Carry On! Let Round two of DD vs everyone continue!...
er.....I mean let's talk about long hair girls and their petite cute body

To Disney's Divinity:Big One wrote:Disney Duster I've read most of your posts here, and you have, in no way, explained consistent or accurate or factual reason to why you're right. It'd be okay if your opinion was backed up by actual facts or problems you had with the movie, but this isn't the case. Not only have you been making up facts to fit your need, but you've been inconsistent and blatantly repeating the same things over and over again. Circular logic won't get you anywhere in a real world debate, so don't expect to get away with it with Disney fans.Disney Duster wrote:I'm sad because people aren't reading what I'm saying. But I'm also happy because I know that I already explained why I'm right about what I say and the answers to their questions, so them not reading them is just ignoring them.
Your posts are not only painful to read (I'd rather be castrated), but are unnecessarily long and full of filler that has no real rhyme or meaning. The above paragraph stands, making up facts isn't forming an opinion; it's forming a fantasy that is governed by your own rules. But the fact is that fantasy isn't reality, and it's time for you to stop pretending to be a true connoisseur such as many fans here actually are (and myself). Other people have explained this in bits, but I'm going to lay it out for you why everything in your post is wrong.
1. Stop repeating yourself.
Disney Duster wrote:I already explained the past things Disney did keep faithful that they could have easily kept. You need to read where I've already said that in past posts.Disney Duster wrote:I already explained the past things Disney did keep faithful that they could have easily kept. You need to read where I've already said that in past posts.No Duster, this isn't as smart as you think it is. It's just as stupid as you said it the first time, not need to say it two more times.Disney Duster wrote:I already explained the past things Disney did keep faithful that they could have easily kept. You need to read where I've already said that in past posts.
2. Stop claiming you know what Disney is if you do not understand the full scope of what Disney has done in the past.
I'll preface this one. Throughout this thread, you've been going on about how Tangled isn't true to Walt Disney form by making up non-facts about how different it is in adaptation compared to the classics such as The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. The truth is, you have not made one coherent response why you believe this, as people have have already deconstructed why your opinion is basically non-existent - but rather is just a series of claiming stuff over and over again. This isn't arguing on your part, this is just stupidity, and bad posting conduct. I've been foruming for 7 years now straight, and I can tell you that you are one of the most offensive posters I've ever encountered on the internet; and I frequent 4chan. It isn't your "opinion" but the fact that you're using lies and misinformation to support it. I've encountered furries, pedophiles, extreme racists, and misogynist on the internet and none are as bad as the stuff I've been seeing you posting all over these forums.
Now let me go through this post and tell you why you really need to re-asses your outlook on life, and re-asses how you post on a civil forum in general.
This doesn't make any sense. There is no "Disney" style aside from the art style and setup used in the movies. Every old Disney movie was different from the other, and you'll notice this if you watch each in succession like I have. There are some exceptions, of course; Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, and Cinderella are very similar to each other. However there are approximately 16 Disney "Classic" movies which I consider to be everything from Snow White to Sleeping Beauty in the Disney canon, and only THREE of them are in a similar style and tone from each other. Disney was founded upon the philosophy that change and twists to familiar stories was interesting and new, and to this day the only one that has remained even remotely accurate is probably Snow White at best. Everyone else in the "Classic" era of Disney is very different from each other. Disney wasn't even really founded on the idea of pushing musicals all over the place like in the Renaissance era of Disney, even though that is what people think of when they think of Disney.Disney Duster wrote:I already explained that the story needed to keep the characters' background to be Disney and they still could have and had the story.
Speaking of the Renaissance era - that, my friend, is when Disney started becoming similar to each other. I think you're confusing the Renaissance era with Classic Disney, probably due to some type of blind nostalgia fanboyism, but the Renaissance era of Disney wasn't Disney in feel, or tone, or anything of that sort. Matter of fact it took a different approach and altered the classic tales even further with modernized concepts and characters and sometimes even destroying great classics (Hunchback of Notre Dame), and made all of the movies into these musical epics. It worked, cause they were still good movies, but the "Disney feel" of them is severely overstated. There is nothing about these movies that are even remotely similar to what Walt Disney did back in the day, or the people he worked with. For this matter, Disney grew a more modernized image of what they do and what they're good at.
