but I cannot think of a single FA that wasn't based on someone else's work. Is there any ?
Dumbo, I think, was an original story developed in house. Interestingly, this was probably the most difficult and crucial film that Walt ever made and financial one of his most successful.
Bambi was based on a novel by Felix Salter. And
The Lion King, well, what the courts say and what the truth is can sometimes differ
The good news is this creative talent can be cultivated and bred fairly easily BUT the commitment to the job has to be deeper than declaring success or failure based on a first wekends take.
This is where we disagree. Creative talent
cannot be cultivated and bred fairly easily thats why no one else has been successful. The long list of attempts and failures from Dreamworks to PDI to Disneys own Vanguard Studios is proof that its extremely difficult. If Disney is to lose Pixar the only people that seem to have gotten it thats every indication Disney will
fail at replacing them.
Thats why Wall Street is pressuring Iger to re-sign Pixar. If the analysts had any faith in Disneys ability to make or purchase replacement films, theyd be pressuring Disney to dump Pixar and keep 100% of the profits.
But as long as someone IS making good animated features at least we know someone IS minding the store
And thats the end fear, isnt it. Theres nothing that says anyone will make good animated features at all. Eisners belief all along was that animation was fit for only Saturday morning cartoons and three year old mentalities. A generation of Disney and Pixar animators had worked extremely hard to prove him wrong.
Sad thing is neither Eisner nor his successor have given up their belief yet.
P.S.
Dumbo was, of all things, a comic strip on the back/side of a cereal box.
I have a fuzzy recollection (most likely wrong), that the comic strip was part of the promotion for the film. There's a story the goes around Disney's lot that the premeir of
Dumbo was going to be celebrated with a cover on Time magazine.
But the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was put there instead.
As the movie opened across the country over the next year (film distribution was very different back then), Disney had be innovative at marketing.