DISNEY’S GONE TOO FAR: The Moana Live-Action Trailer Just Dropped And Fans Are LITERALLY Begging Them To Stop! 🌊💀

The first footage of Dwayne Johnson’s Maui is finally here, but it’s not the “magic” fans expected—it’s a total jumpscare. From the “party store” wig to CGI that looks 90% animated, the comments are absolutely brutal.

Is this a stunning reimagining or just a soulless cash grab that’s destined to sink at the box office? People are calling it an “SNL sketch” and the dislike ratio is exploding! 📉🔥

See the side-by-side comparison that has the entire internet roasting Disney right now 👇

The tide is turning against Disney’s remake machine, and it’s looking like a wipeout.

Just days after releasing the first official trailer for the live-action reimagining of Moana, the Walt Disney Company finds itself in the crosshairs of a furious fanbase. The film, slated for a July 10, 2026 release, was intended to be a summer blockbuster. Instead, it has become a masterclass in how to alienate an audience before a single ticket is sold.

 

Within hours of the trailer’s debut on March 23, YouTube and X (formerly Twitter) were flooded with mockery. According to data from various browser extensions that track YouTube engagement, the “dislike” count has already doubled the “likes,” a staggering ratio that suggests Disney may have another Snow White-sized headache on its hands.

 

‘The Rock’ in a Hard Place

While newcomer Catherine Laga’aia has received some praise for her singing, the lion’s share of the vitriol is directed at the film’s biggest star: Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. Reprising his role as the demigod Maui—this time in the flesh—Johnson appears in the trailer sporting a long, curly wig and animated tattoos that many fans are calling “distractingly fake.”

 

“I’ve seen better Maui costumes at a Spirit Halloween,” one viral tweet read, garnering over 100,000 likes. Another user on Reddit’s r/Movies summarized the sentiment bluntly: “Hundreds of millions of dollars for a wig that looks like it was stolen from an SNL costume closet. Why does this exist?”

 

The criticism isn’t just about the hair. Fans are pointing to the irony of a “live-action” film that appears to be almost entirely computer-generated. With heavy use of digital environments and “roto-scoped” actors, critics argue the film lacks the vibrant, lush colors that made the 2016 original a masterpiece.

 

Corporate Desperation or Creative Bankruptcy?

The timing of the remake is also a major sticking point. The original Moana was released in 2016, making this one of the shortest turnarounds in Disney history. Coming off the heels of Moana 2 (2024), the “remake fatigue” is palpable.

 

“This is the most ‘corporate’ thing I’ve ever seen,” one YouTube commenter wrote in a post that has since been pinned by several reaction channels. “It’s a shot-for-shot remake of a movie that isn’t even ten years old. It’s not art; it’s a line item on a quarterly earnings report.”

Industry insiders suggest that Disney is doubling down on “safe” IP after a string of original projects underperformed. However, with the public reception of the Moana trailer reaching “disaster” levels of engagement, the “safe” bet is looking increasingly risky.

 

A Cultural Battlefield

Beyond the visuals, the film is being dragged into the ongoing “culture war” surrounding Disney’s recent output. While the cast is ethnically diverse and culturally appropriate—featuring John Tui and Frankie Adams—the “anti-woke” contingent of the internet has latched onto the film as another example of Disney’s “creative bankruptcy.”

 

Conversely, some fans are defending the project, noting that the massive success of the live-action Lilo & Stitch remake (2025) proves that internet backlash doesn’t always translate to a box office bomb. “Families don’t care about Reddit threads,” one box office analyst noted. “They care about taking their kids to see a character they love.”

The Future of the Franchise

Despite the digital firestorm, Disney shows no signs of slowing down. Directed by Hamilton’s Thomas Kail and executive produced by original voice actress Auli’i Cravalho, the project has a high-pedigree team behind it.

 

But as the dislike count climbs and the “Maui Wig” memes continue to dominate TikTok, the studio must face a hard truth: the audience’s patience for remakes is wearing thin. If Moana fails to capture the “wayfinding” magic of its predecessor, it may mark the end of Disney’s strategy of looking backward to move forward.

For now, the ocean is calling—but the fans aren’t answering.