Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts

Friday, December 20, 2013

Storming In


Blue Sky has officially announced that a fifth Ice Age is happening, and just in time for the holidays, too! (I bet you are all cringing right now…)

When does the fifth installment come out? July 15, 2016…

Makes sense, since Ice Age movies are now July releases. It's been that way since the third one, which raked in the most money out of the four. But wait a minute!

Blue Sky was supposed to have Anubis - a co-production with Fox Animation Studios based on Bruce Zick's ancient Egyptian-themed The Anubis Tapestry: Between Twilights - ready for summer 2016… Well, it's been moved to March 23, 2018. That was one of the dates Fox secured for a future animated release... Remember? Fox unveiled that massive animation slate where each release was simply called "Untitled Fox/DWA/Blue Sky" back in May? One of the dates on that big ol' slate was 3/23/2018.

Now that slot has been filled! Which slot will be filled next?

Anubis' will also be the first Blue Sky film to be a March release since 2008's Horton Hears a Who!

What do you think of this recent rescheduling? I for one am a bit disappointed, but hey… It's freakin' Ice Age, the last one grossed over $800 million at the worldwide box office much like its predecessor. These films really smash the overseas box office, make no mistake. Of course Blue Sky was going to make another one, and soon… I just wish we didn't have to wait so long for Anubis. Out of all the films on Blue Sky's upcoming slate, that one intrigued me the most. Rio 2 looks like the usual, I'm very much on the fence with Peanuts and 2017's Ferdinand could go either way.

Anyways, what's your take on all this? Sound off below!

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Welcome Back, Tintin!


The sequel to The Adventures of Tintin is a go!

Peter Jackson recently stated that he will begin working on it after he finishes up The Hobbit trilogy (presumably in mid-2014), adding that his return to the Middle Earth saga held him up a bit. At one point in time, it was certain that the film would be a 2015 release, but with The Hobbit being expanded into a three-part film series that ended up with a late 2014 conclusion, it seemed like it would miss the planned 2015 date. Also, several big events started to crowd up 2015… Little films like, you know… The Avengers: Age of Ultron, Star Wars: Episode VII, Batman vs. Superman/Crossover Clusterf*ck...

Then it seemed like it wouldn't happen for a long while because Jackson said weeks and weeks ago that he was going to quit the big-budget blockbuster scene and focus on smaller-scale projects. Well, I didn't think Tintin 2 would disappear just like that. Since it was successful, they couldn't wait too long to give us the sequel. Spielberg also insisted not too long ago that it would be out by late 2015, so he's certainly hoping it'll get made soon.

/Film's Russ Fincher suggests that it will be released sometime after summer 2016, which is a given at this rate. 2016 would be a better place for it, presumably sometime in the autumn. Maybe October, where it's not crammed between blockbuster and animated competition. In North America, the first film was thrown into a box office battlefield with very little marketing (Paramount was giving all of the marketing love to Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol) behind it, but off of that very weak opening came a solid $77 million gross, proving it had good word of mouth - even with family-friendly competition in its way, like the third Chipmunks movie. Thankfully, the film was a box office hit overseas.

With studios slowly but surely announcing 2016 releases, Paramount could reveal The Adventures of Tintin: Prisoners of the Sun's release date sometime soon. Maybe.

What do you think?

Friday, November 22, 2013

Sony Animation's 2016 Film… Unveiled?


Earlier this year, after Disney and Fox announced their big animation slates, Sony Pictures Animation quietly put it out there that they had two untitled films scheduled for release in 2016 and 2017 respectively.

Since they have so many projects in development, one could've only wondered which one would move forward. Would it be something safe like ALF or Manimal? Or would it be something surprising and unexpected? Would they have put an original story like Instant Karma in the 2016 spot?

For a while, I thought that the film in question would be the abruptly delayed Popeye, the one that Genndy Tartakovsky was supposed to direct. With Sony Animation having two animated films - The Smurfs 3 and Hotel Transylvania - ready for release in 2015, it seemed likely. But word on Popeye is scarce nowadays, though it is possible that it'll show up sometime soon. However, I think we now have a good idea of what Sony Animation's September 2016 release is going to be…

Kazorn & The Unicorn

An original film directed by Kelly Asbury, longtime animation veteran who was the director of Gnomeo & Juliet and Shrek 2, it was announced a year and a half ago. It seemed like it would be one of those projects that would just sit there, because a few of the big studios are announcing that all of these projects are in development and yet many of them just don't move forward. Look at DreamWorks. They announced stuff like Dinotrux and Maintenance way back in 2009/2010-ish, no word on what's going on with them. They just secure these things for the future, meaning we'll see those movies sometime in… I don't know, 2019? 2020? 2021? 2022?

