'Strange World' Disney's 2022 Animated Film

Andrew C

You know what's funny?
So the Revival era would be

The Princess & the Frog (2009)
Tangled (2010)
Winnie the Pooh (2011)
Wreck-it Ralph (2012)
Frozen (2013)
Big Hero 6 (2014)
Zootopia (2016)
Moana (2016)

I don't count Bolt with these. It's more along the lines of Chicken little and Robinsons.
All winners IMO.
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member
Interestingly I did find this one that's more updated
View attachment 682002
Apparently we are in the new era? Talk about lazy naming, though I guess its hard to come up with more adjectives.

These things are very interesting to look at, thank you for sharing!

But who is coming up with these titles for the eras? Because I'm suspicious of the real meanings here.

In my mind, these later eras just read as...

"Post Rennaisance" 2000-2007 = Pretty Much Sucks Era
"Revival Era" 2008-2017 = Sucked Slightly Less, But Also Frozen, Era!
"New Era" 2018-2022 = Disney+ Is Only $8.99 Per Month Era
 

TwilightZone

Well-Known Member
But who is coming up with these titles for the eras? Because I'm suspicious of the real meanings here.
Defunctland said the exact thing in his newest video, no joke.

I think it needs to be restructured, not sure how, but the titles don't really work. Ironically, I think Disney's official one is better, but it still needs work.
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member
Ouch! Strange World really did set records for awful box office performance...

"Disney knew it was in trouble before Strange World hit theaters. Tracking showed the movie, an original sci-fi adventure tale, opening to no more than $30 million over the five-day Thanksgiving holiday corridor, a miserable start. From there, things only got worse. Word-of-mouth was so bad that the movie’s five-day domestic opening came in at $18.9 million, meaning the film could ultimately lose $100 million or more for the studio."

Even more misery is available in the rest of the article here...

 

Heppenheimer

Well-Known Member
I guess bolt is placed there in a historical sense. It was the first movie that was reworked under Lasseter. Or at least the most notable one.

After finding out more info about American Dog's plot....yeah I can see why.
I just read about America Dog on the Disney Wiki. A talking TV dog, a one-eyed cat and a giant radioactive rabbit on a road trip. And from the concept art, it looks like it would have featured at least one Godfather parody scene. Because I guess we just can't get enough Godfather parodies.

I know not everyone loved it, but I'm very happy we ended up with Bolt instead.
 

Magenta Panther

Well-Known Member
Ouch! Strange World really did set records for awful box office performance...

"Disney knew it was in trouble before Strange World hit theaters. Tracking showed the movie, an original sci-fi adventure tale, opening to no more than $30 million over the five-day Thanksgiving holiday corridor, a miserable start. From there, things only got worse. Word-of-mouth was so bad that the movie’s five-day domestic opening came in at $18.9 million, meaning the film could ultimately lose $100 million or more for the studio."

Even more misery is available in the rest of the article here...


That reporter's statement that Raya and the Last Dragon was a "success" is BS. It flopped.


Although it STILL did a heck of a lot better than Strange World, as Raya eventually made 130 million world-wide. Still, its budget was reportedly $100 million, which I don't think includes ad buys, etc.

And of course the article ignores the elephant in the room regarding Strange World, 'cause Hollywood Reporter. But you can bet Disney knew about the elephant - because the trailers focused on the dad and HIS dad. And the dog. As opposed to...

Not that they could keep it a secret. In this internet information age, word gets around. And so it goes.
 

Magenta Panther

Well-Known Member
You guys don't get how BIG anime and manga have become. Manga is outselling american superhero comics by a LARGE margin. The young people (and millennials) eat it up!

I'm a fan of anime myself. Miyazaki's Spirited Away is one of my favorite animated movies. And then there's Demon Slayer, Full Metal Alchemist, One Piece, etc.
Princess and animals. Zootopia, Lady & the Tramp, Lilo & Stitch (to an extent). Massive money makers.
Though Pixar did make Wall E, and that did super well, so I guess sci fi animation could work if the story is really good and it starred a cute non human character.
Wall-E's success completely contradicts the claim that Strange World failed because it's sci-fi.
 

Heppenheimer

Well-Known Member
I'm a fan of anime myself. Miyazaki's Spirited Away is one of my favorite animated movies. And then there's Demon Slayer, Full Metal Alchemist, One Piece, etc.

Wall-E's success completely contradicts the claim that Strange World failed because it's sci-fi.
Wall-E is pretty much the exception (unless you also count the Despicable Me and Incredibles Franchises).

In addition to Disney, I browsed through Don Bluth, Dreamworks, Illumination, and Blue Sky. The only other sort of sci-fi movie I could find to have done well is Robots from 2005, which seems all but forgotten by now. Sci-Fi animation just seems like a tough sell to the general public, for some reason.
 

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