- Registrado
- 12 de Jun, 2019
Swaying away from making this a gorl tawk thread about menstruation in cartoons somewhat.
I think Pixars loss of nuance and allegory goes back to the first two Toy Story films.
The original toy storys conflict woody being replaced by buzz the new hot action figure that does way more than a simple pullstring cowboy doll can be taken so many ways. It's been compared to the decline of the western as the space race started (something toy story 2 flat out mentioned) the way new toys that do a lot more than old ones can take a child's time and energy, and even sibling rivalry when a new infant is born. But the original toy story never gets in your face about these themes and it's left it the viewer to decide what if anything buzz and woodys rivalry is allegorical too.
Along came toy story 2 which while still a master piece threw all subtile and nuance out the windows. Stinky Pete's line "once the astronauts went up children only wanted to play with space toys" Jessie's "you don't forget kids like Emily or Andy but they forget you." And especially "Andy's growing up and there's nothing you can do about it" are all spelled out for us.
This carried over into monsters Inc. With the scream shortage flat out called an "energy crisis" and water nooses' line "kids these days," and "the window of innocence is shrinking." Was funny enough Pixar having a "these darn kids and their rush to not be kids anymore." Whining moment and now we got another one in toy story 5.
So Pixar has to some extent ALWAYS been guilty of ditching allegory and nuance for blatant moral pushing...even in their golden age material.
I think Pixars loss of nuance and allegory goes back to the first two Toy Story films.
The original toy storys conflict woody being replaced by buzz the new hot action figure that does way more than a simple pullstring cowboy doll can be taken so many ways. It's been compared to the decline of the western as the space race started (something toy story 2 flat out mentioned) the way new toys that do a lot more than old ones can take a child's time and energy, and even sibling rivalry when a new infant is born. But the original toy story never gets in your face about these themes and it's left it the viewer to decide what if anything buzz and woodys rivalry is allegorical too.
Along came toy story 2 which while still a master piece threw all subtile and nuance out the windows. Stinky Pete's line "once the astronauts went up children only wanted to play with space toys" Jessie's "you don't forget kids like Emily or Andy but they forget you." And especially "Andy's growing up and there's nothing you can do about it" are all spelled out for us.
This carried over into monsters Inc. With the scream shortage flat out called an "energy crisis" and water nooses' line "kids these days," and "the window of innocence is shrinking." Was funny enough Pixar having a "these darn kids and their rush to not be kids anymore." Whining moment and now we got another one in toy story 5.
So Pixar has to some extent ALWAYS been guilty of ditching allegory and nuance for blatant moral pushing...even in their golden age material.