Next fall, Disney Animation will release โHexed,โ an original film about an awkward teenager who discovers that heโs a wizard. โHeโs pulled into a world of magic and realizes, oh, these are his people,โ Mr. Bush said. โSpoiler,โ he added. โMom, whoโs also trying to figure herself out, is tied to him. So itโs a mother-son buddy comedy.โ
Im expecting this to do Strange World & Wish numbers. There doesnt seem to be some sort of charm or striking uniqueness to both the visual world and the overall synopsis. Its just a mix of modern IPs and most strikingly The Owl House.
What i was thinking lately is that the filmmakers at WDAS are constantly looking back at its legacy, desperately trying to make movies that are not too bold or different from their catalogue. Parallels to the little mermaid documentary i rewatched recently where Jeffrey Katzenberg was critizising the crew worrying "what would Walt Disney do and how would Ariel compare to Cinderella and Aurora?" and him telling them "We're not Walt, we have to be US and find our own way" and push forward. I mean imagine Mermaid not having thst bold Broadway Pop Soundtrack or Ariel having a more classic and conservative personality like Aurora yikes. Seems like nowadays the studio completely abondened that mindset and only wants to capture the essence of the past. Just throwing a boy as a protagonist to a mediocre setting and repetitive arc and storyline wont make them win their male audiences. If theyre so desperate with their legacy and a potential male audience, why cant they use their brains and draw Inspiration to Aladdin or their other successful male led successful musicals?! I guess the company forgot atp that Aladdin was the lead in his self titled movie with only Jasmine "Disney princessifying" the brand with her leading the Marketing the last few decades.
If Gigantic would have been released in 2018 (and untoubtfully been a success), they would have been reminded that male Fairytales exists and work too... RIP Gigantic
Songs that slap right now:
1. House Tour (๐ฒ๐บ๐ป๐๐๐๐บ ๐ข๐บ๐๐๐พ๐๐๐พ๐)*new
2. Heaven on Earth (Britney Spears)
3. Sugar talking(...๐ฒ๐บ๐ป๐๐๐๐บ ๐ข๐บ๐๐๐พ๐๐๐พ๐!) *new
4. Get this right! (Frozen 2)
5. Stuck on you (Lionel Richie)
6. Taste (๐ฒ๐บ๐ป๐๐๐๐บ๐บ๐บ๐บ) 7. Beauty & le bรฉast (๐ขeline Dion & Peabo Bryson)
8. ๐ข๐บ๐๐๐ป๐ป๐พ๐บ๐ ๐ฐ๐๐พ๐พ๐! ( ๐ก๐๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ฎ๐ผ๐พ๐บ๐)
9. ๐ณ๐e Boy is mine (Brandy & Monica)
10. Thats how you know (Enchanted)
I'm not sure what I expect box office-wise. It's more interesting than Strange World, but a wizard story doesn't feel "Disney," tbh, even though I'm personaly open to it even if I'd be more interested if it was a musical. Wish's numbers were likely a reflection of Stramge World, which means the numbers here will be more on Wish. I could see a slight gain from Wish's numbers, but not by much. I was more optimistic about Wish going into thst film because I didn't think one misfire (SW) would have that much of an impact that they couldn't come back from. But I think to a degree Wish also took some of the anger over the Snow White and TLM racebending since the protagonist was a character of color as well. I know I had conservative relatives who would roll their eyes when I talked about the film since I was excited by the concept art and all that, saying things like of course the lead had to be a poc because everything at the time (even remakes like Snow White and TLM where the characters had specific looks or story details that were abandoned to make room for a poc protagonist) had to feature a poc as the lead. It wasn't just a Disney-specific thing, but more generally aimed at the film industry at the time, although Disney did have more of a bull's-eye on them.
Listening to most often lately:
Christina Aguilera ~ "Cruz"
Sombr ~ "homewrecker"
Megan Moroney ~ "Beautiful Things"
Im expecting this to do Strange World & Wish numbers. There doesnt seem to be some sort of charm or striking uniqueness to both the visual world and the overall synopsis. Its just a mix of modern IPs and most strikingly The Owl House.
What i was thinking lately is that the filmmakers at WDAS are constantly looking back at its legacy, desperately trying to make movies that are not too bold or different from their catalogue. Parallels to the little mermaid documentary i rewatched recently where Jeffrey Katzenberg was critizising the crew worrying "what would Walt Disney do and how would Ariel compare to Cinderella and Aurora?" and him telling them "We're not Walt, we have to be US and find our own way" and push forward. I mean imagine Mermaid not having thst bold Broadway Pop Soundtrack or Ariel having a more classic and conservative personality like Aurora yikes. Seems like nowadays the studio completely abondened that mindset and only wants to capture the essence of the past. Just throwing a boy as a protagonist to a mediocre setting and repetitive arc and storyline wont make them win their male audiences. If theyre so desperate with their legacy and a potential male audience, why cant they use their brains and draw Inspiration to Aladdin or their other successful male led successful musicals?! I guess the company forgot atp that Aladdin was the lead in his self titled movie with only Jasmine "Disney princessifying" the brand with her leading the Marketing the last few decades.
If Gigantic would have been released in 2018 (and untoubtfully been a success), they would have been reminded that male Fairytales exists and work too... RIP Gigantic
I honestly think Disney need to make more older male protagonist like Aladdin, Milo, or Jim Hawkins. I don't want to make any assumptions on the male mc age for hex, but he's giving me tweens vibes.
Im expecting this to do Strange World & Wish numbers. There doesnt seem to be some sort of charm or striking uniqueness to both the visual world and the overall synopsis. Its just a mix of modern IPs and most strikingly The Owl House.
