TheSequelofDisney wrote:BrandonH wrote:Dinosaur was produced by The Secret Lab, not WDFA, therefore it is not on the Animated Classics list.
Well, BrandonH, why did D.B. Sweeny, on the 
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Platinum Edition DVD, say that 
Dinosaur was made from the WDFA? If you have the DVD, put in disc 2, then go to The Dwarfs' Mine, Disney Through The Decades, and go to A New Century. If you listlen closely, it says that 
Dinosaur was made by WDFA.
 
By then Secret Lab was dismantled, I think.  Also, it'd make more sense for people who had no idea what "The Secret Lab" was to hear "Dinosaur was made by Walt Disney Feature Animation" as opposed to "Dinosaur was made by The Secret Lab".
Pals wrote:Also Chicken Little didn't have original songs or original score songs
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot???
Pals, Luke just said that Chicken Little had an original song, the one by Barenaked Ladies, called "One Little Slip".  Also, there was an entirely original score by John Debney.
If you meant in the sense of the Disney musicals, then yes, CL didn't have any original songs.  But they definitely had an original score.
Aladdin from Agrabah wrote:Have you ever applied for a job there? They need persons who don't have their own opinion and just follow what the boss says.
I've got a summer job at the Mouse House, though it's at the theme parks and not with their animation division.  But even so, you're very wrong about the thought that they only hire people without opinions and simply follow orders.  Creative thinking is encouraged, as is voicing our opinions to our bosses as to some improvements we can make to enhance the guests' experience within the parks.  We may come off as smiling drones, but we do have minds of our own and know when it's right to speak up to a boss with an opinion or an idea that can help improve the parks.
Anyway, back to the general discussion about "Is Chicken Little an animated classic?" (note the lowercase).  I'm sure in time it can be seen as such.  After all, Fantasia was received rather poorly in its initial run.  I'm not saying that Chicken Little is as great as Fantasia.  I'm just saying that perhaps it hasn't gotten its full appreciation.  Perhaps in 20 years people will lament "I wish CGI animation was as good as the days of Chicken Little", much like how a few years ago we were wishing for a great 2D film like "Beauty and the Beast" to show up again.
Besides, "classic" (note the lowercase) is simply a matter of taste and opinion.  I think that Chicken Little is a wonderful film, though it's not a classic yet in the "artistic merit" sense that we view other classics in (stuff like Gone with the Wind, Citizen Kane, Sunset Boulevard, To Kill A Mockingbird, Chinatown, Raging Bull, Schindler's List...).  But is it an Animated Classic (note the uppercase)?  Yes, and no one can really dispute that unless Disney says, "Okay, now we're gonna call these films Disney Animated Post-Its", and then we'd have to say that Chicken Little is an Animated Post-It.
I'd like to say "Case closed, period!" but I'm sure there are more opinions to be voiced. 
Escapay