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That is La Muerte. She is made out of sweet sugar candy.

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At this year's Annecy Festival, Jorge R. Gutiérrez announced that 'The Book of Life 2' is actually happening.
BOOK OF LIFE 2 CONFIRMED
New Coco poster! And a new trailer is coming next week.
Lmao anyway fuck disney for refusing to do the book of life because of racism and then doing a movie exactly like it
And fuck them, an American company, for having the audacity to try and copyright Dia de los Muertos, a Mexican cultural holiday. It’s sickening.
The plot of Coco is literally the plot of The Book of Life with some minor changes so the plagiarism isn’t that blatantly obvious.
Boycot this movie. Disney didn’t want to make The Book of Life because it would not interest USAmerican (ahem gringo ahem) audiences. And now they are basically plagiarising TBL.
Disney made it abundantly clear they only care about using Latin American cultures, Mexican in this case, for money, but actually don’t care about Latinxs/Latin Americans and respectful and authentic rep. If not, look at The Emperor’s New Groove and that wtf thing they did with Elena of Avalor.
Ah yes, boycotting a racially and culturally diverse film will really show Disney that they should……… stick to…….. white movies? That doing anything besides a ‘safe’ film will end in boycotts and rage on the internet?
Also like….
“The day John Lasseter gave the thumbs up for this movie, I immediately felt this huge weight drop onto my shoulders because I knew that we were doing something different than we had ever made at the studio and that for the first time, we were going to have this enormous responsibility to do right by this culture and not lapse into stereotype or cliché,”
and…
The result is that Unkrich secured an all-Latino voice cast (including Gael Garcia Bernal as a skeleton named Hector who helps Miguel on his journey in the Land of the Dead) and sought authenticity via numerous story consultants, key crew members and filmmakers (like co-director Adrian Molina), and musical talent culled from artists down in Mexico. Unkrich, Molina, and producer Darla K. Anderson made frequent trips south of the border (in fact, Lasseter approved the film just three weeks before one Dia de Muertos fell, spurring a first-time scramble to not miss out) and soon sent his story artists, production designers, and even sound crew down to take the aesthetic pulse of villages.
From x
Also looks like this was in pre production in 2013 so thats probably part of why they didnt want to pick up BoL? It could have been for any reason tbh
Anyways like, if you dont wanna support it don’t but y’all are always clamoring for more varied representation in dinsey and pixar so maybe don’t boycott a film they are using to test to waters? Like if they make another Scandinavian fantasy film after this and you all rage Im gonna remember this, put your money where your mouth is :/
Also like, am I crazy or has Disney not been actively including latin@ representation? Or is Elena Princess of Avalore a fever dream Ive been having
Remember don’t get on the hate bandwagon with no proof; you claim that the story is a rip-off but you don’t go into any detail about either plot. We’re supposed to just believe your interpretation? I’d definitely need to know a lot more about Coco before casting judgment.
And Book of Life came out in 2014, if Coco was in pre-production at 2013 it could easily have been passed over for the fact that they already had an in house story to represent that market, and we all know full well that Disney likes to go through a different cultural story/background for each feature film as part of their longstanding tradition.
Even if you want to assume the worst and that their motives were bad and that they’re some evil megacorporation, which you can surely be entitled to think I’m not going to say Disney is amazing and doesn’t have a horrible history- at the very least they are finally making non-white movies. Boycotting the very content we have been begging for for ages isn’t going to get us anywhere, it’s just going to make that content that we asked for unable to turn a profit and therefore impossible to create and sustain a business with. We can’t expect people to make content and not support themselves on it as well, they need to make money to be viable sources of income to sustain the business. If this film doesn’t make money all Disney is going to know is that they can’t make feature films about Latino stories/cultures/etc because it won’t sell.
Ohhhhh, I love it when non-Latinx people try to tell Latinxs what they should and shouldn’t be offended by.
Jorge Gutierrez pitched TBOL to Disney sometime before 2002, speaking from & inspired by his own life and relationship with his father & culture, and got dismissively turned down by every studio he approached, told Latinx stories weren’t marketable and that nobody wanted to see a movie about the Day of the Dead, until he convinced Guillermo del Toro (another Mexican, incidentally) to believe in him and produce the film.
