I miss these type of animation movies
>>152351293>kid me hated disney princess movies for being too girly despite young me also jerking off to ariel and the likeShould i give these a chance? Ariel is so hot in that gif you posted
>>152351310When youre a grown up and you are no longer burdened with having to prove you're mature, it's your chance to go back and retry things you turned your nose up at as a kid, when you were afraid of being judged.The princess movies are fine. Little mermaid is even good.
>>152351359>Little mermaid is even goodSure is.On avoiding things; I'd not planned on ever watching K-pop Demon Hunters because I had assumed it was 'modern writing' Netflix trash. An animators react vid with the creators and a couple clips sold me on watching it and my wife, my two year old and I loved all of it. It isn't obvious at a glance that what it really contains is >What if buttercup from the powerpuff girls was Elsa, in a buffy season finale plot, and the fights were all to great songs?I don't think this will make me not be a contrarian, some popular things are trash. But I am a little more open to content made post 2003 now.
>>152351293In his Little Mermaid video the Nostalgia Critic interviewed one of the animators for the movie and he claims that they were inspired by anime girls when designing Ariel, he said that originally Ariel had more shiny spots on her eyes but in the end the animators found it too hard and they settled for a single shiny spot on each eye, I just find interesting that they were getting inspiration from Japanese animation as far back as 1989
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>>152351443I wonder which anime girls besides Miyazaki’s. >>152351310Yeah, try it again. It’s a good movie.
>>152351310I liked Aladdin the best out of the 90s Disney movies
>>152351553Cute
>>152351443https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/general-news/john-lasseter-pays-emotional-tribute-743635/>Appearing to tear up several times during his one-hour talk, Lasseter said: “Whenever we get stuck at Pixar or Disney, I put on a Miyazaki film sequence or two, just to get us inspired again>Lasseter, who began his career in the early 1980s as an animator with The Walt Disney Company, recounted how he was initially dismayed by the work the company was doing at the time, because he believed animation was a genre that should tell stories that appeal to people of all ages, not just children. While working at Disney in 1981, Lasseter’s team was visited by a group of Japanese animators from a Tokyo-based studio called TMS – and among the aspiring talents in the visiting delegation was a young Hayao Miyazaki. During the meeting, Miyazaki’s boss showed Lasseter and his colleagues a short clip from Miyazaki’s first feature, The Castle of Cagliostro.>“I was absolutely blown away,” Lasseter said. “It had a very strong effect on me because I felt that this was the first animated feature film I had seen that had a vision to entertain for all ages. It made me feel that I was not alone in the world.” He added: “It filled my soul with a drive that said ‘this is what I want to create.”So when you see people claim stuff in the last 10 years has a higher concentration of Japanese influence, it's nonsense. It's been that way for your whole lifetime, you just didn't notice.