent years has me feeling the public will embrace a traditional Disney film. Especially if it's done well.
Posts: 6689 | Registered: Jan 2005
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Now I just have to convince my ex-roommate to work for Disney. She's the biggest Disney freak on the planet and the best artist I know. She got bored at work once (check out at the science library) and made a flip book out of post-it notes featuring our other roommate and her boyfriend. The couple danced around in a circle, and then the boyfriend got down on one knee and offered a box with a ring. The other roommate then jumped into his arms and he spun her around. There was a poofy dress too. The whole thing was a result of us thinking the our other roommate is joined at the hip with her boyfriend, and is out with him ALL the time, often dancing together. The couple looked at china at Macy's once. The flip book was classic, both for the quality of what she did, and for everyone who knows the couple involved.
Despite her eternal love for the company, I don't think she'd work there unless Disney had a satellite office in Pennsylvania. Shame. Still writing her to tell the good news
Posts: 1757 | Registered: Oct 2004
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I hope they get back into the big musical productions of Aladdin, Mermaid, Lion King, Snow White etc.
Those seem to have fallen by the wayside, and were by far the most successful movies (and for many the most memorable). I don't even really care if they have to CGI it (since apparently EVERYTHING has to be CGI these days), just bring back the fun Disney music.
Posts: 21898 | Registered: Nov 2004
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According to most sources I've read, the animated musicals began to decline in box office returns after the apex of The Lion King. With only a couple of exceptions, each film did a bit less than the one before.
The musical format was blamed, so it was dropped.
Personally, I would say it was due to a drop in quality. So many of the post TLK films were increasingly mediocre.
Posts: 6689 | Registered: Jan 2005
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See, they made a bunch of those mistakes with those films.
First, they did the Hercules mistake of the film not taking itself seriously enough. Where Aladdin was able to limit the anachronistic elements to a genie, who at least in theory could have had some knowledge of the future, Herucles was so anachronistic as to taunt the viewer if they ever once tried to take the film seriously.
Compare this to the Lion King, where everything is serious, and the comedy is far more organic to the story.
So then they went the other way, and made movies with no music that took themselves way too seriously, like Atlantis.
And somewhere in there was that dark, gritty Hunchaback of Notre Dame, which managed to offend religious people and turn off parents looking for fun, light Disney fare for children with its dark tone and lack of any completely likeable characters.
Disney seems to completely misunderstand the appeal of its own successful films.
Aaah, I probably shouldn't get started.
But I have a lot of faith that Lasseter does understand, so that gives me hope.
Posts: 1894 | Registered: Aug 2000
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I agree. It's a shame though, with Disney's bad films's recently. (Though Pixar is good.) Disney films are too silly these days; more seriousesque films like Lion King, or kinda like Hercules. I happened to like both of those films.
Posts: 2121 | Registered: Oct 2005
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