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> John Lasseter lascia la Disney e la Pixar
Fra X
messaggio 4/12/2017, 22:56
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CITAZIONE (Enrico @ 2/12/2017, 11:38) *


L' articolo però è del 29 novembre e parla di cose già dette. Su Weinstein uscivano cose nuove ogni ora e anche di Spacey se n' è parlato quasi ininterrottamente.
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Fra X
messaggio 4/12/2017, 22:56
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CITAZIONE (Enrico @ 2/12/2017, 11:38) *


L' articolo però è del 29 novembre e parla di cose già dette. Su Weinstein uscivano cose nuove ogni ora e anche di Spacey se n' è parlato quasi ininterrottamente.

CITAZIONE (LucaDopp @ 2/12/2017, 23:07) *
Mah a me dà fastidio che in questo come in quasi tutti i recenti "scandali" non ci sia stata alcuna denuncia effettiva. Solo indiscrezioni e nessuna prova.


Anche a me. Mah!

Messaggio modificato da Fra X il 4/12/2017, 22:58
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brigo
messaggio 4/12/2017, 23:23
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Ta-daaaahhh!!!

James Levine

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LucaDopp
messaggio 5/12/2017, 0:19
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CITAZIONE (Enrico @ 4/12/2017, 21:02) *
Quelle di John Lasseter non sono indiscrezioni.

I dirigenti Disney sapevano di questi suoi vizi, ma lo hanno lasciato al suo posto per non perdere il suo incredibile talento creativo.
Comportamento altrettanto deplorevole.

Sono tutte indiscrezioni, non c'è una sola prova di tutto ciò se non il comunicato della Pixar (che però non dice quali fossero i comportamenti di Lasseter). Non sto dicendo che sia tutto falso, ma nemmeno andrebbero presi per oro colato articoli pieni di "sembrerebbe" e verbi coniugati allo stesso modo, e che nemmeno dicono da quali fonti prendono le informazioni.

Messaggio modificato da LucaDopp il 5/12/2017, 0:20
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winnie & pimpi
messaggio 5/12/2017, 9:50
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CITAZIONE (LucaDopp @ 5/12/2017, 1:19) *
Sono tutte indiscrezioni, non c'è una sola prova di tutto ciò se non il comunicato della Pixar (che però non dice quali fossero i comportamenti di Lasseter). Non sto dicendo che sia tutto falso, ma nemmeno andrebbero presi per oro colato articoli pieni di "sembrerebbe" e verbi coniugati allo stesso modo, e che nemmeno dicono da quali fonti prendono le informazioni.


Non ci sono accuse, ma una lettera scritta da John Lasseter dove ammette di aver avuto atteggiamenti inopportuni sul posto di lavoro. Non ci sono indagini da fare perchè è lui stesso ad averlo ammesso e la Disney ha ringraziato per la sua sincerità. Cos'altro serve? Voler conoscere maggiori dettagli intimi è solo morboso.

intanto Forbes ritiene che alla Pixar gioverebbe se Lasseter si ritirasse del tutto, definendo poco insipirati gli ultimi film, Coco compreso
Pixar will be betteroff with Lasseter gone


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-Scrooge McDuck-
messaggio 5/12/2017, 15:14
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CITAZIONE (winnie & pimpi @ 5/12/2017, 9:50) *
Cos'altro serve?


Un’indagine e un processo, per dirne una.
Non si può sentire che uno si auto-sospende. Hai commesso un reato? Paghi, e a deciderlo dovrebbe essere un giudice.
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Shirleyno01
messaggio 5/12/2017, 17:47
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Come si dice qui a Napoli... "Assa fa'!"
Lasseter per quel che mi riguarda ha distrutto la Disney coi quei suoi filmetti per mentecatti. La vera Disney è quella di Walt, di "Biancaneve e i sette nani", "Dumbo", "Bambi", "Pinocchio", "Fantasia", "Peter Pan" e chi ne ha più ne metta. La vera Disney è quella dei disegni fatti a mano, quella di Mary Blair, Ub Iwerks, Fred Moore e tanti altri. Proprio per questo neanche a me mancherà Lasseter, anzi mi auguro che dopo queste GRAVISSIME accuse non gli facciano mai più rimettere piede negli studi Disney (o meglio, quel poco o nulla che rimane di Disney).

