A lot of the talk around here concerning Disney's animated movie fortunes as of late has been pretty negative. In the last eight years since Katzenberg left, there have been some bright spots (Lilo, Tarzan, Pixar), and some financial (not creative, mind you) duds (Atlantis, Treasure Planet, Groove, etc.).
Some of the negativity centers around Katz's exit over his mistreatment by Eisner, as one of the reasons for the animated mis-steps by Disney, but if you look at Katz's track record at Dreamworks, it is definitely worse than Disneys. With the sole exception of Shrek, there is not one major hit from them. Yes, some have made a few bucks (Chicken Run), but, by and large, their animated offerings have been one bomb after another -- Spirit, El Dorado, Price of Egypt, and most recently, Sinbad.
I want to qualify what I am saying with two points:
1. I happen to like some of the financial disasters, like Treasure Planet and Prince of Egypt, so I'm not saying these are bad movies, they just weren't huge moneymakers.
2. Disney has been in the game for almost 70 years, to Dreamworks 8 or 9, so, of course, bigger and better is expected from Disney.
My point is this:
I think that Disney and Katzenberg were better together, as opposed to seperate entities. they both suffered as a result of Eisner's failure to recognize Katz's input and importance.
What do you think?
Some of the negativity centers around Katz's exit over his mistreatment by Eisner, as one of the reasons for the animated mis-steps by Disney, but if you look at Katz's track record at Dreamworks, it is definitely worse than Disneys. With the sole exception of Shrek, there is not one major hit from them. Yes, some have made a few bucks (Chicken Run), but, by and large, their animated offerings have been one bomb after another -- Spirit, El Dorado, Price of Egypt, and most recently, Sinbad.
I want to qualify what I am saying with two points:
1. I happen to like some of the financial disasters, like Treasure Planet and Prince of Egypt, so I'm not saying these are bad movies, they just weren't huge moneymakers.
2. Disney has been in the game for almost 70 years, to Dreamworks 8 or 9, so, of course, bigger and better is expected from Disney.
My point is this:
I think that Disney and Katzenberg were better together, as opposed to seperate entities. they both suffered as a result of Eisner's failure to recognize Katz's input and importance.
What do you think?