Timothy_Q
Well-Known Member
But it already is?MPR will never be a beloved movie.
I love these incredibly generalized statements based on personal opinion on a movie.
But it already is?MPR will never be a beloved movie.
Forgive me if I am wrong, but Jungle book has been out there for what 3 or 4 years, and I watch it quite a bit. Then again, I kind of liked the remake of Pete's Dragon.Fella,
get back to me in five years and tell me how many people are re-watching the lifeless drone that is the 2019 Lion King reboot over the original.
Get back to me in five years and tell me how Beauty and the Beast bUt LiVe AcTiOn has aged in the public eye compared to the original.
Get back to me when anyone can even remember the live action Jungle Book or Dumbo.
Alright, fella?
I don't know if you're aware but theme park rides usually need to be built to be be popular and beloved for 20+ years. Mary Poppins Returns is not going to be a property that's beloved in 20+ years.
buot injay Lins tellin' ya's tuh git uf da ryde saftleh ihn iz adooorabulas englush dialuct!
Just guessing here, but probably due to your pompous and over bearing know it all type answering.....I repeat the question: Why do you care enough to pick an argument if I don't think these properties will continue to be beloved and then act like something's wrong with me when I defend my position? And duh, it's an opinion. Just like your thoughts on the matter are an opinion.
When's the last time you watched Peter Pan, or Winnie The Pooh And The Blustery Day?I don't know if you're aware but theme park rides usually need to be built to be be popular and beloved for 20+ years. Mary Poppins Returns is not going to be a property that's beloved in 20+ years.
I feel like Mary Poppins Returns is a different situation from most of the remakes. Since It's a lovingly crafted belated sequel and not a cash grab remake (some of which are also good). It's also in the same medium, rather than changing from animation to live action.Why are the live-action remakes of Disney classic toons so popular? Two reasons: nostalgia and the old same-only-different formula.
People who grew up with certain films like Lion King and Beauty and the Beast want to experience the magic again, especially with their kids. The live-action cash grabs are a way to do it. At first, the fact that most of the remakes are lesser endeavors doesn't matter. Emma Watson plays Belle! But in hindsight, the glow of nostalgia fades and the deep flaws of the remakes surface. No such thing happens with the original animated versions. They're the gold standard.
THAT'S why Mary Poppins Returns will never be as beloved as the first Poppins. It didn't even make the money or win the awards the original did. So that's why any Poppins ride would be wise to eschew anything from the unnecessary sequel. But wisdom is a scarce commodity at TDO these days...
I agree. I walked out of Mary Poppins Returns saying that it was the best live action movie Disney has created in a very long time. Enchanted is the only other live action film I can think of that had the same special Disney touch.I feel like Mary Poppins Returns is a different situation from most of the remakes. Since It's a lovingly crafted belated sequel and not a cash grab remake (some of which are also good). It's also in the same medium, rather than changing from animation to live action.
I'm sure that Returns will not be as beloved as the original the same way very few sequels are as beloved as the original. That's just inherent in sequels.
But Returns isn't a remake. So, it has more in common with Tron Legacy, Incredibles 2, and Toy Story 3/4 than it does with the live action remakes. Your comparison is inherently flawed.
The popularity of a remake doesn’t even have to be tied to nostalgia. I’ve never seen the original Aladdin (although hubby says we still have a VHS copy and the kids watched it a thousand times), and yet I saw the live action version at the theatres six times this summer.Why are the live-action remakes of Disney classic toons so popular? Two reasons: nostalgia and the old same-only-different formula.
You guys...
No hint intended. It was a poor attempt at accentuating DVDs accent.
The popularity of a remake doesn’t even have to be tied to nostalgia. I’ve never seen the original Aladdin (although hubby says we still have a VHS copy and the kids watched it a thousand times), and yet I saw the live action version at the theatres six times this summer.
It wasn’t nostalgia pulling me back into the theatres, it was a visually stunning movie, likeable characters, great acting, catchy tunes, and mostly Will Smith’s portrayal of Genie.
I’ve since seen dozens of side by side comparisons of Robin Williams’ Genie to Will Smith’s Genie on YT, and I’ll say it again ... Robin who?
I quoted a fact of box office.
it'd be much more compelling to point to box office numbers
While I am in the camp that like the remakes for the most part, box office does not equal quality - see Transformers.Funny, the two billion dollar remakes of Aladdin and the Lion King tells a different story about what the public has caught onto. But, keep spinning your opinion in the face of contradictory facts.
And yet, Pandora has been quite successful. This is probably not the example you want to use to debunk the argument that box office success should play a factor when it comes to selecting theme park IPs.avatar is not beloved... like, at all
All should be revealedStill a carousel?
All should be revealed
And yet, Pandora has been quite successful. This is probably not the example you want to use to debunk the argument that box office success should play a factor when it comes to selecting theme park IPs.
only if it can be said that pandora's success is due to avatar's popularity, which it isn't
just combining a few things you inadvertently dived right between...
initial box office take =/= longevity (certainly not 'belovedness') and lame ips can deliver successful lands as successful ips can deliver lame lands
size matters, too, as i'm indifferent to an emily-go-round, but really don't appreaciate ren in mmrr
You don't have to see the movie to appreciate the land. It's an incredible land. Most folks don't walk through it saying "god I hate this land because the movie sucked!"
It's almost like some folks are bitter they actually did a good job.
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