The way Jerry Bruckheimer works is exactly the way the old studios worked. He's the one that actually makes the movie. What Disney has become is simply a mix of Bank of America (lending the money) and RKO (the guys who got the films into the theaters). Nothing in the studio making process has changed, just the players shifted around a bit.
There's no "golden age that will never come back again", it's just when all the other studios were bought by bigger corporations, those companies didn't know how to make a movie and gave the job to other people. Disney's only different because it bailed out of production out of laziness and fear. Again - Disney has given up making product and is content just to wholesale other people's creations.
Now, if you think Disney can remain a "creative" company be acting like
WalMart, I'd love to hear.
And animation was still done completely in-house - and look at what they produced. It's very hard to say "doing it yourself" is dead when you see the grosses for
The Lion King; it's even more difficult say "Walt's way was stupid" when you look at this summer's take from
Finding Nemo. Movies made by people that care enough to make good movies have a much higher chance of success than films churned out just to met corporate release dates.
If any era is passing, it was the brief Corporate Media Empire BSD Media Mogul - of which Eisner is a champion of. In fact, that era was so misguided it never really took off.
Is Dad watching the Angels game on ESPN becasue of the Disney Design TV set bought at Target while Mom microwaves the latest Disney brand kid meals as result of her cooking class at The Disney Institute as Big Sis enjoys the repeat of the latest hit ABC comedy shown on ABC Family as a result of that hot new Miramax soundtrack from Hollywood Records and Little Brother listens to the hits from Radio Disney while portalling through GO.com to research a school paper on latest topic from Discover Magazine becasue he knows the teacher watches Lifetime and he thinks that will get him a few more points?
Did having the Meet 'n Greet with the charactes from
Treasure Planey result in soaring box office for that movie; and did the absence of
Pirates merchandise at Sears doom that movie to obilivion?
Please tell me how all this Media Empire is working?
Perhaps if Disney spent more time making something worth buying instead of trying to resell me the same old product they might not be in the miserable shape they are today. Sure, that's "old fashioned" - but at least that worked.