So if you ever want to complain about how Disney has "fallen" cause they've stopped following Walt Disney, you're approximately 62 years late. Don't get me started on how different the films in between both eras are.This is the same with any Disney movie in the Renaissance era, and a few in between and before it. Any complaint you have with Tangled, applies to The Little Mermaid also, and Beauty and the Beast too. Mind you how I'm actually stating a fact rather than making up one? Neat, huh?Disney Duster wrote:And I did not instantly dislike the film because of the title I said that dampened my enjoyment and was one part of why I didn't like it and the humor was not the same it was way more modern, cutting, and cynical.Okay Disney Duster, I have a test for you. I'm convinced you don't really proof-read anything you type out for various reasons, but I won't delve into that. I have a test that I think you'll end up getting unexpected results from:Disney Duster wrote:In the original The Little Mermaid she really did want to live on land with a human prince in addition to a soul, I read the book. Removing the talk about a soul was a Disney thing to do because Walt would do that for example he took out the religious stained-glass windows in Fantasia's last segment. But Tangled did un-Disney things.
Read every post you made, as if it was another person on this board.
Go ahead and try it and then post the results, and you'll see why people are so bothered by what you're posting.
One day you're going to look back at your posts, and feel so awful you made them, that you're going to regress in a state where you start claiming you were "trolling all along." No, Disney Duster, I see through your guise already; you're no troll, which is sad cause that makes things worse in the long run. But you're going to use this excuse anyway, one day, and I'll be there to remind you that you aren't a troll, just a man who can't form a proper opinion for himself. That's how all self-proclaimed trolls begin...and end. The time for you to accept your defeat is now. You aren't a true connoisseur, and you never will be with this attitude.
Big One wrote:Well I hope no one reads too much into my post; I love Renaissance Disney, and I wasn't critique it. I love Tangled too, even more-so than most Renaissance Disney films. Matter of fact if you find my tier list in another thread, you can see that I hold no bias against that era. But to say it has a Classic Disney "feel" is pretty ridiculous.Disney's Divinity wrote:Actually, DDuster has been very critical of the '90s era. I think the only reason he doesn't outright tear it apart is because he grew up with it, and has some fond memories.![]()
And, personally, I do think the films from the '90s do have a certain feel that goes along with the older movies, although they have steep differences. But I agree that the films from the '90s are extremely formulaic--the problem with making so many films right on top of each other, with the same story ideas, and all in the musical vein.
I think something I've noticed about their modern films (as compared to old Disney) is the need to specifically define everything. Like the way every character must be given a specific name, and a specific motivation. I don't find that a detractor, but, taking Mermaid as example, old-Disney probably wouldn't have given Triton and Ursula names at all--they probably would've just been "the King" and "the Sea Witch." In some ways, that vagueness makes a story come across more timeless for some reason. Not that Mermaid needs help.
As far as Tangled goes, Flynn/Eugene is the only weird name in the movie. Mother Gothel has a classic sound to it--I can't remember if this is a name they came up with or that was in the original story.
I'll explain, as I said there are only 3 films in the Disney era that I feel are even remotely similar. I should probably take that back, as there's also Saludos Amigos and The Three Caballeros, and Make Mine Music and Melody Time.
Aside from that, the following movies aren't similar to each other in any real way, and aim to tell different stories: Pinocchio, Fantasia, Fun and Fancy Free, The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad, Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Lady and the Tramp.
I might as well extend this to the post-Classic era of Disney too...well Robin Hood and The Jungle Book are very similar to each other. Then there's the movies that aren't similar: One Hundred and One Dalmatians, The Sword in the Stone, The Aristocats, The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh, The Rescuers, The Fox and the Hound, The Black Cauldron, The Great Mouse Detective, Oliver & Company, The Rescuers Down Under.
And then it gets to the Renaissance era and what I like to call the "Renaissance revival era" with the two recent movies., where Disney starts getting REALLY similar: The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King, Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hercules, Mulan, Tarzan, Princess and the Frog, Tangled.
And then there are the other movies, Atlantis: The Lost Empire and Treasure Planet are similar to each other, but what about these: Fantasia 2000, Dinosaur, The Emperor's New Groove, Lilo and Stitch, Brother Bear, Home on the Range, Chicken Little, Meet the Robinsons, Bolt?