Messaggio modificato da Shirleyno01 il 5/12/2017, 17:47
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messaggio 5/12/2017, 17:49
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CITAZIONE (brigo @ 5/12/2017, 1:23) *
Ta-daaaahhh!!!

James Levine



eheheh.gif Perfetto (si fa per dire)! Molestatori dappertutto, pure in Fantasia (2000)!
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Shirleyno01
messaggio 5/12/2017, 18:03
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Gia' che ce so' me levo st'artro peso co' Lasseter e co' la Pixar tutta:
https://youtu.be/xSsffD18mdI

Messaggio modificato da Shirleyno01 il 5/12/2017, 18:04
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Angelo1985
messaggio 5/12/2017, 22:39
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CITAZIONE (Scrooge McDuck @ 5/12/2017, 15:14) *
Un’indagine e un processo, per dirne una.
Non si può sentire che uno si auto-sospende. Hai commesso un reato? Paghi, e a deciderlo dovrebbe essere un giudice.


Ma infatti spero che si apra un'indagine e che le autorità facciano quello che devono, anche solo appurare la necessità di un risarcimento a coloro che hanno subito molestie; ad oggi, possiamo solo prendere atto della sua confessione e auto-sospensione e fare un augurio per il futuro degli Studios.
Quello che mi aspetto, però, è che anche chi sapeva e non ha fatto nulla passi qualche guaio, perchè non sarebbe nemmeno giusto il messaggio di punire solo il colpevole e non chi ha guardato dall'altra parte.
Pure questo è importante!

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Messaggio modificato da Angelo1985 il 5/12/2017, 22:40


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brigo
messaggio 5/12/2017, 23:32
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CITAZIONE (Shirleyno01 @ 5/12/2017, 17:49) *
eheheh.gif Perfetto (si fa per dire)! Molestatori dappertutto, pure in Fantasia (2000)!


Foto da me scelta non a caso. (non guarderò più la scena con gli stessi occhi blink.gif )
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Daydreamer
messaggio 31/1/2018, 19:51
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Da BadTaste

John Lasseter: il suo ritorno alla guida della Pixar e dei Walt Disney Animation Studios sarebbe “improbabile”

[...]
È di nuovo l’Hollywood Reporter a scrivere che nella giornata di domani i dipendenti dei Disney Animation Studios parteciperanno a una “Giornata dell’Ascolto” durante la quale, insieme a svariati addetti delle risorse umane, discuteranno di eventuali preoccupazioni inerenti l’ambiente di lavoro. Il meeting – che un veterano descrive come senza precedenti per lo studio – sarebbe stato organizzato poiché, secondo alcuni bene informati, il ritorno di John Lasseter sarebbe alquanto improbabile, anche se un altro esponente di lunga data dei Disney Animation Studios – rimasto anonimo – sostiene che si tratterebbe di un appuntamento per sondare gli animi circa l’eventualità di un rientro di Lasseter.
C’è anche chi è convinto che le rivelazioni sul comportamento del CCO sarebbero incompatibili con la leadership di brand Disney così forti e c’è anche chi svela al magazine che in realtà meeting come quello di giovedì si erano già tenuti (una voce in contraddizione con la prima citata quindi) e avrebbero avuto come oggetto proprio i “passi falsi” di John Lasseter. L’Hollywood Reporter racconta che quando, anni fa, il co-fondatore della Pixar Ed Catmull ha consegnato a Lasseter il feedback ottenuto dai dipendenti, questi si sarebbe infuriato così tanto al punto da non rivolgere la parola a Catmull per una settimana.
In una situazione poco chiara come questa, i rumour su il o i nomi di chi andrà a sostituire Lasseter come CCO della Pixar e dei Walt Disney Animation Studios continuano a rincorrersi. Sono in molti a credere che la prima realtà citata verrà guidata da due veterani del Pixar Brain Trust, i registi Pete Docter e Andrew Stanton, mentre la divisione animata della Disney finirà “nelle mani” di un triumvirato composto da Jennifer Lee (Frozen), Rich Moore e Byron Howard (Zootropolis, Ralph Spaccatutto).
Ovviamente vi terremo aggiornati…


Messaggio modificato da Daydreamer il 31/1/2018, 19:53
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veu
messaggio 31/1/2018, 23:43
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Anche noi abbiamo sentito parlare del triumvirato Lee - Moore - Howard per i WDAS


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Angelo1985
messaggio 1/2/2018, 9:25
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Mah, l'idea del triumvirato la trovo impraticabile, arriva un momento in cui deve esporsi una vera leadership; la Lee andrebbe rimossa per prima, non è che siccome hai fatto 1 film di successo, arrivi e comandi a bacchetta. Non so, mi sembra facciano le cose proprio a c**zo di cane.

