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2013 Disney Movies [best] -

The contrast between these two 2013 releases is instructive. Oz the Great and Powerful looks backward, trying to recapture the nostalgic magic of a 74-year-old film using modern technology. It is safe, male, and concerned with legacy. Frozen looks forward, using new computer animation (and a groundbreaking songwriting team in Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez) to tell a story that actively critiques the very studio that produced it. One film asks, “How do we become powerful?” The other asks, “What if the greatest danger isn’t the villain, but your own fear?”

Disney also spent 2013 expanding its established worlds and testing new waters:

In the grand timeline of The Walt Disney Company, certain years stand out as watershed moments—pivots in history that altered the trajectory of animation and cinema forever. 1937 saw the birth of the feature film with Snow White . 1989 marked the beginning of the Disney Renaissance with The Little Mermaid . And while it may not have the historical sheen of those earlier dates, 2013 deserves a place among them. 2013 disney movies

Disney's acquisition of Marvel continued to pay dividends in 2013 with two major Phase Two releases:

This sequel saw the God of Thunder (Chris Hemsworth) battle the Dark Elves to save the Nine Realms. While reviews were mixed, it grossed over $500 million globally, underscoring the MCU's growing power. Animated Features and Spin-offs The contrast between these two 2013 releases is instructive

For The Walt Disney Studios, 2013 was anything but quiet. It was a year of box office wizardry, technological innovation, and the quiet rumblings of a corporate empire restructuring its release slate. While Pixar stumbled for the first time in nearly a decade, Walt Disney Animation Studios roared back to life, and Marvel Studios began to prove that sequels could be just as eventful as originals.

By the time the Oscars rolled around, Frozen had grossed over $1.2 billion worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing animated film of all time (a title it held until the Frozen sequel and the Lion King remake). It cemented 2013 as the year Disney Animation proved it could stand toe-to-toe with its subsidiary, Pixar. Frozen looks forward, using new computer animation (and

From the snowy mountains of Arendelle to the cosmic corners of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, here is your complete guide to the Disney movies of 2013.

In June 2013, Disney-Pixar released Monsters University . While Pixar is a separate studio, their output is intrinsically linked to the Disney brand, and this film marked an interesting departure for the animation giant.

This was Pixar’s first prequel and their first "college comedy." The film’s central message—that you don't always get what you dream of, but you can still be successful—was refreshingly mature for a kids' film.