MysticMisty
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2013
This is the first I've heard of Wreck-It Ralph being unpopular. I personally loved it and thought it was the best animated movie of the previous decade, if not the past 15 years. Is this why Ralph Breaks the Internet was such a trainwreck, to appeal to fans who didn't care about it in the first place?I guess get fucked Wreck-It-Ralph, apparently your story structure was not good enough for Alternate Endings.
Sorry, Ralph was a Disney movie I genuinely hold in pretty high regard, so it is always sad to see it either get left out or shit on by Disney and its fans when it was a pretty cool and unique Disney film.
Big surprise since Lasseter hated Lilo and Stitch. The studio was really suffering at the time and absolutely needed another Lilo and Stitch, but since Lasseter had a personally vendetta against that movie (and thus, it's creator) there was a zero percent chance that would happen once he got on board. Disney losing Chris Sanders was an absolute tragedy. But the world did get How to Train your Dragon, which wouldn't have happened otherwise. Kind of like how we never would've gotten the good Don Bluth movies if he hadn't quit in mid production of The Fox and the Hound.Also, don't forget that John Lasseter sabotaged Chris Sanders during the production of American Dog (later Bolt), which will forever remain one of the saddest what-ifs of animation history. What if Chris got to make American Dog the way he wanted it, without Lasseter interfering? Maybe it would've been bad, maybe it would've been another Lilo & Stitch-tier masterpiece. We'll never know, because Lasseter was a control freak (for the worse this time).
Actually I think Disney could really use another rival in the form of a former animator like that. They were really stagnant in the 80's, but still chugging along since they were undisputed and therefore complacent even as they suffered losses. They didn't do anything to actually step up their game until Don Bluth showed up and successfully challenged them at the box office. That was when they had to finally step up their game, which led to the very brief Disney Renaissance. They need this kick in the ass again.