Coco was announced as being in pre-production (as in production was not yet underway) well after TBOL was in post, and TBOL was already testing favorably despite having been passed on by Disney execs over a decade prior.
On top of Disney attempting to copyright a fucking holiday from indigenous / Native diaspora Latin American traditions venerating dead family and ancestors– when you’d never dream of attempting to copyright Christmas, Easter, or St. Patrick’s Day without getting laughed out of the patent office– and all designed, naturally, to be monetized and commodified and sold without regard for their cultural significance just like the brownface “skin-shirts” Disney was selling after Moana’s release covered in Maui’s tattoos (another specific cultural + spiritual practice added to the brownface element)– those quotes from Lasseter et al. came after immediate outcry and signature collection protests from Latinx communities once Disney’s legal moves became public knowledge, and before TBOL was released.
And, uh, as an old-timer over here, I can tell you personally that Disney’s been real comfortable tokenizing PoC in the past as well, from Three Caballeros and John Henry on up, complete with romanticized settler-conqueror meets sexy Native musicals in Pocahontas, a weird over-use of pentatonic scales in Mulan’s score, several off-color lines in Aladdin, and the list goes on.
And, in fact, RE: Elena of Avalor, I haven’t watched enough of that show to weigh in on its content specifically (though she sure looks familiar…), but I do know part of the outcry around that is that Disney initially suggested that their TV show Sofia the First would feature its first Latinx princess… until that statement was messily redacted. Elena came years later– on TV rather than theatrically, natch– and it felt like a too-little, too-late one-size-fits-all attempt at a faux apology consolation prize when she debuted, especially since her backstory is being saved by this white princess who was supposed to be Latinx from the jump.
Just as a side note, since I guess that was supposed to be a rhetorical “gotcha” checkmate moment.
But I guess even though Latinxs have been talking about this specific issue for 4+yrs now, I’m hopping on a hate bandwagon with no proof… so just because it costs $0.00 to Google, here’s how the descriptions for TBOL vs. Coco read.
The Book of Life:
IMDB –
Manolo, a young man who is torn between fulfilling the expectations of his family* (see below) and following his heart, embarks on an adventure that spans three fantastic worlds where he must face his greatest fears.
RogerEbert.com (selection from a review) –
Our main hero, the tender-hearted Manola (Diego Luna, whose boyish vocals are a constant source of plaintive pleasure), comes from a long line of legendary bullfighters and is skilled in the ring himself. But his true calling is that of a guitar-strumming troubadour…
iO9 (selection) –
Manolo becomes a talented bullfighter, but one morally opposed to “finishing” (which is to say killing) the bull. (It’s hard to say which disappoints his father more, Manolo’s refusal to kill or his deep heartfelt wish to become a musician.) […] Plus, there is Xibalba’s interference, which eventually sends Manolo on a journey through the afterlife, including the endless party that is the Land of the Remembered and the grim Land of the Forgotten.
Coco:
Wikipedia (via Pixar’s official website) –
Coco follows a 12-year-old boy named Miguel who sets off a chain of events relating to a century-old mystery, leading to an extraordinary family reunion.
Despite his family’s generation-old ban on music, Miguel (Anthony Gonzalez) dreams of becoming an accomplished musician like his idol Ernesto de la Cruz (Benjamin Bratt). Desperate to prove his talent, Miguel finds himself in the Land of the Dead. Along the way, he meets charming trickster Hector (Gael García Bernal) and together they set off on an extraordinary journey to unlock the real story behind Miguel’s family history.
(The Wiki page for Coco also confirms that consultants weren’t hired until after the copyright snafu, btw… ☕)
Bonus! Visual comparisons, because these have been floating around for a while, now, too, with Coco followed by TBOL:
(src with breakdown)
(src with breakdown)
(src 1, src 2, and a gifset with more shots of Grandma Sánchez in her wicker-/woven-backed wheelchair)
…So don’t give me that “at least be happy that they’re giving you attention” B.S. when that attention is being used to dehumanize, degrade, and insult me to my goddamn face– while ripping off people from my community representing themselves. You don’t get to blame me for protesting being mistreated and pillaged for “edutainment” content and consumption for and BY non-Latinxs, if and when I’m successful enough that the people who are trying to use me and mine give up on being parasites on my cultures, and, of their own volition, either do or don’t go back to racist habits they had well before I got here.