What i was thinking lately is that the filmmakers at WDAS are constantly looking back at its legacy, desperately trying to make movies that are not too bold or different from their catalogue. Parallels to the little mermaid documentary i rewatched recently where Jeffrey Katzenberg was critizising the crew worrying "what would Walt Disney do and how would Ariel compare to Cinderella and Aurora?" and him telling them "We're not Walt, we have to be US and find our own way" and push forward. I mean imagine Mermaid not having thst bold Broadway Pop Soundtrack or Ariel having a more classic and conservative personality like Aurora yikes. Seems like nowadays the studio completely abondened that mindset and only wants to capture the essence of the past. Just throwing a boy as a protagonist to a mediocre setting and repetitive arc and storyline wont make them win their male audiences. If theyre so desperate with their legacy and a potential male audience, why cant they use their brains and draw Inspiration to Aladdin or their other successful male led successful musicals?! I guess the company forgot atp that Aladdin was the lead in his self titled movie with only Jasmine "Disney princessifying" the brand with her leading the Marketing the last few decades.
If Gigantic would have been released in 2018 (and untoubtfully been a success), they would have been reminded that male Fairytales exists and work too... RIP Gigantic
That's the tricky part of the game, though. Any movie is going to inevitably be part-imitation and part-innovation, and the official story can be really inconsistent with how it designates these things. It's kind of like how I remember people hailing THOR RAGNAROK as being a gamechanger for the MCU when after I saw it, all I could think was "Ah, so I see that Marvel has decided to take the wrong lessons from Guardians of the Galaxy." Commentators will want to say that the most innovative films will inevitably be rewarded, but really it has a lot more to do with which films tell people what they want to hear.
Disney was absolutely trying to fit a mold when they set FROZEN as a CG fairy-tale musical ... and they also let themselves play with the formula by overtly rebuffing certain tropes. But the larger journalistic body definitely paid more attention to Disney publicly playing to the anti-princess crowd. But if people who loved Tangled hadn't shown up for FROZEN, the narrative would have been that Disney was trying to play it too safe by forcing another princess movie on us all.
Disney Duster wrote: โFri Nov 28, 2025 10:58 pm
A male-centered wizard Disney film sounds exciting to me. Too bad it won't be hand drawn.
How do you know it wonโt be? Have they confirmed that?
I mean, there is no sign that hand drawn animation is coming back to Disney anytime soon sadly. I think all of their veterans 2d animators have let the company and Disney haven't assembled a team of 2d animators because they don't have a lot of people who can do it.
How do you know it wonโt be? Have they confirmed that?
I mean, there is no sign that hand drawn animation is coming back to Disney anytime soon sadly. I think all of their veterans 2d animators have let the company and Disney haven't assembled a team of 2d animators because they don't have a lot of people who can do it.
To be fair, Eric Goldberg is still there and Ron Clements (or John Musker) returned as a mentor for future animators unless Iโm mistaken.
Personally, if not hand-drawn, Iโd like it if they go with a legit stylized CGI style that actually blends the medium with something like 2D, like Paperman. Because with what they went with for Wish, while it does look like a moving storybook illustration with a watercolor โaestheticโ, thatโs just a โfilterโ they went with.
I sincerely hope Hexed turns out to be a good movie, with the quality of a 90s or 2000s Disney movies. I thought Zootopia 2 was going to be a great movie since the critics were raving about it, but it was pretty average. I think the only reason why the movie was well received because it's better than the other movies Disney released recently which is not a good indicator of the quality.
I don't have high expectation for this movie as I had for Wish. I genuinely thought Wish was going to bring a new renaissance age for Disney, but we all know how that turned out. However, since the movie has a villain and it's set in a magical world, the movie might surprise me in a good way, who knows.
Having watched Puss in Boots: One Last Wish now, I can see how both it and now KPOP Demon Hunters are being modeled for their current new properties. They said something recently about pursuing a more anime-esque look--obviously because of Demon Hunters' massive success. I know Wish's look felt like it was trying to go gor something similar to both those films (and Spider-verse). Not surprising it was the one thing praised about Wish, although I hope they continue to develop it further along to look as pretty as those films do. Just ironic to me that hand-drawn combo in a Paperman-style look is what those films are and what audiences are gravitating to, and yet the studio that mastered both hand-drawn for almost a century and created the Paperman look in the first place is playing catch up. Maybe if they hadn't completely done away with hand-drawn, they wouldn't be in this mess. They could've been putting out a hand-drawn film every 4-5 years between their 3D films and sequels while also developing ways for it to improve their 3D, which could've had them at the forefront of the shift instead. And make it easier / cheaper for them to pump out streaming content to boot.
I think those films are also partly why they attempted a villain again in Wish. Too bad they didn't make Magnifico more serious and genuinely threatening as the film went along like Death in the PiB film though (or have a darker villain behind him as I think they were originally going to do with Amaya). I can see the ways they tried to raise stakes (when Magnifico destroys Asha's mother's wish), they just didn't go far enough. Anyway, it gives me hope that Hexed could potentially have an interesting look in the vein of Wish and those films, and there are already signs of a villain people have pointed out.
For a long time they coasted on audiences being wowed simply by how realistic 3D could look, but they've finally reached the point they need to wow stylistically again, the way almost every '90s film had its own distinct look. It id hard to be excited at the moment, but I think they're at least going in a decent direction now even if Hexed may not be the film that is a full materialization of a better vision yet. The only thing I don't get is PiB and KPDH also show people like fairy tales / myth, musicals, drama, and romance. If only they would embrace those things again.
Listening to most often lately:
Christina Aguilera ~ "Cruz"
Sombr ~ "homewrecker"
Megan Moroney ~ "Beautiful Things"