Take the LOTR trilogy, a franchise which in my humble opinion thoroughly deserves the best picture category. The work that went into those was immense. The props including the weapons, the armour, the wigs, the hobbit feet, the clothing were all made from scratch by a newly founded workshop. The location manager spent many months in a helicopter scouring the length and breadth of New Zealand for a suitable location. Peter Jackson used up many miles of film trying to perfect different scenes. The whole cast and crew and equipment including lights, generators and cameras had to be transported to the location, some in remote valleys or up hillsides and took many months to create usable film. The skill shown by the crew and the live actors in performing their roles in the making of the franchise were obvious and evidant and were often slave to the varying weather conditions. I am not saying the work that goes into pure animation is easy hell no, but to put the two types of films on equal footing is not appropriate and that's why I hope pure animation never, ever takes over from conventional film making. That's why animation should have its own category.
Ok, I used an epic franchise as an example of conventional film making as the above is a perfect example of human beings constructing a cinema experience with tangible, real, solid elements which on the whole (I appreciate there was a huge amount of CGI work in the franchise) have not originated via a very advanced software application on very advanced hardware.
To make flippant remarks about one man in his bedroom on a laptop misses my point completely.