What Is It That Sets Pixar Apart From Every Other Animation Studio?

What Is It That Sets Pixar Apart From Every Other Animation Studio?
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.
Chris Ryan/Getty Images

What are Pixar’s standards that differentiates them from other’s storytelling skills and works? originally appeared on Quora - the place to gain and share knowledge, empowering people to learn from others and better understand the world.

Answer by Craig Good, An original PIxar employee, worked there 31 years, on Quora:

I’d say there are a few key things at work here.

  1. Pixar does not make children’s films. They have yet to make a single one. When you make a film aimed at an audience or a demographic you are making the insane claim that you have the ability to read minds. Most bad, big budget movies are made for an audience. Pixar, on the other hand, makes movies they want to see. At some point in production they have to make sure that the film is still suitable for a young audience (note that they didn’t shy from a PG in the case of The Incredibles), but they do not make the movies for children.
  2. Pixar is a creative driven studio. They don’t seek or accept outside story ideas. If the director doesn’t feel passionate enough about a story to want to spend 5 or 6 years in hell bringing it to the screen, it doesn’t get done. The development department is there to support the directors, not to buy and assign properties to be made.
  3. Pixar’s movies all suck, and they know it. At some point in production, every single Pixar film sucks. The trick is not stopping there. Very few studios are willing to hit the brakes on a production and idle several hundred extremely expensive artists while story problems get worked out. Pixar has done this multiple times. It eats into their profitability, but is good for their reputation.
  4. Pixar only hires the best. I remember lunch with a Toy Story era animator who said that if he were showing up then he’d never get hired. There are so many people who want to work there now that it’s insanely competitive to get in. Want to work in production at Pixar? Simple: Just be better than 99.9% of everybody else in the industry. And hope there’s an opening.
  5. Pixar values its employees. It understands that the only meaningful assets it has are the people who make the movies happen, and who enable those who do. It can be a very demanding environment, but they do what they can to make it a rewarding one. (Now that the studio is so big this happens with varying degrees of success, but they do try.)
  6. Story really is king. It’s not just a slogan. Story drives everything creative at the studio: Technology, art, and even the layout of the buildings. This attitude is foundational. John Lasseter mentioned when we were making Toy Story that the “new” look of the film would keep an audience engaged for about ten minutes. After that, if the story didn’t carry the film, it would crash and burn.

This question originally appeared on Quora - the place to gain and share knowledge, empowering people to learn from others and better understand the world. You can follow Quora on Twitter, Facebook, and Google+. More questions:

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot