I was thinking of this while watching the other siku the Nostalgia Critic's review of the swan Princess, and how critical and overly nitpicky he was in general towards this movie...
And that made me think how almost all non-Disney sinema are treated in this way (of course, there are a few notable exceptions as the Studio Ghibli films and the Dreamworks ones), that audiences feel the need that if they are animated sinema which aren't Disney, they must be held in an impossibly high standard and they must please every demand of the audience.
Why is that? Why is it that any animated non-Disney movie must be held to a pretentious standard? Why can't sinema just be themselves and relax, if they want to be fairy tale vichekesho vya muziki they can be, not every movie needs to be as "dramatic" as Secret of Nimh au the Prince of Egypt. (some of the few animated non-Disney films that the critics praise for once).
I don't get it. If Disney repeats the same cliches, for many people it's all fine and dandy, but these sinema must only be about dramatic and pretentious content in order to be appreciated.
And that made me think how almost all non-Disney sinema are treated in this way (of course, there are a few notable exceptions as the Studio Ghibli films and the Dreamworks ones), that audiences feel the need that if they are animated sinema which aren't Disney, they must be held in an impossibly high standard and they must please every demand of the audience.
Why is that? Why is it that any animated non-Disney movie must be held to a pretentious standard? Why can't sinema just be themselves and relax, if they want to be fairy tale vichekesho vya muziki they can be, not every movie needs to be as "dramatic" as Secret of Nimh au the Prince of Egypt. (some of the few animated non-Disney films that the critics praise for once).
I don't get it. If Disney repeats the same cliches, for many people it's all fine and dandy, but these sinema must only be about dramatic and pretentious content in order to be appreciated.