I'm sick of them being allowed to increase their entertainment monopoly on children instead of being told to just create new original works. It's not like they have a shortage of talented people...
When you create a new work based off a public domain work, you own what you added to that work. If your adaptation happens to be extremely successful, that effectively recopyrights the character, because the version people care about is the one you own. If someone else wants to use the public domain character, they have to aggressively distance their use of that character from yours.
Disney spent decades re-imagining Europe's folk tales[0] through his lens. Their movies are the ones people think about when you mention Snow White, Cinderella, Pinocchio, etc. Notably, the visual designs are unique enough to get independent copyright protection. So independent uses of those characters don't look like themselves.
This, BTW, is why anyone who wants to renounce copyright over their creative work should opt for CC-BY-SA and not a public domain dedication. Share-alike clauses prevent this sort of gradual appropriation.
[0] as filtered/censored thru the Brothers Grimm
Well, I agree with that. But very likely not for the same reasons you do.
Stephen Sondheim had a pretty succesful musical based on Grimms tales.
But yeah, if you want people to care about your version, you have to bring something new to the table.
I doubt that Disney would take this kindly or lightly.
That's the entire point of the post that you are responding to.
Disney sued nobody.
Outside of their reimaginings/reboots, I can't think of a single recent movie that isn't an original work.
And that doesn't include things like LucasFilm, Marvel and Pixar which are, obviously, original and still part of Disney.
The most recent movie Wish - is just callbacks to other Disney movies, so does it count as original IP?
And this excludes their reboots - but also excludes Pixar which has done some original albeit lacklustre stuff recently.
There have also been many, many original movies released in that time: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Walt_Disney_Pictures...
The vast majority of recent Disney content is original.
You're thinking of Mulan, not The Little Mermaid.
Edit:
Apparently the pavillion was only partially funded by the Norwegian government. Your comment made me curious.
https://www.disneyfoodblog.com/2021/08/13/who-actually-owns-...
I wonder if anyone has worked out the actual dollar effect it is has had on Norwegian tourism.