My Rotoscoper comrade Morgan Stradling found this when perusing Sony Animation's website…


She also pointed out that Asbury was now part of the filmmakers page on the site. Notice how Kazorn is next to Hotel Transylvania 2, the latest film to have a release date set in stone on Sony's slate…

But also… Popeye is on there, and it's before The Smurfs 3 and Hotel Transylvania 2, so apparently it's still holding up. It's not in limbo, it's not nearing cancellation. After all, they wouldn't want to screw Tartakovsky out of a potential smash. Tartakovsky is an animation mastermind, and he salvaged Hotel Transylvania and it was a big hit - their biggest at the domestic box office, actually. Popeye, especially under his wing, would be too good to throw out. Cartoon Network screwed him over twice, first canceling Samurai Jack and then pulling the plug on Sym-Bionic Titan nearly a decade later; Sony better not make that same mistake! Having Tartakovsky on board to direct features for you is nothing to take too lightly.

Now I wonder…

Will Sony release two films - Popeye and Kazorn - in 2016? Or will Sony have Kazorn ready for 2016, and Popeye ready for 2017? Or vice versa?

It's also interesting to note that Kazorn & The Unicorn will be produced by Sam Raimi, and its co-director is Troy Quane, longtime animator and storyboard artist who has worked on films such as Osmosis JonesEnchanted and 9. It intrigues me because it's their first all-original film (not counting Aardman's Arthur Christmas) since 2007's Surf's Up… Wow! Color me excited, I'm glad Sony is willing to step out of the sequel/Smurfs pool for a minute and try out something cool. Hey, it worked for Surf's Up and Cloudy!

Hopefully we'll see some of the more off-the-wall stuff on their development docket move forward as well. What do you think?

Disney Slate Update: Alice Returns, Jon Favreau Hits the Jungle


Disney is slowly but surely beginning to fill 2016 up with definite releases. For a while, 2016 only had three films: Two Walt Disney Animation Studios films (in reality, those two currently "untitled" films are Zootopia and Giants) and a Pixar film (formerly something untitled, now Finding Dory) - now it has a big live action tentpole release. Not the first Star Wars spin-off, not one of Marvel's untitled movies, not the delayed fifth Pirates of the Caribbean film...

Alice in Wonderland 2

When is it coming out? May 27, 2016.

For a while, I've been predicting that the long overdue sequel to the 2010 Tim Burton box office smash would be a summer release in 2016 since that's the earliest it can open at this rate. Well, it's now moving forward after talk of a new director (The Muppets and Muppets Most Wanted director James Bobin) and a few other things. But one thing is definitely certain, it is not going to repeat the success of the first one - well, domestically at least.


Alice in Wonderland, as many have pointed out, happened to open at the best possible time. Avatar kickstarted a brief 3D craze, the marketing for the film was excellent and everybody and their brother wanted to see it hence that huge $116 million opening weekend gross. But the legs, despite the movie having pretty much the whole month to itself, weren't anything spectacular because the movie… Well… Wasn't all that good.

Anyways, it's sure to do very well overseas given how huge the first one was plus Johnny Depp and Mia Wasakowski are of course returning. I have no real interest in it, and if anything, I'd be happy if Disney took its Memorial Day weekend release date and gave it to Finding Dory instead, because that's currently set to open against How To Train Your Dragon 3, and Fox most likely won't move that DreamWorks sequel. After all, they are in something of a match with the Mouse House. (The Fantastic Four fiasco, putting films out on the same days as Disney's…)

The other new addition to their slate is Jon Favreau's live action take on The Jungle Book, which I have very little excitement for. I like Favreau and I think he'll make a pretty good film (as long as the script is alright, we don't want another Cowboys & Aliens), but I'm tired of Disney's dependence on live action re-imaginings of classic stories that they already adapted into animated features (see Maleficent and the 2015 Cinderella), which is why I'm hoping Brad Bird's Tomorrowland is not only good, but blows all of those films out of the water at the box office.

Disney is jettisoning original live action films and live action films based on riskier properties because of how poorly John Carter and The Lone Ranger did at the box office, though they'll never take the blame for the failures. It must be the movies, right? Right? Yeah yeah, you've heard it from me many times on here, but damn it I'm a broken record - bad marketing and corporate negligence killed those two films! That annoys me greatly, and it annoys me that Disney is holding potentially cool live action fare like The Stuff of Legend, the third TRON, Terra Incognita and Matched at bay, favoring the safest options possible. Oh… And remakes of other films, too. Do we really need remakes of classic live action Disney fare like Flight of the Navigator and Pete's Dragon?

