Could darker movies revive Pixar's fortunes?

Last year's Cars 2 flop pushed the animation king off its pedestal. New edgier films about dinosaurs, Mexico's Day of the Dead, and your brain, could put it back on top

Tim Burton's "Frankenweenie."
(Image credit: 2012 Disney Enterprise)

After nearly two decades of effusive critical praise, awards attention, and blockbuster financial success, Pixar is coming off its most painful year ever. Cars 2 was the studio's worst-reviewed film, its second-lowest grossing (behind only A Bug's Life), and the first not to receive an Oscar nomination in the 10-year history of the Best Animated Feature category. But Pixar may be ready for a comeback. Its new slate of films, just announced at the CinemaCon 2012 festival, is intriguing critics: A movie about El Día de los Muertos (the Mexican holiday Day of the Dead); The Good Dinosaur, about a world in which dinosaurs and humans co-exist; and a project known as The Untitled Pixar Movie That Takes You Inside the Mind, about how people think, dream, and remember things. The new films are set for release over the next few years. Does Pixar's new, darker slate suggest that the studio can reclaim its throne?

Absolutely: The Día de los Muertos film represents a new, adventurous direction for Pixar, says Ben Child at the U.K.'s Guardian. It seems like "the kind of gothic-tinged animated film" that Tim Burton or Coraline director Henry Selick would make. Combine that with a daringly unique project that "takes you inside the mind," and Pixar's new slate should do wonders to "convince naysayers" that the company is as strong as ever. This is a "new lease of life" for the studio.

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