TP2000
Well-Known Member
What I can say is that Disney needs to rein in budgets, that is a long time complaint discussed here in the forums. Should a movie like this cost $150-180M, no. So they have to rein in the costs of production across the board.
Via threads like this one, and the Lightyear thread last summer, plus looking at the
You could still brand individual films as either "Pixar" or "Disney", with Pixar being contemporary non-musical stories while Disney is fictional stories that are often musicals or dependent on songs.
But to have two separate, expensive, sprawling studio campuses 400 miles apart pumping out the same mega-budget animated films that consistently underperform at the box office? Not sustainable. It seems to me to be an easy choice to merge them. Sell the Emeryville campus to condo developers and move on with the 21st century.
It's not 1995 any more, the Emeryville campus makes no sense in the 2020's and 2030's.
And as I said streaming isn't going away so they really do need to figure out how to keep costs low while still pumping out quality content.
I liken streaming new movies to that crypto-currency thing. No matter how many times the Smart Set tries to explain it to me, I just can't wrap my pea-sized brain around how crypto-currency works nor how streaming big budget movies for 8 bucks a month makes anyone any money.
Streaming and crypto both seem like hazy pyramid schemes to me. And streaming seems to drain corporate coffers quickly and gets the legacy studios nowhere with audiences.
I mean, at least with Amway you got some good glass cleaner. But streaming new big-budget content? I don't get how it makes anyone any money long-term.
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