Walt didn't start making live action films for nothing, he took big risks with live action from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea to Mary Poppins. Now the studio just wants to rehash what worked in the past, while Marvel continues to expand on a huge connected franchise and Lucasfilm will continue making Star Wars films… Tomorrowland better be a huge hit because we need some fresh, new stuff in the mix. Live-action Disney can't just be about the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Star Wars and re-imagings/remakes…

The film could be good, and I hope it will be, because Walt's film is a very loose adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's stories and this is one that could be redone and fleshed out. Disney already tackled the books in a proper manner with a live action film in 1994, but Favreau could make something interesting. But still, I'm just not feeling it. I guess if Disney's game plan wasn't "remake our animated classics to go with the dark, gritty, updated fairy tale/classic story trend", I wouldn't mind its existence so much. Alice in Wonderland was one thing, and give them credit, it is a visually cool re-imagining… But it's Hollywood, of course they're going to milk that dry. I'd rather have something like Alice in Wonderland once in a blue moon, but no… Maleficent, Cinderella, an Oz sequel, a Cruella de Vil origin story (*cringe*). Bo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-ring!

The film is set to open on October 9, 2015… A very interesting choice of release date for many reasons…

When's the last time Disney released a big budget tentpole movie in October? When do studios ever release big budget blockbusters in October?

If anything, the success of Gravity might've motivated them to place a film in the early October spot. The month will slowly but surely become a blockbuster month… All the months will be in due time. It's well-spaced out from The Good Dinosaur, which opens at the end of November that year and it's far enough away from Marvel's Ant-Man. Between July 31 and October 9, Disney will probably throw a few small-scale films out into theaters along with that IMAX space film that they announced for a 2015 release.

So now their 2015 slate should look like this…

Small-Scale Film - January/February
Cinderella - March 13th
Disneynature Film - April
The Avengers: Age of Ultron - May 1st
Tomorrowland - May 22nd
Inside Out - June 19th
Ant-Man - July 31st
Planes 3 - August (it's more or less confirmed, sorry folks)
Small-Scale Film - August
IMAX Space Film - September
The Jungle Book - October 9th
Small-Scale Film - October/November
The Good Dinosaur - November 25th
Star Wars: Episode VII - December 18th

The Mouse House will practically destroy every calendar in the future if they go by this template…

Now with another 2016 release being officially announced, when will we get more? Let's leave Marvel out, since Kevin Feige said that we won't get anymore big Phase 3 information until next spring. When will Disney outright say that Zootopia is in fact Walt Disney Animation Studios' March 4, 2016 release? When will Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales get a release date? When will Lucasfilm announce what the first Star Wars spin-off/origin (most likely Han Solo) film will be and when it'll hit theaters?

Ahhh, the waiting game...

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Figuring Fox's Animation Slate Out


In an attempt to fire back at a very confident Disney, who announced a giant upcoming animation slate that ended in fall 2018, 20th Century Fox grabbed dates for animated films from DreamWorks, Blue Sky and Fox Animation. Their slate capped off a month after Disney's...

Disney's slate consisted of four (wisely) untitled Walt Disney Animation Studios project. Two of which will hit theaters in spring and autumn 2016 respectively, the next two will be released in spring and autumn 2018 respectively. The other four films on Disney's animation slate were untitled Pixar films; one slated for summer 2016, another for summer 2017, one for fall 2017 and the last one for summer 2018. All of the projects were "untitled".


DreamWorks' animation slate, at the time, concluded in November 2016 with Trolls. Nothing was set in stone for 2017 or 2018 just yet, though Blue Sky Studios shocked some by announcing a spring 2017 release date for their upcoming Ferdinand. At the same time, they unveiled that their 2016 release would be Fox Animation's long-gestating Anubis. The film is now a co-production between Blue Sky and Fox Animation. Fox Animation is basically the revived animation wing that 20th Century Fox shut down in 2000 after Don Bluth's Titan A.E. bombed at the box office, now they're doing various projects. Wes Anderson's Fantastic Mr. Fox was one of them...

Shortly after Disney announced their full upcoming animation slate, Fox then announced theirs... The following dates were...

March 10, 2017
June 16, 2017
July 21, 2017
November 3, 2017
December 20, 2017
March 23, 2018
June 29, 2018
July 20, 2018
November 2, 2018
December 21, 2018

Next to each was "Untitled Fox/DWA/Blue Sky"...

Also notice that there's 5 releases set for 2017 and 2018...

