DisneyKidds
<font color=green>The TF thanks DisneyKidds for mo
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2001
- Messages
- 4,731
I'll throw my hat in with Matt on this one. Just as Walt was the first to use multi-plane cameras in the animation process, so too should the Disney of the 90's been the first to identify the latest emerging technologies in animation. Disney should never have put themselves in the position of having to catch up with anybody......no matter how successfull they were at traditional bread and butter animation. That smacks of resting on your laurels and failing to remain the leader in the animation field. There is no reason why Pixar should have been able to invest in and pursue technologies that Disney didn't even have on the radar screen. True, by the time Pixar had demonstrated the virtues of GCI animation there may not have been many choices for Disney (but that could be argued).........but it never should have gotten to that point. I think that is what Matt is saying.
Of course, this is also true........
Of course, this is also true........
Yes, it would have been a fine line to walk. However, this very quote highlights the fact that Pixar was in fact the "Disney" of the 90's. That is sad, because it is all animation, and Disney should never have been second to anybody in any form of animation, for any reason. Period. I don't care how successful The Little Mermaid was, there is no reason Disney shouldn't have been the one winning all those technological awards starting back in 1991.Face it ... no one thought computer animation was a particularly cool or lucrative thing until Pixar made it so. Just as no one thought animation at all was a cool or lucrative thing until Disney made it so. If Disney had jumped into CGI when Pixar did, they'd have been roundly criticized for taking this warm, beautiful art of hand-drawn animation and trying to do it on a computer.