I had this one assumption and i know Disney wouldn't dive into it because it would offend audiences, but it was that possibly the mother got raped or something.

Yeah. I know. I'm probably going to deep into it. But think about it.
Well, I know that in the novel, Quasi was born to the Gypsies, but was switched with Esmerelda. Not that that is relevant to the film's portrayal of characters, but I think no matter what, Quasi is of Gypsy heritage. His pale appearance is probably from lack of sunshine; he's not out as much as others. And his red hair... I have no clue. :-\Scarred4life wrote:I was always under the impression that the gypsy was Quasi's adoptive mother, and that explains why the two men (assuming one of them was the mothers husband) didn't care about Quasi ('Shut him up will you' 'We'll be spotted').
I feel the same way about Hercules. There is absolutely nothing family-friendly about the original Greek myth and the Disney version pays extremely little resemblance to it, aside from Hercules' strength, the god's roles and character names. Instead, they pretty much took Superman, dressed it in Greek clothing and added a whole load of pop-culture references.atlanticaunderthesea wrote:I cant really make a fully - fledged opinion on this, as I havnt read the book all the way through, but it does make me wonder; which Disney employee read this book and thought, "Yes ! Here lies a fabulous animated musical !" From what I have read of it; it felt like it would have been too 'different' a premise from Disney's Lagacy.
you forgot adding in Christians themes in a greek story.estefan wrote:I feel the same way about Hercules. There is absolutely nothing family-friendly about the original Greek myth and the Disney version pays extremely little resemblance to it, aside from Hercules' strength, the god's roles and character names. Instead, they pretty much took Superman, dressed it in Greek clothing and added a whole load of pop-culture references.atlanticaunderthesea wrote:I cant really make a fully - fledged opinion on this, as I havnt read the book all the way through, but it does make me wonder; which Disney employee read this book and thought, "Yes ! Here lies a fabulous animated musical !" From what I have read of it; it felt like it would have been too 'different' a premise from Disney's Lagacy.
So, what motivated Ron and John to make a film about Hercules (aside from allowing them to get Treasure Planet green-lit)? But, I'm getting off-topic here, sorry.
Hardly the first time, Goddess of Spring did the same decades before. On the same note, who in the studio thought 'I think 'The Rape of Persephone' would make a swell Silly Symphony!'Super Aurora wrote:you forgot adding in Christians themes in a greek story.estefan wrote: I feel the same way about Hercules. There is absolutely nothing family-friendly about the original Greek myth and the Disney version pays extremely little resemblance to it, aside from Hercules' strength, the god's roles and character names. Instead, they pretty much took Superman, dressed it in Greek clothing and added a whole load of pop-culture references.
So, what motivated Ron and John to make a film about Hercules (aside from allowing them to get Treasure Planet green-lit)? But, I'm getting off-topic here, sorry.
Still stupid though.Someday... wrote: Hardly the first time, Goddess of Spring did the same decades before.
Timon & Pumbaa awful? I loved those guys! I even loved their spin-off TV series that they had, which could hardly be considered the same continuity as the film with all those random characters and over-the-top Ren & Stimpy style plotlines and whatnot, but I didn't care cause I enjoyed watching them anyway. They were certainly enjoyable enough characters in The Lion King to have their own cartoon as far as I was concerned.Lady Cluck wrote:Timon and Pumbaa are two of the most obnoxious comic relief sidekicks everThey make fart jokes, break the 4th wall, and hog the airtime in the entire second half of the movie. People who act like TLK is an example of a "serious" Disney masterpiece seem to ignore this fact. I can't imagine the backlash if Olaf was half as obnoxious as them.
You took the words right out of my mouth.Lady Cluck wrote:Timon and Pumbaa are two of the most obnoxious comic relief sidekicks everThey make fart jokes, break the 4th wall, and hog the airtime in the entire second half of the movie. People who act like TLK is an example of a "serious" Disney masterpiece seem to ignore this fact. I can't imagine the backlash if Olaf was half as obnoxious as them.
The gargoyles are obnoxious but not quite as awful as their reputation. They're easy to ignore and the rest of the movie is fantastic.