Blade Hoarder
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Do you remember the order of these? Pocahontas is the other one I would have considered if it was just down to my preference, but it didn’t seem to hit that big. Which one came out first after the 4 mentioned?To me it was Beauty/Aladdin/Lion King/Mulan/Tarzan/Hercules
Pocahontas and Hunchback also came out around that time frame. But I remember them not being as popular
Is The Little Mermaid as beloved as The Lion King or Aladdin, though? At least as far as name recognition.
Never seen it, so I have no idea- or any real reaction to this new version- but something like the live-action The Lion King or Aladdin, regardless of their quality, I can see how they did as well as they did. Not to mention the Disney marketing machine. Has The Little Mermaid ever been on that same level?
The Little Mermaid - '89Do you remember the order of these? Pocahontas is the other one I would have considered if it was just down to my preference, but it didn’t seem to hit that big. Which one came out first after the 4 mentioned?
Ah thanks!! This makes perfect sense now. I was still very much on board after Lion King and going in to Pocahontas. Was disappointed that it didn't catch fire like Aladdin and TLK (the peak of the era) and from Hunchback onwards it felt like we'd gone back down to silver medal standard - still great but not the same highs. Not to say that the following films were necessarily weaker than TLM & BatB, but those were-part of the build-up period and the overall excitement as films came out wasn't the same for me when it felt like the era was over/winding down/transitioning to Pixar.The Little Mermaid - '89
Rescuers Down Under - '90 (the forgotten stepchild of the Renaissance era)
Beauty and the Beast - '91
Aladdin - '92
The Lion King - '94
Pocahontas - '95
Hunchback of Notre Dame - '96
Hercules - '97
Mulan - '98
Tarzan - '99
Mostly killer, no filler. TLM, BatB, Aladdin and TLK are my Mt. Rushmore for important childhood Disney movies. Hunchback, Hercules, Tarzan and The Jungle Book are runners up.
The Little Mermaid - '89
Rescuers Down Under - '90 (the forgotten stepchild of the Renaissance era)
Beauty and the Beast - '91
Aladdin - '92
The Lion King - '94
Pocahontas - '95
Hunchback of Notre Dame - '96
Hercules - '97
Mulan - '98
Tarzan - '99
Mostly killer, no filler. TLM, BatB, Aladdin and TLK are my Mt. Rushmore for important childhood Disney movies. Hunchback, Hercules, Tarzan and The Jungle Book are runners up.
The 2000s were a dark time for Disney Animation with the exception of Lilo and Stitch being as successful as it was. Besides Home on the Range, none of them were really bad. Some of them were actually pretty good (Emperor's New Groove, Atlantis) but they still don't hold a candle to peak Disney Renaissance period.The box office is interesting too. Hitting its peak with Lion King, but starting to rise again with Mulan and Tarzan, only to drop off again once Pixar and Dreamworks became the main staple of animation in the early 2000s.
The Little Mermaid - $84,355,863
The Rescuers Down Under - $27,931,461
Beauty and the Beast - $145,863,36
Aladdin - $217,350,219
The Lion King - $312,855,561
Pocahontas - $141,579,773
The Hunchback of Notre Dame - $100,138,851
Hercules - $99,112,101
Mulan - $120,620,254
Tarzan -$171,091,819
--
Fantasia 2000 -$60,655,420
Dinosaur -$137,748,063
The Emperor's New Groove -$89,302,687
Atlantis: The Lost Empire -$84,056,472
Lilo & Stitch -$145,794,338
Treasure Planet -$38,176,783
Brother Bear -$85,336,277
Home on the Range -$50,030,461
How dare you forget Treasure Planet?The 2000s were a dark time for Disney Animation with the exception of Lilo and Stitch being as successful as it was. Besides Home on the Range, none of them were really bad. Some of them were actually pretty good (Emperor's New Groove, Atlantis) but they still don't hold a candle to peak Disney Renaissance period.

I like it fine. Good, not great.How dare you forget Treasure Planet?![]()

Disney must have had no faith in it because they opened it up against a Harry Potter movie.It's sad to think Treasure Planet was/is the biggest modern bomb of Disney Animation history. Glad that it didn't kill Musker and Clements career though with Princess and the Frog and Moana finishing their run.
Thanks for putting this together, also very interesting to see the trends. Disappointing that Disney couldn’t maintain the levels after TLK. From the modern films I think Tangled and Frozen are great and might have also done well during this renaissance period and kept the run going.The box office is interesting too. Hitting its peak with Lion King, but starting to rise again with Mulan and Tarzan, only to drop off again once Pixar and Dreamworks became the main staple of animation in the early 2000s.
The Little Mermaid - $84,355,863
The Rescuers Down Under - $27,931,461
Beauty and the Beast - $145,863,36
Aladdin - $217,350,219
The Lion King - $312,855,561
Pocahontas - $141,579,773
The Hunchback of Notre Dame - $100,138,851
Hercules - $99,112,101
Mulan - $120,620,254
Tarzan -$171,091,819
--
Fantasia 2000 -$60,655,420
Dinosaur -$137,748,063
The Emperor's New Groove -$89,302,687
Atlantis: The Lost Empire -$84,056,472
Lilo & Stitch -$145,794,338
Treasure Planet -$38,176,783
Brother Bear -$85,336,277
Home on the Range -$50,030,461

It is also almost universally agreed upon to be the bad Renaissance movie, so even if it wasn't problematic it would probably struggle.
Want to see a good Pocahontas movie, watch this one:
View attachment 58651
Looks like “redheads are being replaced and erased” takes are back on the menu. Notice that absolutely nothing was said about the daredevil actor not having red hair recently. Which exposes what this is really about.
Most people who argue "redheads are being erased" think that you have to be born a redhead lol and dont understand that 90% of the red headed actresses are bottled red heads.