You don’t get to justify me being fucked over as acceptable collateral damage who needs to sit down, shut up, and take it with a smile just because “it was worse yesterday and if you say no it’ll be worse tomorrow,” with the implication that I oughta let my folks be denigrated for the “greater good” of other people not dealing with that– as if, somehow, by taking subpar treatment, my exploitation will enlighten others into treating somebody else better. As if I’m supposed to make this gesture in good faith, presuming that statement makes sense in the first goddamned place.
It don’t work like that, fam. Either I’m powerful enough to have been a neglected audience for no reason and therefore am well within my rights to demand not being insulted, if my protests are somehow magically strong enough to blame me for white racism more than those folks’ free will; or I’m marginalized and desperate for representation, and I’m being given dirty dishwater, and protests are the only way for my minority ass to get loud enough to gain traction to be heard– not necessarily obeyed, but even heard– alongside the House of Mouse.
Neither situation demands gratitude, nor are Disney or Pixar (or any of y’all) owed that; or me turning my brain off to spare them having to face an audience of critical-thinking Latinxs examining the ways in which we are supposed to be grateful to be represented; or my money for a movie ticket.
Or even, tbh, the right to pry into my business about how I’m spending or not spending my money, since neither Disney, Pixar, or any of y’all is out here paying my Latinx-ass bills.
So you can feel free to try it on the next person you meet, but I’m not the one today, tomorrow, or yesterday.
Coco was announced as a deliberate attempt to take out Book of LIfe before release. They weren’t close to ready on production. If anyone’s paid any attention to pixar over literally the last decade they’d know it’s a dumpster fire of decay. They were on fire at this time and it’s pretty clear Coco was in the same phase of preproduction Avatar 2 has been in for six years. I mean. Just look at them since 2010. Toy Story 3 (a movie I love with my whole heart, but features fiery latin lover mode for Buzz Lightyear). Then it goes sequel, brave, sequel, inside out, the death of pixar that was good dinosaur, sequel, sequel, Coco (which is a ‘cover’ of book of life), sequel, sequel, sequel. That’s what pixar has been doing. So pardon me if I’m dubious about them having the ability to craft a wholly original story from a culture not their own that turns out good. I mean. It’s obviously stolen.
“who cares if coco and the book of life have such similar plots? just be glad theres more movies about dia de los muertos!”
that would be a nice sentiment if disney hadnt tried to trademark “day of the dead” to make its movie, trying to make it so it would be the only company able to market the holiday and basically reducing it to nothing more than another means to make money
plus disney rejected jorge and wouldn’t make tbol because there’d be no audience for a dia de los muertos movie
and then they were like nvm we wanna capitalize on this
“Can I copy your homework?”
“Yeah but change it a bit so it doesn’t look the same.”
I’m sorry, but I don’t want to hear anything positive about Pixar’s Coco. A studio who denied Jorge Gutierrez on The Book of Life - now are making a complete rip off…appalling.

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How do you feel about the upcoming Mexican Pixar movie about the day of the dead?
Listen, Jorge Gutierrez was rejected by Disney Pixar and by basically every other major animation producer when he tried to make The Book Of Life. If Del Toro hadn’t come along and agreed to produce the movie himself, TBOL would have never seen the light of day. (source)
GUTIERREZ: I had this movie for 14 years. Ever since I was in film school, I wanted to make it. When I got out, I pitched it to every studio and everybody told me the same thing. “You’re just some dumb kid out of school, and no one’s interested in the subject matter, and there’s no audience for Hispanic movies.” It took a long time. Eventually, I pitched the movie to Guillermo’s people four times and he said, “No.”