DreamWorks releases three films a year maximum, and they'll begin doing that regularly starting next year. Their plan is to lower the budgets on their films, especially after how badly Rise and the Guardians and Turbo both did at the box office. I honestly can't see DreamWorks releasing four films in a calendar year; too much workload, it could affect quality and also... It almost happened, but didn't.


So that leaves Blue Sky and Fox Animation, assuming that "Untitled Fox" means " Untitled Fox Animation Studios Film", and they've got a few projects on the docket.

Fox Animation is currently working on The Book of Life with Reel FX Creative Studios, that'll be released next October. After that, they'll collaborate with Blue Sky to bring Anubis to the screen in 2016. Three other animated films are in the works there: Welcome to the Jungle, Mr. Men and King Kong...

It's possible that one of these three untitled projects will be co-productions with either Blue Sky or Reel FX. If things go well with The Book of Life, then Reel FX and Fox Animation may collaborate again.

Also, we have no idea whether Fox is including films like Alvin and the Chipmunks sequels on this slate or not, the day the slate was unveiled, they did announce that the fourth film in that series (ugh) was slated for a December 2015 release. Do they consider those films animated films? Or hybrids at least? Or not? If they do, then the December 2017 or December 2018 release could be another Chipmunks film, as much as we don't want it to be.

That being said, since there's 5 slots, Blue Sky may have to ramp up their schedule a bit. Two films a year could very well be their game plan. I will admit, I do give them props for taking their time on films, as they release one film almost every calendar year. (Averted in 2010.) But that may change...

But as I learned over the last couple of months, nothing really is seemingly set in stone. Dates constantly change, and sometimes unthinkable release dates are picked for animated films. Who would've thought that Disney would pick the now-lucrative March spot for a Walt Disney Animation Studios film after years of usually picking summer or pre-Thanksgiving November? They haven't touched the spring spots since 2004! DreamWorks shuffles films on their slate constantly, so we may see a big change with the 2015-2016 section in the coming months.

Who knows... But one thing's for certain, Blue Sky might have to get two films out a year. Either that, or Fox Animation will have to really step up and make more films than they usually do...

Either way, it's big doins' for Fox, animation and all of the studios that make the films for them to distribute...

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

October Animation Tidbits [#2]


Tidbit time...

~


Willem Dafoe recently talked about Finding Dory. Recording sessions have begun, which indicates that the script is already in great shape. Dafoe confirmed the other day that he is indeed returning to voice Gill, and he also said "It's even better than the first. It’s fantastic. It’s good to say I think it’s going to be better than the first; that’s good advertising!"

To hear him (he recently criticized reboot The Amazing Spider-Man, a film he has not even seen, for being a "cynical approach to making money") be enthusiastic about a sequel that many are having a hard time warming up to is something of a good sign, don't you think? Or is it just PR sugarcoating?

Finding Dory can very well be like Toy Story 2, folks. Just because Cars 2 (which obviously wasn't going to be fantastic to begin with) and Monsters University didn't fully deliver as sequels/prequels doesn't mean Finding Dory can't. Andrew Stanton and crew may just surprise us all.

~


Disney Animators' Instagram unveiled this...

If that's Big Hero 6's official logo, then that's great. I already love the look of it, very Marvel-esque but also anime-esque. It perfectly describes the "big" scope and the Japanese flair of this upcoming Walt Disney Animation Studios film. Now hopefully we'll get some sort of official logo reveal some time soon!

And... I might be too hopeful here, but I'd love to see a teaser before Frozen... Heck, use that test scene as the teaser and get the word out! C'mon Disney marketing.


~


Two directors have been attached to the 2016 Angry Birds animated film...

Disney veteran/supervising animator Clay Katis is one of them, who was the supervising animator on Bolt and Tangled. He also worked on several other films during his 19-year tenure at the studio.

Veteran storyboard artist Fergal Reilly is the other, his credits include The Iron Giant, Spider-Man 2 and most of Sony Animation's films... This leads me to believe that this film - which is being distributed by Sony - will be a partial Sony Pictures Animation production. Maybe. Summer 2016 is blank right now, usually they release two films in a calendar year and one around this time. According to Cartoon Brew, Rovio is producing it in-house (they're based in Finland), but it's possible that Sony Animation could work on some of it. But come to think of it, you would've heard something early on by Sony Animation themselves...

That's a strong line-up there. The screenwritter, Jon Vitti... Well... Simpsons veteran, but he wrote the two Alvin and the Chipmunks movies. Good choice for a film like this though, because we all know it won't be anything spectacular - it'll be a diversion for the kiddies. Solid choice for the script, if there is much of a script. (A silent film would be interesting, but that probably won't happen.)

