"Gnomeo & Juliet" not quite dead yet?
http://www.jimhillmedia.com/articles/02052004.1.htm
For a start, what's all this about English humour? To take an example.
I may be stupid, but I just don't see anything "English" about that. May be the actual concept of Garden Gnomes is somewhat English, but it's not really English humour. I suppose if I would have to describe English humour in a single word, I would use "irony". But I don't see much ironic about garden gnomes especially as recent trends in English humour are towards darker irony (although at a pinch it could be described as slight visual irony). Oh, and we don't have lawn flamingos.On the other hand, Disney CEO Michael Eisner & WDFA President David Stainton just DIDN'T get the point of "Gnomeo & Juliet." They failed to see the humorous potential of restaging "Romeo & Juliet" -- W. Shakespeare's hot-blooded romantic tragedy -- inside a quaint English garden. How funny it would be to see a concrete garden gnome riding through this tranquil terrain atop his trusty steed ... Which would be a plastic lawn flamingo.
But Hahn (Who spent a couple of years in the U.K. back in the late 1980s, when he was riding herd on "Roger Rabbit." So he GETS English humor) immediately saw all the humor inherent in this premise. More importantly, Don remembered what happened the last time that Disney Feature Animation combined a Shakespearean tragedy with the music of Elton John. After an equally troubled pre-production period, the Mouse ended up with this colossal hit film. Maybe you've heard of it? "The Lion King."
Anyhow enough about this, see what's next:
Well, I know that I've never heard of The Three Little Pigs or A Day with Wilbur Robinson books. And I doubt many people outside of America at all have (and to be honest, how many inside have. A Day with Wilbur Robinson doesn't appear to be flying of Amazon.Com's virtual shelves). But I bet a lot more people have heard of Romeo and Juliet. I'm sure the play on word of Gnomeo and Juliet will come with a lot more initial awareness than A Day with Wilbur Robinson will. To be fair, The Three Little Pigs always has - er - The Three Little Pigs fable to fall back on. I also doubt Disney artists would develop the story from nothing anyhow - I'm sure it would follow the play closely."David likes to play it safe, Jim. I mean, look at the handful of projects that he's actually put in Feature Animation's production pipeline since he took over for Schumacher in November of 2002. 'The Three Little Pigs,' 'A Day with Wilbur Robinson.' These projects are all based on award winning books."
"Stainton doesn't trust the homegrown stuff. Movie ideas like 'Gnomeo', films that WDFA's own story artists develop right from the get-go, make David nervous. He'd prefer a pre-sold name. Something that will already have some name recognition with audiences. That will hopefully make the finished film that much easier for the Mouse to market & sell."
But I just don't get all this repeated bashing about Disney playing it safe which seems to come up in the media these days. Is it some sort of lie which if said enough times comes true? Disney are doing anything but playing it safe (IMOHO). If Disney were playing it safe, we'd just be getting "Princess" and "Animal" films from them. And we're getting a lot more.
So does that mean that by comissioning "Gnomeo and Juliet" Disney would, in fact, be "Playing it safe" and "not innovating"? Get your story straight!"You wanna know the really sad part of his attitude? If Stainton had been calling the shots back in the early 1990s, he probably would have taken a pass on 'The Lion King' as well. I mean, "Gnomeo' has virtually the same ingredients as that film. It's based on a famous Shakespearean tragedy. It has a score by Tim Rice & Elton John ... But David just doesn't see the potential in that project."