Per quanto riguarda il porco maniaco ho solo una cosa da dire:

A CASA!!!

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Enrico
messaggio 1/2/2018, 10:19
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Vanno bene tutti (pure la Lee che ha fatto un film di successo, che poi in realtà ha sceneggiato anche Ralph e Zootropolis eh) basta che non facciano rientrare quel grassone.
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Fra X
messaggio 4/2/2018, 13:02
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"Poco chiara" Termine più appropriato non ci poteva essere. Mah! La si finirà di parlare per enigmi?

CITAZIONE (Angelo1985 @ 1/2/2018, 9:25) *
arriva un momento in cui deve esporsi una vera leadership


Già!

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Fra X
messaggio 8/4/2018, 17:21
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https://www.fastcompany.com/40551146/inside...asseters-return

Ad un mese dalla fine dell' autospensione tornerà, non tornerà... boh! Il bello o il brutto è che tutto o quasi tace!
Mi fa strano leggere che uno studio che ha quasi 100 anni di storia sia una realtà meno consolidata di un altro che ne ha poco più di 30. eheheh.gif Vabbé che ci si riferisce allo staff odierno in generale. Comunque se Lasseter non dovesse tornare la questione si porrà ovviamente sul lungo termine.

Messaggio modificato da Fra X il 8/4/2018, 17:24
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veu
messaggio 28/4/2018, 21:23
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Dal sito Hollywood Reporter

"He Who Must Not Be Named": Can John Lasseter Ever Return to Disney?

As the most powerful man in animation nears the end of a six-month "sabbatical" for personal "missteps," CEO Bob Iger must soon determine his fate. But a close look at the career and workplace behavior of the Pixar mogul reveals a man much darker, angrier and, at times, more abusive than "the happy-ass guy in the Hawaiian shirt," the purported Walt Disney of the digital age.

The night of the Oscar ceremony March 4 brought another triumphant moment for The Walt Disney Co. when Coco scored two awards, including best animated feature. The win marked the 12th top Oscar in the past 15 years for Pixar Animation Studios or Disney Animation Studios, and with ticket sales of more than $780 million worldwide, Coco was another box-office win, too.

The acceptance speeches included thanks to many people, but one name was conspicuously omitted: John Lasseter, the absent chief creative officer of both pillars of Disney's animation empire. "He who must not be named," marvels one animation veteran who, like many, won't talk about Lasseter on the record. Lasseter, 61, was on what Disney described as a six-month "sabbatical"; in an October memo to staff announcing the leave, he had acknowledged unspecified "missteps." As The Hollywood Reporter first reported then, Lasseter was known by insiders for grabbing, kissing and making comments about physical attributes of women. Multiple sources said Lasseter drank heavily at such company events as premiere parties. Now, with the six months of his leave drawing to a close, many animators are convinced that Lasseter will not return. Disney remains mum, but multiple sources believe that Disney chairman and CEO Bob Iger is prepared to bid Lasseter goodbye. "Bob is about keeping peace in the family," says one Disney veteran. "He's not anxious to take on defending somebody with that kind of reputation."

Insiders say Lasseter had amassed so much power that his underlings at one point told Iger they needed to check with Lasseter before carrying out Iger's instructions. Now if Lasseter returns, there is likely to be a negative reaction from some employees at Pixar and Disney who felt that Lasseter had bullied and belittled them and hogged credit for years. Finally, there is the issue of his conduct with female employees. "If John goes back, it will kill women in animation," says a former Pixar insider. "The message will be so clear: Shut up and take it."

Disney does not appear to be preparing to send that message. In February, the company held an unprecedented "day of listening" at the Disney animation unit and brought in a handful of human-resources professionals to facilitate a discussion of workplace concerns. More recently, Pixar employees learned that longtime human resources chief Lori McAdams — seen by many as one of Lasseter's chief protectors — was leaving the company. McAdams did not respond to a request for comment.

