May
24
2009

The Secret of Pixar’s Success

There was a great article in the Baltimore Sun today that both delights me and has me scratching my head.

The article delights me because it reinforces some ideas I already had, and publicly stated some less-known things I already knew. These truths I hold to be self-evident boil down to this: the secret of Pixar’s success has to do with doing things differently than the rest of Hollywood. Basically, they focus on story, tell the stories they want to tell, even if the characters don’t come from the Big Book of Hollywood Licensable Characters, and most importantly, they ignore the Suits, Beancounters and Crystal Ball Gazers to which the rest of the industry seems to have abdicated their creative power. There are highly paid guys at studios, publishers, distributors and labels, who so far as I can see, don’t do anything productive. I mean, they don’t create anything. Their main function seems to be to get between the creatives and the audience and say no to unconventional but good ideas. But that doesn’t occur at Pixar.

The article has me scratching my head, because as I read the words, I couldn’t help wondering why the rest of the moviemaking industry hasn’t tried to copy Pixar. I mean, they have tried to copy Pixar when it comes to character design, rendering technology, and so forth… the nuts and bolts, the technicalities of making any film. The technical exercise, they’ve got down cold, of course, because that’s the easy part. But they haven’t tried to copy Pixar in the sense of How You Make Good Movies, how you ignore the suits and greedy bastards, ignore the people who say “no one wants to see a film about a rat”, and get on to the business of telling real, honest-to-God stories with characters an audience might remember in 10 years, after the toys and tie-ins and Happy Meals are gone.

Anyway, the article is far more eloquent than I, but I will pull out a couple of my favorite passages for your browsing convenience:

“[Up creates] a narrative that operates less like a roller coaster than an old-fashioned merry-go-round, with panels that light up and illuminate the core. And because Pixar is also a director-driven studio, Docter didn’t have to stand for any second-guessing based on executives’ condescending notions of audience expectations or the slanted reactions of recruited focus groups.”

and

“When will the rest of Hollywood learn Pixar’s lessons? When will people realize that “conventional wisdom” is rarely wise at all? Hollywood may be sure to pull in a certain tidy sum with a Kate Hudson or Matthew McConaughey comedy or Nicolas Cage slumming in another comic book or fantasy film, but these movies are just killing time in every way. They build no legacy for the art or the industry and leave no feelings of love or loyalty in an audience.”

As for listening to Suits and Beancounters, if there’s anything I think America and the world would have learned from the whole Financial Meltdown caused by truth-blind managers and short-term-focused beancounters is that listening to that collective group is the absolutely wrong way to go. Please tell me we’ve at least learned that, whether we’re talking about making entertainment, or just running the world.

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Written by Og in: Film, animation, philosophy | Tags: ,

5 Comments »

  • chris cox says:

    I so, completely, totally and utterly agree with you!

    It’s nice to be able to create your own ideas to amuse yourself- and if anyone else likes it that’s a plus to your enjoyment.

    Just look at other things created in this way- Narnia, Middle Earth, Calvin and Hobbes- unconventional, fresh and lasting.

  • Marc says:

    It’s a matter of survival. Studios used to be headed by creative people (the Warners, Zanuck, Louis Mayer, etc.). Businessmen who READ, who knew the arts. That kind of person is hard to find theses days. The studios are now owned by mega conglomerates where to succeed, you need a business degree, not a well rounded intellectual life. Studios and their output are product, not art (big “a” or otherwise). SO I’m not sure where the fault lies. Is it with the corporations for not recognizing these facts early on and demanding higher standards in their management, or is it with the studios who sold out to Coca-Cola and GE and Sony?

    And trust me, the suits aren’t going to just get up and leave when you get to make millions and sleep with all the wanna-be starlets you want. They don’t give a crap about you or me or art or even their “product”. They do however give a crap about money and chicks. I suspect the price Pixar pays is in a lack of hot chicks parading through the executive suite. Freakin’ nerds….when will they learn.

  • ZooRocket says:

    Well, it all went wrong when it became the “business” of movie making and not the “Art” of story telling anymore. But hey!… because of that, you get these gems that make the “Art” that much more special.

    I am also very much looking forward to Disney getting back to its roots that made it so special also. Princess and the Frog looks to be an instant classic.

  • Tom says:

    This is what I have always loved about Pixar. When you start watching the special features on the DVDs and hear these guys talk (especially Lassiter and Bird) these things come out crystal clear. It’s really a simple idea when it comes down to it. Can’t wait to see Up.

  • Og says:

    They’re a great company and they seem to have a corner on doing it right. I have obviously given it a lot of thought, but the lightbulb went on this weekend when I realized it’s not just that Pixar has magical lightning in a jar, but that they have courage enough in their convictions that they can reject the notions they reject. The difference is that other companies WANT to. Pixar DOES.

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