Hi again Scoop-
Sorry to be dragging this out and if I am being dense, but to be honest, I still don't get it - I mean the reason why.
FWIW, I don't get how El Dorado (a buddy travel comedy) or Prince of Egypt (the story of Moses) are action adventure. If El Dorado is action adventure, then is Emporer's New Groove? Sure ENG is a lot funnier than El Dorado, but basically they both are about buddies on the road, and there is as much "action" in the plot of ENG as in El D. I'm really not sure how El Dorado or Prince of Egypt can be "action adventure" but Lion King or Alladin aren't - what is the distinction there? Or sherk or chicken run for that matter?
I _think_ that I think that the two best non-disney-affiliated-is-some-way animated films I've seen are iron giant and anastasia. Well, I might throw in Princess Manonoke, I might not (I'm honestly not sure how much I liked it, but then it might be Disney affiliated for that matter, like Spirited Away). Anyway, I really honestly do not know if you would classify the first two as action-adventure, because I don't understand the criteria that you use to classify - that's the crux of my question, really.
Final Fantasy, really, was more like a live action movie than an animated one, in a lot of ways - that movie wasn't good because it wasn't good, not because it happened to be animated. In some ways, I could buy someone arguing that final fantasy was one of the best computer animated films technically, in terms of the techincal animation, in that it was so smooth and lifelike. But the problem with it was the weak story.
I thought there were some good things about Titan AE, but mostly it wasn't that good as a film, not because it was animated. There were some highpoints and fun points, but overall it wasn't that wonderful. Would Titan AE have been any better if it was live actors acting out the same story? I don't see how it would, and if it was done in live action and it wasn't any better that wouldn't make me think that science fiction (which is what it really was more so than action adventure) is a genre that won't work for live action. Actually, I pretty sure that someone could come up with a longer list of live action science fiction films that were very bad and unsuccessful than a list of animated, but I don't think that would mean the genre doesn't work for live action. I'm absolutely positive that someone could come up with a very long list of very poor live-action action-adventure films that were horrible; again, that doesn't mean that action-adventure films don't work for live action movies, does it?
Honestly, I think that you are taking animated films that have underperformed at the box office and lumping them together as "action adventure" - I'm left wondering what makes one animated film "action-adventure" and another something else....so what is the criteria here? What excludes Lion King, Alladin, the Little Mermaid, Tarzan, Toy Story, Pocohontus, Mulan? I'm being quite serious here. How about Lilo and Stitch?
"The main point is that so far, I have yet to see of any animated film, within recent times, whose plot was an action plot, that did diddly-squat at the box office."
Tarzan? Mulan? Toy Story 2? Again, I'm not sure what the criteria is here for an "action plot." Surely the gang sneaking out of Andy's room on the treacherous track to Al's toy barn to rescure Woody, with the sub-plot of Buzz vs. Zurg, is action? Certainly if El Dorado is, right? What am I missing?
And again, how come action adventure shows are the tops for animated television, but not successful at the theatre? Again, what about the success of anime? I ask these because I don't understand what the Process is that results in animation not being a viable format for action-adventure feature films.
And remember, scoop, Fantasia was a commercial disaster. Certainly people thought that format didn't work. But for you it defines Disney. So where is that desire for innovatin and breaking new ground?
It is odd to me that people will criticize Disney for "playing it safe, never trying something new or risky, rehashing the same old same old, etc." whereas other people will criticize the smallest steps away from the formula. Perhaps the cheapquals aimed at 3-8 year old girls and 3-6 year old boys really are the way to go, from a business standpoint. After all, parents will take their preschoolers to see any "nice" G-rated film anyway since it is the only thing in the theatre and they simply must take their kids to something. Right?