Folks, I grew up with Disney classics like Bambi and Aladdin, and I still love them to this very day.
Though would you say, that Pixar and Dreamworks are becoming the new 'Disney' classic filmmakers? I ask this because I think the shareholders got their mits into the Disney company and wanted more money, and not movie greatness.
Pixar, Toy Story, need I say more, and INSTANT classic and I love it. Dreamworks, Shrek and Megamind, to me utter classics.
Pixar is an AMAZING company, I loved Cars! They somehow seem to find the magic between adult and child, and get a slot for a 'recurrent' actor, Ham, Mardie, THINK!!:P
Disney made the 90's classics of all time, now, I think the torch goes to Pixar, and Dreamworks, they have made AWESOME films and I hope they continue!
Uh, Fletch? Even though Pixar started as G. Lucas' baby through ILM, as of the past half decade, Pixar IS Disney, so they don't have to go through all that tedious mucking about in "becoming the next" Disney
Zealot Wrote:Just go play the game and have fun dammit.
Treewyrm Wrote:all in all the conclusion is that disco doesn't need antagonist factions, it doesn't need phantoms, it doesn't need nomads, it doesn't need coalition and it doesn't need many other things, no AIs, the game is hijacked by morons to confuse the game with their dickwaving generic competition games mixed up with troll-of-the-day.
Here's one of my favorite scenes from the movie, toward the end, building up to the climax. In it, the main characters (A toaster, a lamp, a radio, a vacuum-cleaner, and an electric blanket) have found themselves in a junkyard, about to get crushed into scrap metal. Meanwhile, "The Master" (Toaster's owner) is debating with his girlfriend where to go to get new appliances for his dorm room. The TV set, who knows where Toaster is, is trying to get The Master to go to the junkyard and save Toaster & Co.
And old broken cars sing about their life and their imminent death as they are thrown one by one into the giant, evil compressor-thing.
It got somewhat morbid at points, at least as far as kids' movies go, but I grew up loving it. I recently found it again and re-watched it, and still found it very enjoyable. Granted, most of my love for it is probably just nostalgia, but I still think it was an awesome little movie.
I'm pretty sure you can find the full thing online somewhere.