Lasseter's departure would be a sad denouement for the burly figure in brightly patterned shirts who is perhaps the most famous living person in the animation world; the man who co-founded Pixar, resuscitated Disney Animation and played a key part in giving the world a series of brilliant, beloved, childhood-defining films that reaped billions in box office. "No single artist since Walt Disney has had as much of an impact on animation as John Lasseter," says Tom Sito, a veteran animator and the former head of USC's Division of Animation and Digital Arts. "John really was the person who guided computer graphics and animation together to create this new medium."

It began with 1995's Toy Story, which was followed by one hit after another: A Bug's Life; Monsters, Inc.; Finding Nemo, to name just a few. After Disney bought Pixar in 2006, Lasseter took on the studio's faltering animation unit, which then cranked out such hits as Frozen, Zootopia and Moana.

But interviews with a broad swath of animators and executives who crossed paths with Lasseter over the years suggest that as he achieved great success and power, he became increasingly imperious. At Pixar, some insiders called him "King John" and various other uncomplimentary nicknames. "He changed drastically as success and money came," says one former colleague. Another longtime Pixar executive says Lasseter's image as a Walt Disney of the digital age — as a whimsical, childlike genius with a wall-to-wall collection of toys and memorabilia in his office ­— concealed a darker reality. "The public didn't see that," this person says. "The happy-ass guy in the Hawaiian shirt? That was a well-crafted persona."

In the early going, the outlook for Toy Story was not good. Based on Lasseter's success with short films at the nascent Pixar, Disney asked him to make the first full-length computer-animated movie. But as the project progressed, some top Disney executives were unimpressed and considered pulling the plug. Then in his 30s, Lasseter "was a pretty humble guy who had a movie that was struggling to find itself," says an executive who worked with him at the time. There was no sign of "these issues that revealed themselves over the years." With $7 million already invested, then-Disney studio chief Jeffrey Katzenberg stayed the course. The reward in 1995 was a hit so unexpected ($373.6 million worldwide) that the company was caught flat-footed without Toy Story toys and other merchandise to sell. Lasseter, who had been let go from Disney's animation unit a little more than 10 years earlier, was on his way.

As Toy Story was followed by a dazzling run of hits, former colleagues at Pixar say Lasseter became jealous of potential rivals and intolerant of criticism. "The only person who could give John notes was Steve Jobs," says one, referring to Pixar's majority shareholder in that early era. "There was a level of fear that permeated senior management." Another says Pixar became "this cult of the infallible genius." Lasseter had younger proteges like Pete Docter, who directed Monsters, Inc., and Andrew Stanton, who directed Finding Nemo, but those were talents he had nurtured. With others, says an executive who worked with Lasseter, "You could be 'in' one day but if you did something he didn't like, he could turn and cause a lot of damage." A former Pixar insider says Brad Bird was able to thrive on his 2004 film The Incredibles only because he had been hired by Jobs, who saw to it that Bird was able to assemble and run his own team.

Sources say among those whom Lasseter eventually pushed aside was legendary Disney animator Glen Keane, who drew Ariel in The Little Mermaid and the Beast in Beauty and the Beast. Back in 1983, Keane and Lasseter — then both at Disney — had collaborated on a test combining drawn animation and computer-generated images. ("In five years these tests will seem so primitive, they'll look like Steamboat Willie does today," Lasseter said presciently at the time.) When computers came to dominate the field, associates say that Keane, unlike some who made their names in hand-drawn animation, successfully navigated the transition to the new technology. He left Disney in 2012, and this year won an Oscar for his work with Kobe Bryant on the short Dear Basketball. He's now directing an animated feature for Netflix. Another casualty was Don Hahn, whose producing credits include Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King. "He was one of the most successful animation producers of all time," says a Disney veteran. "John treated him like shit." (Keane and Hahn both declined to comment.)

By the mid-2000s, Jobs had become concerned about Lasseter, according to a former high-level associate. The Apple co-founder may not have been comfortable with one man wielding so much power at Pixar, but there was more. Lasseter could be "mean" and "vindictive" while drinking, this person says. "He had ballooned up. Steve was afraid he would have a heart attack." Jobs wanted Lasseter to cut back on drinking and lose weight. "Steve tried," the executive says. "But then Steve got sicker. He wasn't around anymore."