This means there are approximately 28/50 Disney films that aren't really similar to each other, and most of them are what people call "Classics." The "Disney feel" is practically non-existant, and seems to be some type of blind nostalgia fans tend to have. I've seen similar cases over the years and as I get older it gets more apparent to me.
To celebrate the release of The Princess and the Frog on DVD and Blu-ray, Princess Tiana was officially welcomed into the Disney Princess court with a coronation ceremony. […] With books sold in more than 90 countries around the world, the franchise is poised to continue to grow in 2011 when it welcomes to the family Rapunzel, heroine of Walt Disney Pictures’ Tangled.
Will the rest two nominated songs be performed as well?estefan wrote:The Academy has also officially announced that Alan Menken, Zachary Levi and Mandy Moore will be performing "I See the Light" at the Oscars.
http://twitter.com/TheAcademy
Randy Newman will also be performing "We Belong Together."
it's totally off topic, but i freaking love your avatar. In case that wasn't clear in the previous topic. It just sums up the whole "what would Walt do" debate so well!Super Aurora wrote:(<i>See the previous discussion here:</i> http://www.dvdizzy.com/forum/viewtopic. ... 46&start=0)
Carry On! Let Round two of DD vs everyone continue!...
er.....I mean let's talk about long hair girls and their petite cute body
Since you finally said what I suspected for a long time, I think it really is that because I speak that way, people take it so badly. I try to speak as plainly as I can, without any frills or too many maybes or anything like that, and that's what I think has led to that. Anyway, on with the show...Enigmawing wrote:Which lead to you saying it's why Disney is being s*** on in your matter-of-fact tone.
I disagree with all of this so far. Generally, everything you say about my posts, I think the opposite.Big One wrote:Disney Duster I've read most of your posts here, and you have, in no way, explained consistent or accurate or factual reason to why you're right. It'd be okay if your opinion was backed up by actual facts or problems you had with the movie, but this isn't the case. Not only have you been making up facts to fit your need, but you've been inconsistent and blatantly repeating the same things over and over again. Circular logic won't get you anywhere in a real world debate, so don't expect to get away with it with Disney fans.Disney Duster wrote:I'm sad because people aren't reading what I'm saying. But I'm also happy because I know that I already explained why I'm right about what I say and the answers to their questions, so them not reading them is just ignoring them.
Your posts are not only painful to read (I'd rather be castrated), but are unnecessarily long and full of filler that has no real rhyme or meaning. The above paragraph stands, making up facts isn't forming an opinion; it's forming a fantasy that is governed by your own rules. But the fact is that fantasy isn't reality, and it's time for you to stop pretending to be a true connoisseur such as many fans here actually are (and myself). Other people have explained this in bits, but I'm going to lay it out for you why everything in your post is wrong.
I completely disagree.Big One wrote:1. Stop repeating yourself.
Disney Duster wrote:I already explained the past things Disney did keep faithful that they could have easily kept. You need to read where I've already said that in past posts.Disney Duster wrote:I already explained the past things Disney did keep faithful that they could have easily kept. You need to read where I've already said that in past posts.No Duster, this isn't as smart as you think it is. It's just as stupid as you said it the first time, not need to say it two more times.Disney Duster wrote:I already explained the past things Disney did keep faithful that they could have easily kept. You need to read where I've already said that in past posts.
I disagree and generally think the opposite of most of this stuff as well.Big One wrote:2. Stop claiming you know what Disney is if you do not understand the full scope of what Disney has done in the past.
I'll preface this one. Throughout this thread, you've been going on about how Tangled isn't true to Walt Disney form by making up non-facts about how different it is in adaptation compared to the classics such as The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. The truth is, you have not made one coherent response why you believe this, as people have have already deconstructed why your opinion is basically non-existent - but rather is just a series of claiming stuff over and over again. This isn't arguing on your part, this is just stupidity, and bad posting conduct. I've been foruming for 7 years now straight, and I can tell you that you are one of the most offensive posters I've ever encountered on the internet; and I frequent 4chan. It isn't your "opinion" but the fact that you're using lies and misinformation to support it. I've encountered furries, pedophiles, extreme racists, and misogynist on the internet and none are as bad as the stuff I've been seeing you posting all over these forums.
Now let me go through this post and tell you why you really need to re-asses your outlook on life, and re-asses how you post on a civil forum in general.
