That's the sort of thing I fear most about Disney acquiring all these other franchises. The idea that they get so caught up in owning Star Wars and Marvel that they lose sight of what I think truly defined the studio and made it so magical: their legacy in the art of hand-drawn animation. It's what makes Disney "Disney" in my eyes. Even if they think their magic of animation is still there in CGI, I still think it's not the true art of Disney and just a perversion of what really made them what they were as an animation studio.DisneyEra wrote:http://www.cnbc.com/2015/08/03/disneys- ... gical.html
This is why a future of 2D Features at Disney is just not likely. They're making a killing with their established franchises. They predict a $2.2 Billion worldwide gross for Star Wars TFA. They are pulling in so much $$$ they can do a write-off of $130 million for the flop Tomorrowland & no effect they're bottom line.
I wouldn't mind their ownership of Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars, and The Muppets if they still remembered that they are, first and foremost, a studio built on animation, and unlike Pixar, one rooted in the style of 2D animation as opposed to the 3D works of their secondary CG-built animation studio. That's how I wish it would be. But instead, I see today's Disney as a studio with an identity crisis.