I'm very glad that Pixar didn't pull a Newt with Coco and didn't dump it because it would have been too similar to Book of Life (which is a good movie in its own right, and the director has been working on that one longer than Pixar was on Coco). I just hope it gets better reception and manages to break free of a Minority Show Ghetto (TVTropes' term, not mine).
I still don't know what to think about TS 4. I really, really liked what Pixar was doing with the shorts and specials, continuing the story and the characters without having to produce a full hour and a half long movie. And it's not like the universe wasn't expanded and characters weren't developed. The Halloween special had a great character piece about Jesse and her claustrophobia due to being boxed away for years. The Time Forgot special gave third movie's secondary character Trixie some much needed character expansion. Small Fry even expanded on the abandonment issue with the most expendable kid's toy their is, the fast food premium. All without being Toy Stories 4, 5, 6, and 7.
Now, I really think they could make this a half hour Valentines special and it would still work, and if it really needs the full kid's movie length to work is to be seen.
As for Cars 3, I really want them to go back and do what made Cars 1 special. There's no doubt this is because the cars are perennial best sellers, but the second movie had pretty much a Saturday Morning cartoon plot. Visually, I find it superior to the first movie as they were no longer limited to a rundown town and had to be clever with the alternate sentient car timeline architecture. As for the plot, I think they pushed it as far as they could with a simple "should have been an episode of the cartoon show" plot. They made it a nice Mater piece, and threw in some delightful oil company conspiracy, but overall the film didn't play to anyone that wasn't a fan of the film or anyone over the age of 9 (generously). Hopefully they'll get a more sophisticated story for the third one, making it the Iron Man 2 of the franchise. I do enjoy Cars unironically, knowing full well it wasn't Pixar's best work, but also knowing Pixar shouldn't have to make all their films tearjerkers. In fact, after Up's devastating opening and TS3's so beautiful you can't help cry ending, it was refreshing to not come out of a Pixar film choking back tears. Then Inside Out came and brought that feeling back again.
I still don't know what to think about TS 4. I really, really liked what Pixar was doing with the shorts and specials, continuing the story and the characters without having to produce a full hour and a half long movie. And it's not like the universe wasn't expanded and characters weren't developed. The Halloween special had a great character piece about Jesse and her claustrophobia due to being boxed away for years. The Time Forgot special gave third movie's secondary character Trixie some much needed character expansion. Small Fry even expanded on the abandonment issue with the most expendable kid's toy their is, the fast food premium. All without being Toy Stories 4, 5, 6, and 7.
Now, I really think they could make this a half hour Valentines special and it would still work, and if it really needs the full kid's movie length to work is to be seen.
As for Cars 3, I really want them to go back and do what made Cars 1 special. There's no doubt this is because the cars are perennial best sellers, but the second movie had pretty much a Saturday Morning cartoon plot. Visually, I find it superior to the first movie as they were no longer limited to a rundown town and had to be clever with the alternate sentient car timeline architecture. As for the plot, I think they pushed it as far as they could with a simple "should have been an episode of the cartoon show" plot. They made it a nice Mater piece, and threw in some delightful oil company conspiracy, but overall the film didn't play to anyone that wasn't a fan of the film or anyone over the age of 9 (generously). Hopefully they'll get a more sophisticated story for the third one, making it the Iron Man 2 of the franchise. I do enjoy Cars unironically, knowing full well it wasn't Pixar's best work, but also knowing Pixar shouldn't have to make all their films tearjerkers. In fact, after Up's devastating opening and TS3's so beautiful you can't help cry ending, it was refreshing to not come out of a Pixar film choking back tears. Then Inside Out came and brought that feeling back again.