I already did that in the past, sometimes I stumbled upon my own posts and started reading them without knowing they were by me, in the search function, and I found myself going “I agree wit this person, so much, he speaks about what I always thought!” and then realized it was me. Ther were times when, I thought “this guy is too angry” or “this guy isn’t explaining himself well”, and I find that I do get so angered by what Disney's doing these days and also that it is hard for me to explain myself well all the time. However, since the posts you are addressing are recent, I do know there is nothing I want to change and as of now at least, that I can explain any better. I feel I have explained things well enough to get the points I really want to. All I need now is for people to actually get it, but if they don't get it, once again I will chuck it up to overlooking, not caring/wanting to, or inability.Big One wrote:This doesn't make any sense. There is no "Disney" style aside from the art style and setup used in the movies. Every old Disney movie was different from the other, and you'll notice this if you watch each in succession like I have. There are some exceptions, of course; Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, and Cinderella are very similar to each other. However there are approximately 16 Disney "Classic" movies which I consider to be everything from Snow White to Sleeping Beauty in the Disney canon, and only THREE of them are in a similar style and tone from each other. Disney was founded upon the philosophy that change and twists to familiar stories was interesting and new, and to this day the only one that has remained even remotely accurate is probably Snow White at best. Everyone else in the "Classic" era of Disney is very different from each other. Disney wasn't even really founded on the idea of pushing musicals all over the place like in the Renaissance era of Disney, even though that is what people think of when they think of Disney.Disney Duster wrote:]I already explained that the story needed to keep the characters' background to be Disney and they still could have and had the story.
I think that there is a Disney style and a Disney essence that lives on in some movies and other things the company makes after Walt and that they mist try to keep. I believe in it. If there is no Disney essence, i.e. what Disney is, then there is no reason for the company to live on carrying the Disney name, and no reason for any of us to be here unless this was all just about the old Walt Disney movies they keep re-releasing.
Those movies you mentioned are not the only similar ones. All Disney Animated Features have similar messages of innocence, goodness, good winning over evil, belief, and themes of fantasy. Every single Disney Animated Feature features fantasy from either magic or talking animals, but often have both. Magic is in the first four films Walt made (don't forget Dumbo's feather and flying), and Bambi is a prince of the forest, it's all fairy tale like. This continues similarly to the other films. Their imagery is also generally more beautiful and fantasy-like than normal life or like other studios' work.
I will however agree that the pushing of musicals is a Disney Renaissance thing and not really a Disne thing, but the use of music to tell and push the story forward is a Disney thing. Walt always wanted "story songs" as he said.
I do agree that the Renaissance films feel different from the classic classic Disney, but I still feel that the Renaissance films have become classic and that the Disney essence is kept in them as much as it needs to be. Things like The Hunchback of Notre Dame "destroying" a classic are actually keeping the Disney tradition of family-friendlyness and happy endings. I do think that in between the post-Walt and Renaissance eras are some movies that don't quite feel fully classic Disney, but it's more because of stuff like Robin Hood being animals and Oliver & Company being animals, and that era I am less sure of. However, I'm not too mad or finding too much wrong with that era.Big One wrote:[Speaking of the Renaissance era - that, my friend, is when Disney started becoming similar to each other. I think you're confusing the Renaissance era with Classic Disney, probably due to some type of blind nostalgia fanboyism, but the Renaissance era of Disney wasn't Disney in feel, or tone, or anything of that sort. Matter of fact it took a different approach and altered the classic tales even further with modernized concepts and characters and sometimes even destroying great classics (Hunchback of Notre Dame), and made all of the movies into these musical epics. It worked, cause they were still good movies, but the "Disney feel" of them is severely overstated. There is nothing about these movies that are even remotely similar to what Walt Disney did back in the day, or the people he worked with. For this matter, Disney grew a more modernized image of what they do and what they're good at.
So if you ever want to complain about how Disney has "fallen" cause they've stopped following Walt Disney, you're approximately 62 years late. Don't get me started on how different the films in between both eras are.