Former Lasseter associates say for many years, Jobs was not the only governor on Lasseter's engines. Joe Ranft was a towering presence both literally and figuratively — brilliant at story and a talented writer, animator and voice actor. He had a great gift for injecting sweetness and humanity into scripts. And according to many contemporaries, he commanded Lasseter's respect. As he had little interest in the limelight, he also did not present a threat.

Ranft had met Lasseter in the late 1970s, when both were students at CalArts, the southern California art school co-founded by Walt Disney. He worked at Pixar starting with Toy Story. "Joe was a gentle giant," says one executive who knew him. "When everyone was freaking out, Joe was the calm one." A former Pixar insider who worked with Ranft says his basic decency operated on those around him: "No one wanted to look bad in front of Joe. [And] Joe could call bullshit on John in a way no one else could. Joe wasn't afraid of John ­— not even 1 percent."

In August 2005, Ranft was a passenger in a car heading to an annual spiritual retreat in Mendocino when the 2004 Honda Element veered off a cliff and rolled 120 feet into 14 feet of water. Several sources who knew both men say when Ranft died tragically at 45, Lasseter lost much more than just a talented colleague. "Joe was his Jiminy Cricket," says a person who was close to Ranft, adding that with his death, "I think John might have lost his moorings." Coinciding as it did with Jobs' cancer battle, the death signaled that the checks on Lasseter were gone.

"I was enjoying my life at Pixar and then Joe died," says another person who fell afoul of Lasseter. "I didn't realize how Joe had been protecting me. It's amazing how one person's life can keep things from going south."

Even before Lasseter's domain expanded to include Disney animation, employees had become wary of his wandering hands. Some say they employed a move they called "the Lasseter" to prevent their boss from putting his hands on their legs. One longtime insider says he saw a woman seated next to Lasseter in a meeting that occurred more than 15 years ago. "She was bent over and [had her arm] across her thigh," he says. "The best I can describe it is as a defensive posture ... John had his hand on her knee, though, moving around." After that encounter, this person asked the woman about what he had seen. "She said it was unfortunate for her to wear a skirt that day and if she didn't have her hand on her own right leg, his hand would have traveled."

In 2010, one former Pixar insider says Lasseter was spoken to — this person assumes by Iger; Disney would not comment — regarding an incident that occurred the night before Up won best animated feature at the Oscars. At a party that evening, Lasseter, who is married, was seen indiscreetly making out with a Disney marketing employee. For a time after that, his behavior was muted; he later told an associate that he had gotten into trouble and as a result was drinking only beer at a company event.

Over time, sources say, there were complaints to human resources at both Pixar and Disney Animation. (Disney declined to comment.) A former insider says the thinking was, "We have to do everything we can to protect John from himself and keep the truth from the public."'

Jorgen Klubien is a controversial figure in animation circles: A strong-willed Dane who can be blunt to a fault, he is seen as talented but difficult. Whether his faults outweigh his artistry or vice versa is a matter of opinion. Klubien met Lasseter in 1978 when Klubien, then 20, was offered a scholarship to the nascent CalArts animation program. At the time, Lasseter was an award-winning senior. (Tim Burton was a junior.) Klubien and Lasseter became friends, traveled to Europe together and met each other's families. Both were hired at Disney and for a time, they shared a house near the studio.

Disney was in a relatively fallow period. The two were put to work on The Fox and the Hound. Lasseter, who by several accounts was not an especially talented draftsman, left the company in 1984. "He wasn't really in love with drawing like a lot of us were," Klubien says. Technology held more appeal. "For him, it was more about 'How can we get to do animation in this medium?' "

For a time, Klubien and Lasseter went their separate ways; Lasseter met Ed Catmull, who invited him to work at a new Bay Area computer graphics unit within Lucasfilm. Ultimately, Steve Jobs bought that unit and it became Pixar, with Catmull and Lasseter in leadership roles.

In 1993 — while Toy Story was still in the works — Klubien was hired to work on Pixar's second movie, A Bug's Life. He was credited for helping develop the story and as a storyboard artist but came away feeling that he had not been credited properly as a writer on the film. Concluding that the way to advance was to pitch his own idea for a movie — as Docter had done with Monsters, Inc. — he asked his lawyer, who also represented Lasseter, how to best go about pitching as a Pixar employee. He says he was advised simply to talk to Lasseter.

