A well-done animated movie can be enjoyable for anybody. Both Disney and Pixar, corporate giants in the field of animation, usually do incredibly well at putting together and releasing high-quality ⛦animated movies. However, there tends to be a lot of overlap between the companies, which makes mixing up who did wha🐈t really easy.

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This usually begs the question of what the difference between Disney and Pixar really is. The line between these two animatioﷺn giants can be pretty clear in most respects, but there are places where it gets fuzzier and harder to distinguish.

What Is Disney?

Snow white in bed looking at the seven dwarfs after waking up

Although you likely already know what Disney is, it’s still good to clarify. The Walt Disney Company, frequently shortened to “Disney” is an American-founded media and entertainment conglomerate. Disney used to be called the Disney Brothers Carto♍on Studio, founded in 1923 by Walt Disney and his brother, Roy Disney. In 1986, the company changed its name to the Walt Disney Company.

From the beginning, Disney has been a media leader in animation, though over time it expanded its business ventures far beyond just animation. Nowadays, the Walt Disney Company owns and operates amusement ⭕parts, streaming services, cable TV networks, and film and TV production studios, alongside their ever-growing collection of merchandise.

What Is A Conglomerate?

To put it simply, a conglomerate company is made up of small subsidiaries and acquisitions. These subsidiaries could be off-shoots of the original company or outside companies that have been ac🌱quired through a variety of means and integrated. In Disney’s case, there is a healthy mixture of both internal off-shoots and external acquisitions.

What Is Pixar?

Inside Out, Joy sitting with Sadness while Joy holds a core memory

Pixar is a computer animation studio, often celebrated for its regular innovation in the field of animation. Pixar was originally created as a part of Lucasfilm in 1979. It became an indepen🧸dent company, separate from Lucasfi🌱lm, in 1986, courtesy of some heavy outside investment.

Both Pixar and the Walt Disney Company worked together prior to Pixar's acquisition, making movies like Toy Story 2 and The Incredibles.

Eventually, in January 2006, the Walt Disney Company acquired Pixar, integr▨ating it ﷽into the conglomerate. Interestingly enough, the acquisition of Pixar happened only a few months before Disney began work on its last 2D animated film, The Princess and the Frog.

How Many Disney-Pixar Movies Are There?

Including the time spent collaborating while Pixar was technically an independent company, there are 26 computer-animated movies by Pixar or Disney-Pixar. Pixar really only has two movies they put out without any interaction or🤡 input from the Walt Dis꧑ney Company.

Pixar generally puts out one to two computer-animated feature-length movies every year. Th🔥eir more recent productions tend to be liked well enough, even if the box off🌄ice doesn’t always surpass the budget.

Name

Release Date

Toy Story

November 22, 1995

A Bug's Life

November 25, 1998

Toy Story 2

November 24, 1999

Monsters, Inc.

November 2, 2001

Finding Nemo

May 20, 2003

The Incredibles

November 5, 2004

Cars

June 9, 2006

Ratatouille

June 29, 2007

WALL-E

June 27, 2008

Up

May 29, 2009

Toy Story 3

June 18, 2010

Cars 2

June 24, 2012

Brave

June 22, 2012

Monsters University

June 21, 2013

Inside Out

June 19, 2015

The Good Dinosaur

November 25, 2015

Finding Dory

June 17, 2016

Cars 3

June 16, 2017

Coco

November 22, 2017

Incredibles 2

June 15, 2018

Toy Story 4

June 21, 2019

Onward

March 6, 2020

Soul

December 25, 2020

Luca

June 18, 2021

Turning Red

March 11, 2022

Lightyear

June 17, 2022

Elemental

June 16, 2023

Inside Out 2

June 14, 2024

Walt Disney Animation Studios movies like Big Hero 6 and Wreck-It Ralph may be commonly confused for Pixar movies, but it's important to note that they aren't. The confusion likely stems from the fact that these movies feel more "grounded" and less "fantasy" than your traditional Disney animated movie.

The Disney-Pixar Ratings

The general ratings for Disney-Pixar films border on the moderately high end, often capping out at 8/10, with a low of 6/10. Some of the animated movies they put out become instant🐬, heart-warming classics, while others fall to the wayside, unfortunately forgotten.

S🍎ometimes it’s best to forget a series, however, raꩵther than see unneeded sequel after sequel make a return on the big screen. Even still, sometimes those sequels end up being better than the original installment, as surprising as that can be.

The top five Disney-Pixar movi🃏es all tend to end up being rated just slightly ove🌊r 8/10, which is unsurprising - they are enjoyable (and well-paced) movies, after all.

Title IMDb Rating Runtime
Finding Nemo (2003) 8.2/10 1h 41m
WALL-E (2008) 8.4/10 1h 38m
Up (2009) 8.3/10 1h 36m
Toy Story 3 (2010) 8.3/10 1h 40m
Coco (2017) 8.4/10 1h 45m

The Difference Between Pixar And Disney Movies

Coco Ernesto de la Cruz introducing Miguel to other dead at his party

Although Disney may technically own Pixar, there are some differences between the way they go about telling a story and what those stories are. Although one could consider the worlds that Pixar builds to be fantastical, they're hardly fantasy.

Disney prefers to indulge in fantasy aspects, readily incorporating magic and fantasy creatures into the different tales they spin. These fantasy elements are important for Disney movies and are a key point of why the story turns out the way it does. Pixar, on the other hand, doesn't necessarily need fantasy elements to tell their stories. Instead,ꦬ these s🐷tories feel a lot more grounded and, in a sense, realistic.

Part of this stems from the fact that Pixar, generally, takes a lot more time to reach the central portion of their story, taking the time to ease you into the world and make it feel realistic. To put it simply, Pixar indulges in a grounded fantasy, whereas Disney tends to skip straight into high-fantasy for their storytelling. Pixar's movies don't have the protagonists weaving magic or sword-fighting dragons (most of the time), but that's all right!

In most cases, it makes Pixar stories really heartfelt and relatable. Their stories hinge on cultural understandings and the experience of growing up most of the time, which often results in stories that warm your heart and make you want to cry all at the s🐬ame tim🍷e.

To Wrap It Up

All Pixar animated movies are Disney movies, but not all Disney movies are Pixar. Up until 2006, Disney only distributed Pixar movies. Despite Disney owning Pixar, movies produced by the subsidiary are not Disney-aniꦜmated movies.

For it to be a Disney-animated movie, it would have to be created by the Walt Disney Company’s internally-created branch, rather than an externally incorporated company. Disney movies also tend to lean towards different narratives and story-telling devices. This usually gives Pixar movies a distinct and unique feel from the rest of the Walt Disney Company's productions.

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