DancingBear
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2001
- Messages
- 6,167
How does Disney fill the void if they lose Pixar? How about trying to hire away some of Pixar's talent? Wonder if there are any contractual restrictions against Disney doing this?
hopemax: Very astute - So who plays Oswald this time around - Woody or Buzz?
But Hope, Walt hated Donald Duck...So would this be a good thing?...he could be the next Donald Duck.
Originally posted by KNWVIKING
Pixar has been around since '94- right ? And in 9 years they have made a total of 5 films - or is it 6 ? And during this timeline Disney has provided half the production costs- correct ? During this same time, how many movies has Disney put out ?
I guess I'm just mystified why everyone stands so in awe of Pixar. Hard to imagine Disney ever survived without them. The entire Disney empire has only survived this last decade because of 5 films.
Originally posted by HB2K
Viking....I still haven't seen your explaination of how Disney is going to make up for the lost Pixar revenue....
So you feel that Pixar will reup with Disney at the same contract terms (a 50/50 split)?Funny, I still haven't seen that Disney lost it -
Originally posted by HB2K
So you feel that Pixar will reup with Disney at the same contract terms (a 50/50 split)?
Even if Disney keeps Pixar (and I'm still saying that's a HUGE if), the terms will be radically different (in Pixar's favor), thus creating a loss of revenue. I hope you're not trying to insinuate that the current deal will continue into the future.
KWVIKING claimed that Disney could fill the revenue void left by Pixar's renegotiation. I'm still asking how.
Some other things I'd say. On a previous thread I asked about the distributorship agreements. It seemed to me that people agreed that the Disney-Pixar deal was that Disney would pay 50% of the production costs, all of the distribution costs, then split the profit 50-50. The "Lucas-Fox" deal is that Fox pays all the distribution costs, and Fox gets 10% of the profit. This is my understanding of what I've picked up on here, but I'm not sure that it is correct or that everyone agrees about this?
Originally posted by HB2K
There is no sense of urgency in any of his statements regarding Pixar.
Interesting thoughts. I know the current deal gives Disney control of all sequels to the Pixar movies made for Disney. Does that mean (a) Disney has any rights to Pixar's digital "backlot" itself; and/or (b) Pixar won't be able to use any of that backlot ever again, if it doesn't re-up with Disney?Originally posted by d-r
Now, I've simplified that a lot. In traditional animation, an animator draws the character, it goes to paint, it goes to inbetweeners, etc. In cgi, there is a rough draft, then a series of iterations that add in special effects, lighting and shadow, etc. But what I'm getting at is the basic process is different, and that Pixar has a treasure of stuff in their "backlot" - more than anyone else, I'd think. Also, don't forget their software. Also, it should be much more economical to make a sequal (Shrek 2, etc.) than an original - you have the sets (Toy Story 2 used all new sets since Andy's family moved, Al's toy barn and apt., the airport, etc. were all new places) and the characters. Now you just act them. So, the resources at Pixar are a little more than just the people and their creativity.
DR