Inspired by a Disney short called Susie the Little Blue Coupe, Klubien pitched Lasseter on a movie featuring talking cars. Lasseter liked the idea and told him to start drawing to flesh it out. Klubien says he worked for three months on drawings of settings and characters that appear very similar to those in the finished film. Then he pitched the project to Lasseter again but got no immediate response.

He went to work on Monsters, Inc. and Toy Story 2. But then he heard that Lasseter wanted to move ahead on a cars movie. He checked in with Lasseter, who said he did want to go forward but with a different plot from the one Klubien had proposed. With that, Klubien and Ranft set to work on scripting and illustrating the main beats of the new story and, according to Klubien, created a version that had all the main elements of the finished movie. Klubien went with Lasseter as he pitched the project first to Jobs and then to a top team from Disney, including then-CEO Michael Eisner and Roy Disney. "John was great at pitching the story, mentioning me as one of the inspirations for him wanting to do this," Klubien remembers. After the meeting, Eisner wrote in an email: "This is totally original and wonderful."

Klubien believed Lasseter had promised he could co-direct the film. Instead Lasseter named himself as the sole director. Klubien was told his consolation prize would be a story and co-writing credit, shared with Ranft and Lasseter. But Klubien says that while Lasseter gave notes, he was not involved in the day-to-day writing of the script. In meetings on the project, Klubien says, Lasseter often seemed to echo things that he or Ranft had just said — but the person taking notes included only Lasseter's words, making it appear that Lasseter had originated thoughts he was merely repeating. Klubien adds that he had observed the same tactic during the making of A Bug's Life.

Finally, Lasseter shocked Klubien by taking him off the film altogether. Klubien remained at Pixar, developing other ideas, and says he came up with several, including one called The Spirit of New Orleans that he thinks eventually may have morphed into the 2009 Disney film The Princess and the Frog. In 2003, Klubien was fired from Pixar after 10 years at the company. He says he was told that no one wanted to work with him. After that, he says, he found it difficult to get hired elsewhere, a problem that he thought was compounded because he believed his credits did not reflect all of his work at Pixar.

In the end, Klubien says he got a $50,000 payment for the Cars idea. It did little to diminish his disappointment. "I didn't even get invited to the premiere or to Cars Land when it opened," he says, referring to the 12-acre attraction at Disney's California Adventure Park. "I went with my family to see Cars Land and they had a whole museum of how the film and the Cars Land ride was made. And not a sketch, not a mention of my name in it."

Klubien continues: "I was the creative spark behind this franchise. It's John's genius that he got it going, that he was the master of Pixar. And if he had allowed me to be part of it all, I would've been his biggest champion. But I find it to be an abusive thing that he got rid of me to claim sole inventorship." He says Lasseter used to advise people in plain language to learn to take credit. "The thing for me is, why can't you say what it really was?" Klubien says. "You're great enough in that role. What's wrong with that? I just don't get it."

A number of Pixar veterans say the company never had a welcoming environment for women. A glimpse of that became public in 2011, when Brenda Chapman, who had originated the idea for Brave and was in the middle of directing it, was pushed aside and replaced by Mark Andrews. She had been the first woman director of a Pixar feature and received a shared credit when the film was released in 2012. No other woman has ever received a directing credit on a Pixar movie, and no woman has ever been a member of the famed Pixar "Brain Trust," though some have attended meetings.

(Longtime Pixar producer Darla Anderson, one of the few women in the upper echelons of the company, departed in March. While her exit was presented as amicable, sources say there had been complaints about bullying conduct — though one former associate says Anderson's actions were no worse than behavior that was accepted from men. Anderson declined to comment.)

Though Chapman has remained largely mum on her sidelining, she wrote in a 2012 essay in The New York Times that it was "truly distressing" to be replaced by a man on a film that "came from a very personal place, as a woman and a mother." Without addressing Pixar specifically, she continued: "Sometimes women express an idea and are shot down, only to have a man express essentially the same idea and have it broadly embraced. Until there is a sufficient number of women executives in high places, this will continue to happen."

