Fox12 said:
There are a lot of Ghibli films of varying quality, and not all of them are good. However, for their more critically acclaimed films, there are several reason why people like them. Miyazaki's early works, while not bad, were fairly bland and simple. Nausicca and Castle in the Sky were fun adventures, but the they followed well worn archetypes that have been done before, and done better. His later filsm, however, tend to stray from this path. They are childrens films, but they don't talk down to children.
Mononoke has a rather complex set of characters, given that its a 2 hour film. It's not a story of good vs. evil, it's a story of people vs. people, which is inherently more interesting. The leader of the humans is simply trying to carve out a place for her followers to live. She looks after the rejects of society, including lepers and whores, and shows them another way to live. Technology isn't evil, it allows the poor to resist their oppressors and maintain a higher standard of living. However, in so doing they ruin the lives of the creatures of the forest, who are noble, but savage and violent. They simply want to protect their home. This is far more complex then Cinderella or Hercules, where the villains are simply evil for the sake of being evil. It's also far more complex then Fern Gully or Avatar. Most of his films are like this, at least in his later career. Spirited Away is more of a traditional fairy tale that manages to avoid the traditional act structure of Western story telling, to its benefit. It also has a cast of complex characters. Miyazaki also has FAR more complex female characters than Disney does, and I would much rather have my sister appreciate Ghibli's heroines to Disney's. Miyazaki simply writes better female characters.
However, is Ghibli inherently superior to Disney? Disney has much more to it, since Ghibli is only a studio, so I would argue that Ghibli maintains a higher standard of quality overall. However, if you compare the best works of both, I would say they are relatively even. Up, The Lion King, and Hunchback of Notre Dame deal with complex characters and motivations, and are surprisingly mature, given their target audience. Sometimes I grow tired of the silly sidekick characters, when their not important to the plot, but on the whole I would say that Up and Hunchback are just as good as Ghibli's best films.
How does Frozen fall into all of this, though? I would argue that it doesn't compare favorably to either Ghibli OR Disney. It can't hold a candle to Pixar, either. It's trying so hard to recapture the magic of the Disney Renaissance, but it fails in all regards. There are plot holes, poorly written characters, and bad music. This is what happens when Disney fires the staff that made them great in the 90's. The old masters are gone.
This is Frozen:
This is classic Disney:
There can be no comparison.