DEL TORO: When I heard it was on the Day of the Dead, in the last 15 years I had heard many, many Day of the Dead pitches. I didn’t like it because they were all postcard, folkloric, or coldly calculated things and none of them felt personal. Finally, Cary Granat said, “You have to meet the guy and see some of the art. If you don’t relate to that, that’s it.” So I met with Jorge – he’ll tell you the story – but I immediately connected to it because it was personal to him. For me to produce, I am so busy. I don’t have a personal life. I am a ruin. I’m dedicated to projects that support my family that goes with me. They cannot integrate themselves into that life. But I said, “Do I want to do this?” When I met Jorge, I knew there was something that we could do beautifully together, but more important than anything, I wanted to protect the movie. One of the reasons I was interested is because the things that make the movie great now are the things I knew were going to get us a lot of “no’s” from the studios.
If TBOL hadn’t gotten as much critical acclaim as it did and gotten enough revenue for Fox to approve a sequel and possibly a third movie too, Coco would have never become a serious project.
[image: screencap of a tweet by Jorge R. Gutierrez (@mexopolis) that reads “Who wants to see this movie? Asking for a friend.” with the poster for “the Book of Life 2″]
On the one hand we have TBOL, which was imagined, written, produced and directed by Mexican artists. On the other hand we have Disney, who rejected Jorge Gutierrez’ proposal for a Mexican-based movie and who tried to trademark “Day of the Dead” to make money off it after TBOL was announced (source).
I mean, sure, the same cartoonist who said this:
“How could Disney allow such a blunder,” marveled Lalo Alcaraz, a Mexican-American editorial cartoonist and founder of Pocho.com. “I knew they weren’t copyrighting the holiday, but I couldn’t believe they would let someone in their legal department let this happen. On the surface, it looks like Disney is trying to copyright the holiday.”
[image: a cartoon of Mickey Mouse as a skeleton destroying a city, with the legend “Muerto Mouse: it’s coming to trademark your cultura!”]
Is also now working on the movie, (source)
Several years ago, when Disney tried to trademark the Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), political cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz was one of the most vocal critics. That’s why it came as a surprise to many when news broke this week that Pixar, which is owned by Disney, hired Alcaraz to work on its animated film “Coco” that’s centered on the Mexican holiday. (…) Several years ago, when Disney tried to trademark the Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead), political cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz was one of the most vocal critics. That’s why it came as a surprise to many when news broke this week that Pixar, which is owned by Disney, hired Alcaraz to work on its animated film “Coco” that’s centered on the Mexican holiday.
But Disney’s intentions are still suspicious. I mean, their treatment of Elena of Avalor has already been more than questionable… For starters, the fact that the first Latina princess in Disney’s history gets a TV-show instead of a movie. (source)
TV is great, but all of the major Disney princesses appeared on film, first. So, what does is say when there’s no Latina princess with her own movie? (…) We could give Disney the benefit of the doubt since they may not be able to milk two new princesses at the same time, but that also means they decided Elena isn’t worthy of the big screen treatment. Despite that fact that in 2015 alone, Disney released 12 feature films.
Disney could’ve added Elena to its slate. It’s not too big of a burden for Disney to create a princess who represents 17% of the nation’s population — which is why I refuse to accept that the Latina community’s first Disney princess will not be in theaters.
As a Latina, I’m sick of being told to be grateful to have a princess when movie after movie features strong, usually white, heroines. And while I’m a light-toned Puerto Rican (that’s a whole other can of worms), I believe my culture deserves to be viewed by a national audience, not just households with kids 5 and under.
Latinas haven’t waited 79 years and fought for recognition to accept a supporting role.
[image: a promotional still of Elena of Avalor, holding a Spanish guitar and wearing a red dress inspired of traditional flamenco dresses.]
And then we have the fact that she… She isn’t even Latina. She’s a caricature. She represents no actual Latinx in the entire continent. (source)
Elena isn’t indigenous or Afro-Latina or from a specific Latin-American country. She is a thin, light-brown Latina princess from Avalor, a made up Latin-American-esque kingdom that exists in a pre-colonial, pre-Columbian world. This, by the way, is baffling: how does one understand their Latino identity without acknowledging colonialism? While the backdrop of Elena is influenced by Mayan culture and Chilean folklore, her race and ethnicity is otherwise based in Disney fantasy.
(For a better understanding of what is and isn’t Latinx, check this post.)