Rashida Jones was hired as a writer on Toy Story 4 but left the project early. Multiple sources say that before Jones exited, Lasseter made an unwanted advance toward her. When THR first reported this Nov. 21, Jones did not deny the incident but said she and her producing partner "did not leave Pixar because of unwanted advances." She then took a shot at the company's culture, adding that "women and people of color do not have an equal creative voice" at Pixar. (A Disney spokesperson says "THR chose to credit only anonymous sources in its original character assassination story [about Lasseter] and then was forced to issue a major factual correction that its entire story hinged on. THR is doing it again based on nothing more than anonymous sources and rumor-mongering." [Editor's Note: No correction was ever issued.]) Another former Pixar insider says she and other women were mostly relegated to supporting roles and expected "to make it seem like the men knew what they were doing." Some women at the company came up with the term "bitchy mommy-wives" to describe the role they were expected to play.

In recent years, this former insider says, it became harder to help Lasseter maintain his image of infallibility, such as when the release date of Pixar's The Good Dinosaur was pushed from November 2013 to May 2014 to November 2015. It was clear that the original approach was troubled, but Lasseter had not reached that conclusion on his own and no one had mustered the nerve to tell him. "He couldn't give notes or fix it," this person says. Ultimately Pixar revised the entire film in a frantic, all-hands rescue effort, scuttling most of the voice talent, including John Lithgow and Neil Patrick Harris. The final product was considered Pixar's first financial disappointment and was shut out of Oscar nominations.

At this point, some insiders believe Iger is quietly preparing to name new heads of Pixar and Disney Animation — those floated include Docter for Pixar and Rich Moore and Jennifer Lee at Disney Animation. But some veterans are angry, saying that the company allowed Lasseter to dominate — and to take credit for the work of others — for too long, only acting in the wake of the #MeToo movement.

"All of his behavior was condoned," says a longtime animator. "It wasn't just the drinking. It was his never having grown up. Some of senior management believed that was part of the secret ingredient when really the secret ingredient was a group of people."



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Fra X
messaggio 5/5/2018, 12:48
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Mamma mia! Diciamo tanto di noi italiani, ma questi ammerecani... sick.gif
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messaggio 12/5/2018, 15:41
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CITAZIONE (Fra X @ 5/5/2018, 13:48) *
Mamma mia! Diciamo tanto di noi italiani, ma questi ammerecani... sick.gif

nono è diverso in Italia


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Daydreamer
messaggio 17/5/2018, 16:04
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Da The Wrap

Disney Considers John Lasseter Return in Limited, Creative Role (Report)

Disney has discussed bringing embattled Pixar boss John Lasseter back to the company in a new role, six months after the head of the studio’s animation division took a self-imposed sabbatical following reported complaints of workplace misconduct.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Disney executives are weighing a new role that would give Lasseter less managerial power but full creative influence over the studio’s considerable animated projects. The proposed new scenario would see Lasseter’s ability to hire or fire staff “removed or contained,” the report said.

A Walt Disney Company spokesperson did not immediately return TheWrap’s request for comment.

A homecoming for the powerful executive would be a departure from how many Hollywood companies have handled men accused of misconduct in the #MeToo era. Reported accusations against Lasseter detailed unwanted hugs and inappropriate interpersonal communication. Disney did not formally impose the leave of absence but let him volunteer.

The studio has a history of accommodating the two-time Oscar winner. The Los Angeles Times reported in early May that Lasseter’s “physical contact sometimes crossed the line and upper management worked diligently to protect the director from his own behavior.”

That report cited almost 10 Pixar employees who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Last November, Lasseter announced he would be taking leave and apologized for what he called “missteps” in his interactions with staffers, which he said made some “feel disrespected or uncomfortable.”

Lasseter said the time would provide an opportunity for him to take “better care of myself, to recharge and be inspired, and ultimately return with the insight and perspective I need to be the leader you deserve.”

The announcement followed a Hollywood Reporter story in which an undisclosed number of “former Pixar insiders” said that Lasseter had frequently made a habit of “grabbing, kissing, making comments about physical attributes” of women at the company.

Lasseter is best known as one of the founders of Pixar and directed films such as “Toy Story,” “A Bug’s Life,” “Toy Story 2,” “Cars” and “Cars 2.” After Disney purchased Pixar in 2006, Lasseter was named the chief creative officer of both Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios, where he oversees all the media giant’s animated films and projects as executive producer.

