Last "traditionally" animated Disney movie ever

>last "traditionally" animated Disney movie ever
what went wrong?

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None of the cows were fucked by strong bulls on-screen.

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i loved the style used, it was like atlantis but with animals

Were PatF and Winnie the Pooh not traditional?

They didn't draw them sexy enough.

full digital

Every Disney after Little Mermaid is digital.

no porn

>every scene have their orifices shown
imagine the fucking sales

The last traditional animated movie was Princess and the frog.

>Shrill characters.
>Obvious executive meddling.
>Was suppose to be released before Brother Bear but they switched the release date instead.
>Fat ugly women trio protagonists.

The visual style was great and I love the idea of a Disney movie taking place in the west, but the writing and story were so unbelievably fucked that this movie was never going to be good.

No it wasn't

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This and Chicken Little was just Disney trying to do the DreamWorks formula since Shrek mogged Atlantis at the box office and TP bombed hard.
They just didn’t give a shit anymore at this point.

It was fun. It wasn't a "Disney" movie, but it respected its genre and was self-aware.

what does Home on the Range even has in common with Shrek?

Not enough retarded cute pets.

There were like 5 of those

The 3D cabal made it go wrong on possible to convince the market that 2D was dead as a medium and further the 3D agenda.

I'll tell you what I thought as a kid.
I'd rather watch those cowboys than some gay ass pandering farm animal sidekicks

>ugly
Them's fighting words.

>The story originated as a supernatural western about a timid cowboy who visits a ghost town and confronts an undead cattle hustler named Slim.

Sounds WAY cooler than the movie we got. And Slim was the only good part of the movie.