Speaking of John Lasetter, he moved over to Skydance Animation and made that Luck movie. Has anyone seen it?
He didn't make it, he just helped it along when he arrived. It's pretty meh, needed more time in the oven, but it was probably already set on a schedule and Lasseter knows how to work with crunch time. You can easily tell when it was he arrived on the scene because the animation started looking less stilted and a weird radish-like character was brought in in the third act that John Ratzenberger plays.
Admitting it’s women fault why Pixar flopping is not a win as you think.
It's just one of Pixar's many problems, though.
Brave turned out the way it did because, back when it was still
The Bear and the Bow, Brenda Chapman left over "creative differences", whatever that means, and whoever stepped in did some stuff to it that didn't mesh well with whatever she was going with. I'm not saying that was entirely her fault the movie didn't reach its full potential, but men and women approach story-telling differently from each other, and you could probably pin-point the moment(s) where her influence was out of the picture. It's been years since I last saw it, I just remember feeling disappointed at how janky it got after the mother turned into a bear. And since it was a mother-daughter movie, it was obviously made for a female audience in mind, but there needed to be stuff in it to keep the boys' attention as well, which was why the script clashed as hard as it did.
Now
Turning Red was 100% a "woman" movie because it was obviously a self-insert therapy session because the director clearly has some tiger mom issues she never got over.
There's a reason women writers need to get tard-wrangled by other men when they're trying for a mixed demographic.