Flanger-Hanger wrote:pap64 wrote:Give up? He didn't want to draw Flynn because he was a CG character. Yes, he is one of those Disney fanatics that believes that the Disney Essence(c) only exists in the hand drawn animated features.
Really? He's done live-action Disney characters before in that series. Does this mean he thought the Disney "essence" applied to those movies AND 2-D, but not CGI? I'm confused, but at least he changed his mind.
I'm just as confused as you are. The only reason I can think of is that when Disney closed down the hand drawn animation unit in favor of CG, and Chicken Little, fans were left butt hurt by it (I should know, I was one of them at first).
But really, that's some sort of animation racism. I mean, Flynn is just as exploitative hot as the other Disney heroes. Why shouldn't he be given the chance of posing in his underwear like a juicy piece of beef at a butcher shop for the enjoyment of rabid fangirls?
Disney'sDivinity wrote:I'm not sure who you're talking to, because it could be about people not from this site ('cause I honestly can't think of anyone on this site with those views...--I know you mentioned davidkawena, but that's just one person?), but the reason I personally love TP&TF is for its story and characters. The 2D is an added bonus. If I felt less about Tangled, it's only because Rapunzel was the only character I honestly loved. I liked Gothel okay, and Maximus was hilarious, but besides that I wasn't crazy about the cast.
Of course I'm not just talking about this site, and not everybody that didn't enjoy Tangled wasn't biased against the CG. But I HAVE seen people make outlandish claims that Tangled should have been 2D from the very beginning and that this is how Disney should ONLY be. Again, I agree that there should be more variety in animated films, but until then I want to focus on the quality of the film rather than the medium used.
There's nothing wrong in enjoying Princess and the Frog (like I said, I liked the film myself). I'm just saying that there are some silly die hard fanatics that give it too much credit while tearing Tangled apart without looking at Frog's own flaws.
Both films are great, and neither film is perfect, regardless of the medium being used.
And I still don't get the claim that TP&TF relies on nostalgia and re-hash, but Tangled doesn't. Tangled is dripping with re-hash--all "princess" films are. Honestly, I'm sure I'm alone considering all the gushing here, but I found Tiana and Naveen's relationship much more sincere than Rapunzel and Flynn's--as sincere as any Disney couple gets really (which isn't saying much).
First, watch this trailer for Princess and the Frog:
<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="560" height="349" src="
http://www.youtube.com/embed/XmlZhrmMAhc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Now look at the teaser trailer for Tangled:
<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="560" height="349" src="
http://www.youtube.com/embed/pyOyBVXDJ9Q" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Watch this Princess and the Frog featurette on Facilier:
<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="560" height="349" src="
http://www.youtube.com/embed/Tgz1l-k-FG0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Now look at this featurette for Mother Gothel:
<iframe title="YouTube video player" width="560" height="349" src="
http://www.youtube.com/embed/1-QpUKOjTTc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Noticed the differences yet?
In both videos for Princess and the Frog, they talk about Disney's legacy in animation, how the movie would fit perfectly along the Disney classics of the 80s and 90s, that Facilier is a wonderful villain in the same vein as the classic villains.
But for Tangled, all they did was sell it as a silly comedy, even though Tangled is just as much of a modern Disney classic as Princess and the Frog is.
Why is that? Because Disney did their darnedest to sell the movie based on the nostalgia the Disney Essence(c) has created in audiences, most notably in us older Disney fans who grew up with the fab four movies (again, in the first trailer we see clips of The Little Mermaid, Lion King and Aladdin, then it cuts to Tiana, implying that the movie is just as great as they are).
Tangled was just a comedy, and sold only as a comedy. Yes, I understand that this is a trend in marketing in order to convince people to go pay to see the movie (The Nostalgia Chick explained it better here:
http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/videol ... he-eyebrow). But still, Disney did NOT give the movie enough credit as its own entity, even though its just as classic as the other movies.
And yes, Tangled did have many of the tropes you mentioned. But AGAIN, THAT'S NOT HOW IT WAS SOLD. Hence why people, myself included, believe that Princess and the Frog tried too hard to use nostalgia in order to attract people to theaters. In other words, Princess and the Frog was coated in all things Disney Essence(c).
My only problem with the 3D is that there didn't seem any particular reason for doing it in 3D other than...to do a 3D film. Glen Keane managed to use the 3D to emphasize the hair and the lantern scene, but that's not the intention the movie began with it all. Still, I'm open to variety--I'm particularly looking forward to Reboot Ralph, which I've known from the beginning will be 3D. The difference is that the film's storyline seems to gel with 3D, but a musical fairy tale doesn't (and I still feel that way, even if I'm the minority, though the animation was well-done in Tangled; a lot of the theatrical side of the singing looked ridiculous in 3D whereas it would have been smoothed out in 2D).
So basically what you are saying that directors, producers and artists should ignore what medium THEY want to use because a few Disney fanboys want THEIR vision to be made a reality, never mind the fact that the artists have to deal with executive meddling and the company constantly pressuring them to make a profitable product or else they are fired?
I'm sorry, but that's not how it works. Glen Keane envisioned the movie as a CG film from the very beginning. He had many ideas for it. Did all of them become a reality? No, but he used the technology he had to his advantage. While is indeed subjective, I think Tangled had the best CG animation out of the animated films released in 2010 (yes, above Toy Story 3 and How to Train Your Dragons, very pretty films in their own rights).
Your argument could be used against Princess and the Frog. Was there ANYTHING that benefited from being in 2D? From where I am standing, everything done in the movie could have been done in 3D just fine (SHOCK AND HORROR!).
But they went with 2D instead, and they did a good job with it. Yes, I know I just accused them on relying on nostalgia to sell the film, but they did put a lot of work into the animation. The characters animated really well, the backgrounds are beautiful and it looks like on an HD set.
And personally, I don't see why a 3D animated film can't be a musical. I think the reason you think that way is because we have been raised on so many 2D animated musicals that when Pixar did the whole "no singing" thing with Toy Story, we accepted CG films as not being musicals at all. Maybe that's why people find it weird that Tangled as 3D musical, it may have been the first of its kind.
I don't have an issue with a 3D musical. Once more, it is not the MEDIUM, its how it is staged, presented and shown.