Lasseter won Academy Awards for Best Animated Short Film (“Tin Toy”) and one Special Achievement Award for “Toy Story.” Pixar itself has won eight Academy Awards and the films have grossed over $6 billion at the box office, domestically.
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veu
messaggio 8/6/2018, 23:21
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Ufficiale! Lasseter uscirà dalla Disney alla fine dell'anno.
A sostituirlo probabilmente Pete Docter (regista di Inside Out) per la Pixar e Jennifer Lee (regista di Frozen) per la Disney Animation.

Dal sito Hollywood Reporter:

John Lasseter to Exit Disney at End of the Year

Directors Pete Docter and Jennifer Lee are expected to take on added roles at Pixar and Disney Animation.
John Lasseter, the creative force behind both Pixar Animation and Walt Disney Animation, is officially exiting his post as chief creative officer of both animation studios at the end of this year, the Walt Disney Co. said.

Until then, he will have a consulting role with the company through Dec. 31.

Disney did not name replacements for Lasseter, but Jennifer Lee, director of Frozen, and Pete Docter, director of Inside Out, are expected to take on greater roles at Disney Animation and Pixar, respectively.

In announcing Lasseter's departure at the end of the year, Robet Iger, Disney chairman and CEO said, "John had a remarkable tenure at Pixar and Disney Animation, reinventing the animation business, taking breathtaking risks, and telling original, high quality stories that will last forever. We are profoundly grateful for his contribution, which included a masterful and remarkable turnaround of The Walt Disney Animation Studios. One of John's greatest achievements is assembling a team of great storytellers and innovators with the vision and talent to set the standard in animation for generations to come.

The decision follows a sabbatical where the fate of the most powerful man in animation had been up in the air. On Nov. 21 last year, acknowledging unspecified “missteps” that left some employees feeling “disrespected or uncomfortable,” Lasseter, 61, announced he would take a six-month leave of absence in order “to start taking better care of myself, to recharge and be inspired, and ultimately return with the insight and perspective I need to be the leader you deserve.”

Lasseter is one of the founders of Pixar, which began as part of the graphics group at Lucasfilm. Along with Ed Catmull, he popularized CGI in animation with early films like Toy Story, A Bug's Life and Monsters Inc.

In 2006, after Disney purchased Pixar, Lasseter was named the chief creative officer of both Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios. He has since become the face of all Disney animation, overseeing the recent resurgence of the studio's namesake brand with properties like Frozen and Moana.

Lasseter, who directed Toy Story and Toy Story 2 among other Pixar films, produces or executive produces every Pixar project and he executive produces every WDA feature. While Lasseter has only won two Oscars (one is a special Oscar for his work on Toy Story), Pixar has racked up an impressive eight best-animated feature wins. Under Lasseter's purview, WDA has picked up three wins, most recently with 2016's Zootopia.

Pixar films have grossed more than $6 billion at the domestic box office. The Emeryville-based company latest feature is Coco, which grossed more than $450 million worldwide in its first three weeks of release. Pixar is currently working on a sequel to The Incredibles and the fourth Toy Story installment. WDA will release a Wreck It Ralph sequel in 2018.


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Daydreamer
messaggio 9/6/2018, 8:13
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Speriamo che l'ingresso di un possibile leader donna possa portare nuova linfa e creatività ai WDAS. Per il resto, tutto è stato abbastanza prevedibile, certamente qualcosa è sfuggito e potrebbe essere stato ingigantito rispetto alla realtà, in epoca #metoo siamo invischiati in un nuovo "maccartismo" nell'industria del cinema, spesso anche ipocrita, come spesso negli USA, si stanno facendo tante vittime sul campo e per ora si vedono solo condanne. Speriamo arrivino anche i benefici.
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messaggio 9/6/2018, 9:13
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Era ampiamente prevedibile. Resto titubante all’idea di mettere a capo degli Studios degli ottimi registi perché non capisco quanto le due cose céntrino, però era inevitabile che si dovesse allontanare Lasseter (anche se penso che continueranno a consultarlo).
Penso anche che sia giusto. Alla fine di tutto quest’uomo, per quanto sia un genio, ha avuto atteggiamenti irrispettosi verso altre persone e ha creato un pessimo ambiente di lavoro attorno a sé, quindi sono d’accordo con la decisione di allontanarlo definitivamente.
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