Oh cmon, you know full well this is a bad faith argument.. you don’t genuinely believe that’s what we’re saying and what’s happening, do you? That’s not at all what the majority of us are saying. We’re simply people that care about the originality, creativity, quality, and talent of the company first and foremost and the legacy & impact made from that. What’s actually being said (by me included) is that we’re sick of the ‘overdoing’ on tieing every new attraction to pre-existing film IP rather than letting Imagineering make successful original attractions like they did in the past, aswell as constantly coming at the expense of classic attractions that in our opinion, would be better benfitted by better maintenance standards to keep them operating at their best and/or tasteful enhancements & tech & spfx improvements rather than needlessly gutting them entirely. The other argument is there’s plenty of space to be used aswell as space for a new park and attractions that’d fit the themes they want to explore that they simply refuse to do for some reason, despite it only improving park capacity & variety and not coming at the expense of it.
Most of us could say we love attractions based on IP, we just don’t want additional new attractions constantly coming at the expense of the classics we love aswell as new non-film tied attractions. Basically we want a better balance/variety instead of mostly just one direction of making everything tied to a film.
It’s Infact a very similar argument that we make about recent films here.. we’re just tired of ‘mostly’ sequels & remakes being made now rather than more originality w good/understanding talent behind it. Walt once said “You can’t top pigs with pigs”, after he’d made a sequel to the highly successful Three Little Pigs short, and it didn’t do as well. Walt had both love for the nostalgic while also pursuing new ideas. But it seems that keeps getting lost more and more often. And I’d argue, ‘if’ the current day originals aren’t making as much of a profit or impact atm as remakes and sequels.. I believe there is a bigger issue within the company at hand, which is the production process behind it aswell as who’s behind it and what happened behind the scenes with it that made it a failure. No better example of the issue happening that what happened with Wish. Disney typically has a story trust in the main animation studio made up of various successful creative folks to have meetings with to get feedback of what could possibly be improved or fixed. Also they have plenty of contacts on Renaissance era folks they can get in touch with or mentorship or feedback from. If that’s not at all even being even considered ‘or’ if the executives are meddling with things within the creative process where they shouldn’t… then they should invest into and tackle that issue first. Both within the live action ‘and’ animation divisions. And if it’s still a worry, again, proof from the success of the releases via Fathom Events & GKids with the Studio Ghibli classics, adding that with a merchandising campaign similar to what Disney did in the 90s & prior. That ‘should’ be the thing that’d cushion Disney financially without spending too much without good return, get folks more on board with those characters and stories, not to mention the art of animation better than a remake many have more issues with than not ever could.
The other example that could be used from Walt’s era.. is when his slew of package features weren’t doing as well at the box office.. what should always be done is something similar to that scenario.. it was folks in finance that were saying “Hey, why don’t we do another princess fairytale like Snow White”? Walt and his team did this, but they were still creative with it in making a story that they hadn’t yet adapted. It worked and was a HUGE success.. that is what should be done at the studios today.. but alas.. they’d rather mostly keep trying to top pigs, excuse me, actually remake a pig that was already a fine/successful pig.