That is not a fact. The fact is that in those movies you mentioned the backgrounds of main/major characters were not changed like in Tangled. For example there is a huge difference between a merchant who sells things becoming an inventore who sells things and a prince who becomes a thief. If you cannot see the big difference, that is your inability, which others may share, but alas. The humor (and everything) was more cutting and cynical and ironic and fast in Tangled than in the past. If you cannot get that, I still think it's your inability to tell, but that one is harder and I'm not completely sure of that one, just pretty sure, and so, I still talk about it here to let people know how I feel which is what a forum is for.Big One wrote: This is the same with any Disney movie in the Renaissance era, and a few in between and before it. Any complaint you have with Tangled, applies to The Little Mermaid also, and Beauty and the Beast too. Mind you how I'm actually stating a fact rather than making up one? Neat, huh?
Big One wrote: Okay Disney Duster, I have a test for you. I'm convinced you don't really proof-read anything you type out for various reasons, but I won't delve into that. I have a test that I think you'll end up getting unexpected results from:
Read every post you made, as if it was another person on this board.
Go ahead and try it and then post the results, and you'll see why people are so bothered by what you're posting.
One day you're going to look back at your posts, and feel so awful you made them, that you're going to regress in a state where you start claiming you were "trolling all along." No, Disney Duster, I see through your guise already; you're no troll, which is sad cause that makes things worse in the long run. But you're going to use this excuse anyway, one day, and I'll be there to remind you that you aren't a troll, just a man who can't form a proper opinion for himself. That's how all self-proclaimed trolls begin...and end. The time for you to accept your defeat is now. You aren't a true connoisseur, and you never will be with this attitude.
Disney’s Divinity, thank you for being a defender to me, at least in some parts, and especially after something like that posted above went after me. I am a little bit mad about the way they did things in the Renaissance, but for the most part, I truly do like the new things they did, and I would not tear it apart. Most of all, I do feel it the Renaissance kept the Disney Essence in a modern era, while Tangled kept less of the Disney essence in a modern era. If it keeps getting less and less, it just might not be there anymore, so I must speak out now.”Disney’s Divinity” wrote: Actually, DDuster has been very critical of the '90s era. I think the only reason he doesn't outright tear it apart is because he grew up with it, and has some fond memories.
And, personally, I do think the films from the '90s do have a certain feel that goes along with the older movies, although they have steep differences. But I agree that the films from the '90s are extremely formulaic--the problem with making so many films right on top of each other, with the same story ideas, and all in the musical vein.
I think something I've noticed about their modern films (as compared to old Disney) is the need to specifically define everything. Like the way every character must be given a specific name, and a specific motivation. I don't find that a detractor, but, taking Mermaid as example, old-Disney probably wouldn't have given Triton and Ursula names at all--they probably would've just been "the King" and "the Sea Witch." In some ways, that vagueness makes a story come across more timeless for some reason. Not that Mermaid needs help.
As far as Tangled goes, Flynn/Eugene is the only weird name in the movie. Mother Gothel has a classic sound to it--I can't remember if this is a name they came up with or that was in the original story.
Disney Animation, the kinds of changed Disney made to the old films does matter, because it is not just about any change, it’s about a Disney change, just like it’s not about making any good movie, it’s about making a good Disney movie. The kinds of changes Disney made to the old stories are not the same kinds of changes they made to Tangled, and that is the problem. It can’t just be any change, it has to be a Disney change. And I didn’t say it was a FACT Disney made the real versions, I said it was a FACT that Disney made the films feel like the real versions to many, many people, but Tangled doesn’t feel that way to anyone.”Disney Animation” wrote:That is the point I think you're ignoring Disney Duster. A change is a change, no matter how obvious it may or may not be. The Little Mermaid is as different from it's original source as Tangled, no technicality or haphazard explanation you apply to that will change it. It is not FACT that Disney make the "real" version of classic stories at all, again it's your OPINION. If you don't like Tangled, fine that doesn't bother me, what does is your belief that you need to educate the rest of us and impose your OPINION on us, believing that is fact that we all should agree with. Get it through your head that you are not some protector of Disney tradition, your a fan, just like the rest of us. No doubt you'll make up another vague argument to disagree with everyone again but the fact remains, you still have yet to give any adequate evidence to back up what you're saying.”BigOne” wrote: Any complaint you have with Tangled, applies to The Little Mermaid also, and Beauty and the Beast too.