[image: Miguel from “Coco” sitting on the edge of his grandma’s wheelchair, both smiling.]
To add to it, “Coco” sounds like a straight plagiarism from TBOL (source)
According to Entertainment Weekly, Miguel lives in a Mexican village and dreams of becoming a musician. The only problem? His family has sworn off music ever since Miguel’s great-great-grandfather abandoned his wife to pursue his own musical dreams.
While trying to emulate his musical hero, the late Ernesto de la Cruz (voiced by Benjamin Bratt), Miguel accidentally enters the Land of the Dead. There, he teams up with the aforementioned funny skeleton (voiced by Mozart in the Jungle’s Gael Garcia Bernal), meets his ancestors, and tries to track down his idol.
We have a hero who wants to make music but doesn’t have his family’s support (Miguel’s family has sworn off music, Manolo wants to be a musician but his family wants him to be a torero). We have a hero accidentally entering the Land Of The Dead and meeting his ancestors. Bet you $20 that Miguel becomes a “Day of the Dead”-styled skeleton during this trip to the Land of the Dead.
[image: Disney representatives speaking in front of a projection of the “Coco” title.]
Like “Moana” is an amalgam of Polynesian tradition and cultures created by white people first and foremost for white people’s consumption (check Fangirl Jeanne’s criticism of it), Elena of Avalor and now Coco are heading in the same direction, and the worst part is that we’re constantly being told by white fans that we should be grateful for whatever “representation” these major producers decide to throw at us.
Let’s just hope they don’t go around selling sugar-skull masks and make-up with the Disney trademark like they did with the brownface Polynesian-tattoo costume for Moana. (source)
[image: photos of a full body suit in the tone of brown skin and covered in traditional Polynesian tattoos, with a skirt made of leaves.]
The world of Pixar is expanding in a big, dead, musical way in November 2017. Coco is Pixar’s next original movie, and it’s the sole novel film for...
why is concept art always 300% better than the final product especially in western animation
99% of the replies to this are twelve page essays about how time consuming it would be to animate concept art like . buddy. i know. im in film school for animation. u ppl needa know how 2 see a funie joke on the internet and move on without takin it so seriously
aight but have none of those ppl seen The Book of Life bc uh lemme tell you
the concept art and the finalized versions of sets, characters, and scenes in the film look THE SAME. The Book of Life had a lower budget than Frozen too so uh…….. 👀 y’all need to open ya eyes
Two years ago, Los Angeles art gallery iam8bit presented a great idea: an art show filled with work based on sequels that don’t actually exist. They called it SEQUEL—and now that show has its own sequel.
*gapes and points, has no words*

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hello everyone i say as i dust off this blog to say happy book of life anniversary <3
I was right! You have become the greatest Sanchez ever!
I found my TBOL folder again ;_; I made so many drawings for this fandom haha. Here you have some!
Director Jorge Gutierrez created this beautiful art just for you!
Save or print it, then add the names of your loved ones who are celebrating the holiday in the Land of the Remembered!
you know, i doubt Coco (??) will be a bad movie, i’m sure that it’ll be beautiful and the story will be good. Pixar (and Lee Unkrich in particular) have made some wonderful stories, and im not worried about the quality of the story
it just leaves a bad taste in my mouth that Jorge Gutierrez and Sandra Equihua spent years trying to pitch their idea and weren’t even let in the door by most studios, that The Book of Life wasn’t even nominated at the Academy Awards, while this movie will almost definitley be a box office hit and a critic darling and win all of the awards, and so on
i love that Pixar is expanding into non-eurocentric and non usa-centric stories, believe me, im ecstatic, but we need to remember that while supporting these stories are great, it’s even more important to support non-white and/or indie creators
i won’t hold it against anyone if you go see Coco, but please promise me you’ll at least buy The Book of Life off iTunes or something

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It will never not piss me off that everyone’s praising Disney for making a Dia de Los Muertos film and it’s probably going to make a shit ton of money and probably win an Oscar when The Book of Life, a Mexican movie made by actual Mexicans was essentially ignored by the general public and snubbed by the Oscars
The Book of Life was such an amazing movie.
Completely slept on.
★ Maria Posada appreciation post ★