What the heck is this?!

I keep seeing these popping up in tesco they just make me laugh XD theyre gonna be forgotten the minute theyre taken off the shelves, not as if anyones buyin them at £13 lol what where they thinking/

Ugh… They had “What’s Up” at my local grocery store today. They also had “The Frog Prince” Which is obviously a rip-off of “The Princess and The Frog”

They’re doing that with Disney now too? Well, come to think of it I’ve always seen DVDs of cheaper versions of Disney films like Aladdin and Snow White, though they’re probably not from the same people that are intentionally ripping off Pixar’s work. I don’t think I would want to know what their version of Toy Story would be like.

Yeah, apparently, they are doing it with Disney now. As soon as I saw it, I was like “This looks familiar” and it only took me a second to realize that it was a rip-off of “The Princess And the Frog” I don’t think I wanna know what their version of “Toy Story” would be like ethier.

Edited. There is no need to quote the entire post. – Mitch

Worst movie ever! :angry: I could only watch for 8 miniutes…

I read this topic a little bit before I joined, and a few days later, I went to Family Video and passed the kids section. And what did I see? A rip-off of Finding Nemo! I forget what it was called, though. And you know what else? It was RIGHT NEXT to Finding Nemo! Way to go, VB. :unamused:

i feel so bad to say that all that crap comes from brazil! I’m brazilian and I love Pixar, and I know how this Video Brinquedo is awful… They ripped off Cars, Bee Movie, Ratatouille, etc. I don’t know if I should be angry or just laugh at them.

Here’s a list of all their films:

The Little Cars
Ratatooing
Little Bee
Gladiformers
The Little Panda Fighter - Previously known as Heavy Weight Panda
Tiny Robots
Little Princess School
What’s Up?: Balloon to the rescue
Little & Big Monsters
The Frog Prince
Toy Tales
Little Princess School 2

Edit: Trailer for Little Princess School
[url]- YouTube
I am speechless and appalled.

I found part 1 to “What’s Up?: Balloon To the Rescue!”!

[url]- YouTube

Terrible.

Wow, dude, seriously, wow. I knew they were good in ripping off but seriously?

Do these dudes seriously think they can get away with that? Also, why is there almost always a synonym for small in the titles? I can think of way more. :stuck_out_tongue:
(isn’t it because little can be part of words in that language?)

To quote one of my favourite parodies:
‘Little Bee is a terrible story which humans really don’t like.’

There is a saying that goes… “If it looks like an apple, if it smells like an apple, if it tastes like an apple, then it must be an apple”.

Seriously. What make this different from Up? And Ratatoing? Little Cars? Tiny Robots? THATS SACRILEGE!!! (especially the last one)

This is ridiculous! Toy Tales!? You’ve gotta be kidding me…

What? :open_mouth: Toy Tales? I wonder what the plot is. Probably something very similar to all the other rip-offs.

Toy Story?
Toy Tales?

Hmm… yeah, that sounds nothing like a ripoff. :unamused:

Story’s basicly the same as tale.
Also, OMG these movies have terrible aimation (I’ve only seen parts but they probably have) and why hasn’t Pixar sued these crapimators yet? They’re also definately and seriously copying Disney with The Frog Prince and Little Princess School. Really, some of the characters are IDENTICAL. I don’t care for the franchise but seriously.

This just feels so illegal. My skin is crawling thinking about it.

I just discovered yesterday that Pixar may in fact have ripped someone else off to make Up… “Above then Beyond” and Pixar’s “Up”

Not to mention there’s parallels between Miyazaki’s Howl’s Moving Castle and a little known Werner Herzog film called Fitzcarraldo…

But I think ‘What’s Up’ is practically asking for it… maybe we should just take it as a very sincere form of flattery (albeit one that pinches some of Pixar’s profits from more ignorant viewers)?

Wow, the similarities between Up and “Above then Beyond” are striking. The chairs in her living room reminded me of Carl’s chair, the men in suits were very similar in both films, and the relation of the house to the city is also similar in both films, not to mention the age of both main characters.

This short film was very touching, but I do not feel like PIxar “stole” from these film makers. It seems though this short did have some influence in certain aspects of Up.

For one, the idea of a house floating away really isn’t that original. As I child I saw many programs on TV where the characters pondered things being lifted by ballons, even a house. In an episode of Spongebob, Squidward’s house is surrounded by a bubble and floats high above the surface of the water. Even the notion of a flying home is just an expansion of a mobile home/flying car.

So perhaps the floating house in Up isn’t the most original. However, Pete Docter’s second film is still one of the most original pieces produced by Pixar. It is the way the floating house is just a piece of this extrememly creative story that makes Up so original.

I see the similarities, but I wouldn’t call it solid copying, because they elaborated the idea and made Up much more meaningful and uplifting than the short.

Naturally, being Pixar fans I guess we would defend our favourite studio. TBH, I haven’t seen “Above then Beyond” yet (cos’ I’m afraid it might tarnish my perception of Pixar’s originality)…

I just don’t understand the hypocrisy here… people here are complaining two upcoming movies ‘Rio’ and ‘Alpha and Omega’ are ripping off ‘Newt’ (even though all three probably went into production at the same time, and it was likely a product of divine coincidence), yet we refuse to acknowledge that Pixar may have in fact copied other people’s work?

If you’ve read ‘The Pixar Touch’, there was a lawsuit filed by a children’s writer against Pixar after she found out some of their characters from Monsters Inc were apparently based on her own. The case was dropped (I forgot why), but I am a little skeptical about Pixar’s claim to being original. Granted, they do try, but we have to acknowledge that it’s hard to set a precedent for storylines nowadays.