Well, the idea that Rapunzel was a peasant meant she was the lowest of the low and so were her parents. They needed food badly and had to farm it themselves, so it made more sense why Rapunzel’s father had to to steal food to keep his wife and child alive, and why he would need to give the witch his daughter just to get the food later. And then when Rapunzel met a Prince, it meant he was the highest of the high and carried her off to a much better life than she could have ever dreamed of as a peasant, and is far more romantic. As an innocent character who doesn’t steal like a thief who goes from peasant life to horrible tower life, seeing her become a princess feels very good. But the most important reason is just that all the previous Disney films kept these same kinds of backgrounds.”Super Aurora” wrote: One complaint I don't get why Duster complained about is Rapunzel and flynn's roles.
He was Rapunzel to be a peasant and Flynn be a Prince. I always thought, what difference it makes since in end they both become Prince/princess, whether we went Duster vision or one we have now.
We had a girl peasant, male prince numerous times in Disney. Flynn being a thief I find refreshing, new and interesting. Only other time Disney had similar roles was in Aladdin.
I know this is just your personal reaction to the movie, but I don't really see that with Tangled. I mean, I noticed a semi-realistic touch to the background characters--something about the drab colors gave that effect to me--but I don't think there's ever any real fear of these characters by the audience. I mean, for one, most people know what to expect from a Disney film. But, at the same time, we're only presented with this fear by Gothel, who is clearly a villain from the get-go, so noone will take her attempts to scare Rapunzel seriously (which is why they're used more for comedic effect in "MKB").Big One wrote: This is actually a very refreshing twist from standard Disney fantasyland movies, which usually have inspired locations from the real world but have things such as dwarves, god-like fairies, dragons, etc. Removing those aspects, kind of gives an audience an easy way into the character's places as Rapunzel and Flynn live in a world where a barbarian could kill or even rape them at any moment in the middle of their journey. Matter of fact, Mother Gothel encouraged Rapunzel not to go out into the world cause it was full of things like that.
Disney Duster wrote:I disagree with all of this so far. Generally, everything you say about my posts, I think the opposite.
Disney Duster wrote:I completely disagree.
STOP REPEATING YOURSELFDisney Duster wrote:I disagree and generally think the opposite of most of this stuff as well.
The Disney name is a brand, not a honorable deity. At most, there is a "Disney style" in the sense where Disney was the first to do high budget animated feature films. You know why he wanted to do it? He wanted animation to be a respective artform. He didn't want a specific series of traits to define every movie, and it's quite clear if you watch films like Snow White, Fantasia, Pinocchio, Bambi, and Peter Pan side-by-side, that none of these films have anything in common other than the people that worked on them, and have humor and darker themes that far eclipse what most of Disney is doing today.Disney Duster wrote:I think that there is a Disney style and a Disney essence that lives on in some movies and other things the company makes after Walt and that they mist try to keep. I believe in it. If there is no Disney essence, i.e. what Disney is, then there is no reason for the company to live on carrying the Disney name, and no reason for any of us to be here unless this was all just about the old Walt Disney movies they keep re-releasing.
This is a false misconception. Those aspects aren't exclusive to Disney, nor is beautiful imagery. Disney didn't invent anything new, just put it all into an animated feature. The concept was to bring a painting to life, and Disney was successful at that, making big-budget animation more popular than ever. In that sense, everything is "Disney essence" according to your definition. Everything.Disney Duster wrote:Those movies you mentioned are not the only similar ones. All Disney Animated Features have similar messages of innocence, goodness, good winning over evil, belief, and themes of fantasy. Every single Disney Animated Feature features fantasy from either magic or talking animals, but often have both. Magic is in the first four films Walt made (don't forget Dumbo's feather and flying), and Bambi is a prince of the forest, it's all fairy tale like. This continues similarly to the other films. Their imagery is also generally more beautiful and fantasy-like than normal life or like other studios' work.
So it's because they're old, that they're classic?Disney Duster wrote:I do agree that the Renaissance films feel different from the classic classic Disney, but I still feel that the Renaissance films have become classic and that the Disney essence is kept in them as much as it needs to be.
And apparently Tangled isn't family-friendly nor does it have a happy ending.Disney Duster wrote:Things like The Hunchback of Notre Dame "destroying" a classic are actually keeping the Disney tradition of family-friendlyness and happy endings.
There's also these differences with every Disney film, especially The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Hunchback of Notre Dame, Jungle Book, Hercules, Mulan, Tarzan and Alice in Wonderland are all very worse adaptations of their source material. Saying they have the "Disney essence" isn't an excuse because you have yet to explain what the "Disney essence" actually is or what it should or should not entail, when I've already proved that there is no consistency when it came to the classic Disney movies.Disney Duster wrote:That is not a fact. The fact is that in those movies you mentioned the backgrounds of main/major characters were not changed like in Tangled. For example there is a huge difference between a merchant who sells things becoming an inventore who sells things and a prince who becomes a thief. If you cannot see the big difference, that is your inability, which others may share, but alas.
NODisney Duster wrote:The humor (and everything) was more cutting and cynical and ironic and fast in Tangled than in the past.
Now this is getting comical...Disney Duster wrote:I already did that in the past, sometimes I stumbled upon my own posts and started reading them without knowing they were by me, in the search function, and I found myself going “I agree wit this person, so much, he speaks about what I always thought!” and then realized it was me. Ther were times when, I thought “this guy is too angry” or “this guy isn’t explaining himself well”, and I find that I do get so angered by what Disney's doing these days and also that it is hard for me to explain myself well all the time. However, since the posts you are addressing are recent, I do know there is nothing I want to change and as of now at least, that I can explain any better. I feel I have explained things well enough to get the points I really want to. All I need now is for people to actually get it, but if they don't get it, once again I will chuck it up to overlooking, not caring/wanting to, or inability.
Disney Duster, stop sounding like you've just put a series of words through Google Translator.Disney Duster wrote:Also, similar things you said to me, I thought of of you as I was reading your post. You are not explaining youself, you have no facts, you are making stuff up, you aren’t backing yourself up, and it's still all your opinion. Actually, that's not what I would normally have thought, normally I would have thought "It's possible he's thinking of instances in his head where this is true", but after what you said to me, that's not what went through my head.
I disagree, there was nothing comical about Gothel. She was actually likable, but not comical. The "creepy" factor is that you actually find her relationship with Rapunzel heartwarming in a lot of ways, unlike with Frollo or Lady Tremaine where it's established at the very start that they have a horribly dominating relationship with their adopted.Disney's Divinity wrote:I know this is just your personal reaction to the movie, but I don't really see that with Tangled. I mean, I noticed a semi-realistic touch to the background characters--something about the drab colors gave that effect to me--but I don't think there's ever any real fear of these characters by the audience. I mean, for one, most people know what to expect from a Disney film. But, at the same time, we're only presented with this fear by Gothel, who is clearly a villain from the get-go, so noone will take her attempts to scare Rapunzel seriously (which is why they're used more for comedic effect in "MKB").
Yeah it was done in Princess and the Frog, but it was done in a lot of other movies too. The difference is that in Princess and the Frog they were frogs, and in Tangled they were full-fledged people. Though I do think Princess and the Frog has a very good relationship between the two central characters, the relationship itself is flawed cause Naveen in particular has absolutely no likable qualities to both the viewer and the Tiana enough for her to fall in love with him. With Rapunzel, Flynn was her very first exposure to the real world, and Flynn is just in it for the pussy ultimately. It makes sense, a naive princess and a worldly thief.Disney's Divinity wrote:Oh, and about the fire scene you mentioned, and I've said this before, but that scene is total copy-and-paste from TP&TF. I mean, whether or not you agree if Tangled did it better (I don't, personally), there's no denying it plays on the same plot device. A couple at odds with one another sit and get to know one another by the fire, and realize there's more than meets the eye.
Become a fan of Yensid. It will be everything that Dustified Disney isn't, hence the backwards name.pinkrenata wrote:My head is spinning in circles and I think I officially hate Disney now.
Thanks, Disney Duster!![]()
Hair schmair. Who has better eyes: Rapunzel or Flynn? She's got those big doe eyes and he's got that lean smoldery thing. One is bound to win.pinkrenata wrote:Back to more important discussion topics -- who has better hair: Rapunzel or Flynn? Keep in mind, while Rapunzel's mane has magical powers, Flynn's goatee is also magical in its own way.
Escapay wrote:I had no idea what was going on in the last thread until I decided, "a new one's started, maybe I can talk without getting lost in the shuffle". Then when I read Big One's post here, I backtracked the last few pages of the last thread and all I could think was "OMG, it's 'Disney Essence: The Not So Fresh Feeling' all over again".