Talk:Moana/@comment-24791592-20140424125008/@comment-24791592-20140425112513

^ And let's not forget Totoro showing up in Toy Story 3! I love all 3 companies tbh, I just think Disney has been with me all my life because it was so popular when I was born. My entire family life has something to do with Disney. The first film my grandmother saw in a cinema was Snow White when it was first released, as her dad took her to see it while her mother gave birth to her brother. My mother's first film in a cinema was Herbie: The Love Bug, a live action Disney, and mines was Toy Story. I was 2 years old, and my dad took me to see it. Conversely, my brother's first was Shrek! He fell asleep during it, he was only little and it was so cute! I'm a fan of most animation (I particularly love Ice Age and Despicable Me), so anything will do for me. Very few have disappointed me. Only one Disney animation I can think of that made little sense to me was Mars Needs Moms. Don't get me wrong, I was grateful at the time of seeing it, but it didn't interest me enough to buy the DVD for my collection. Anyway, animation is (mostly) better than live action, mainly in kids films. Live action films never grabbed my attention. The closest to that was the Lizzie McGuire Movie, Freaky Friday and Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, and even those I feel is dead and buried. It was like the original early live action/hybrid movies didn't appeal to me (Mary Poppins, Song of the South, Pollyanna, Bedknobs and Broomsticks), those I mentioned from the early 2000s did a little, and after the Disney channel churned out High School Musical, Hannah Montana and Camp Rock I realised that live action movies are not worth it for kids. I guess I found them limited, even the likes of Bedknobs and Broomsticks which had both animation and live action, as there was very little fantasy in them. Flying a magic carpet or turning a mermaid into a human or seeing a little wooden puppet come to life in live action is hard to do.