I'm not excited for it, but I'm sure a lot of kids and fans will be. That's who they are probably aiming for with this film... But will Angry Birds still be popular with young'uns three years from now?

~

What do you think of Dafoe's comments on Finding Dory? What do you think of the Big Hero 6 logo? Do you think that'll be the final one? Or do you think it's just a prototype? What's your take on the Angry Birds movie? What do you think of the fact that they got those two animation veterans to direct it?

Sound off below!

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

The Popeye Problem


Sony Pictures Animation has a computer animated film based on Popeye in the works, I'm sure you've read about it somewhere. This film was originally scheduled for a fall 2014 release, September 26th to be specific. Genndy Tartakovsky, animation genius and director of the studio's highly successful Hotel Transylvania, is directing it. With how successful Hotel Transylvania was - a project that he salvaged with very little time - it seemed like this film would definitely hit theaters next autumn, right?

Wrong.

This past May, Sony Animation announced that film was delayed. To what date? All they said was 2015, so the exact date is to be determined. Sony Animation has two films coming out in 2015: The Smurfs 3 (which was recently moved from July 24 to August 14) and Hotel Transylvania 2 (September 25). Sony Animation has never had three films ready for release in a calendar year, only DreamWorks has achieved that feat.


This initially lead me to believe that Popeye would be Sony Animation's currently untitled fall 2016 release, but... It's also possible that Popeye will end up making one of the 2015 releases move. Plans always change when it comes to feature animation and scheduling.

  • Popeye will take The Smurfs 3's August 2015 spot and send that unnecessary sequel to August 2016. Sony Animation may have only one film announced for a 2016 release right now, but they can always add another one. Not like anyone really wants The Smurfs 3 anyway...
  • Hotel Transylvania 2 may end up moving, because Popeye is apparently far enough along to be completed in time for a fall 2015 release. Hotel Transylvania 2? We've heard very little about it; a director hasn't even been attached yet.
  • None of the 2015 films will move. Popeye will end up coming out sometime in 2016 - either fall or late summer.
  • Sony will go big and release Popeye in 2015 alongside The Smurfs 3 and Hotel Transylvania 2. 3 in a year!
  • The project is in real trouble, and Sony won't have it completed for a long while. After all, The Familiars - once set for early 2014 - has been off of their slate for a while with no sign of it being completed any time soon since the director is handling another project somewhere else.

What do you think? Cast your vote in the latest poll!

Monday, September 23, 2013

The Duel



For a while, two major animated films have been slated to open on June 17, 2016...

Fox and DreamWorks claimed this date first, placing How To Train Your Dragon 3 there. That was last summer...

This past May, Walt Disney Pictures picked that same date for an untitled/undetermined Pixar film when unveiling their 2016-2018 animation slate. Until now, we presumed that it would be Lee Unkrich's "Day of the Dead" project. Due to what happened in the last few weeks with The Good Dinosaur, Finding Dory is now set to open on that day - that sequel was originally scheduled for a November 25, 2015 release.

So... On the warm summer day of June 17th in the year 2016, we'll have the first major head-to-head animation battle since Don Bluth's All Dogs Go to Heaven was released by United Artists on the same day as The Little Mermaid back in 1989. It wasn't the last head-to-head animation battle, mind you. Universal released An American Tail: Fievel Goes West the same day as Beauty and the Beast in 1991, but let's face it... That was no "major" animation battle; Disney had it in the bag, plain and simple.

*Note: The whole Peanuts vs. Finding Dory thing was a big mistake on my part. A copy of Fox's animation slate had Peanuts listed for a November 25th release, so I assumed that Fox moved it to Dory's original release date to compete... The film is still - and has always been - slated to open on November 6, 2015.

So...

Finding Dory vs. How To Train Your Dragon 3...

VS.

I don't know about you, but this just can't work out. DreamWorks may have claimed the date first, but no way is Disney going to move Finding Dory (or any Pixar film for that matter) from Pixar's typical mid-June spot unless they opt for a Memorial Day weekend release. Nothing has that spot right now, so Disney can very well move the Pixar sequel to that date. Also, Finding Nemo opened on the last Friday of May in 2003, The Good Dinosaur was almost a late May release... It would make perfect sense, actually.

The question is, will they? Or do they want to go head-to-head with Fox and DreamWorks?

Would Fox and DreamWorks move the How To Train Your Dragon threequel? Maybe, but since the second film has a similar mid-June release date for next year (June 13th), they probably wouldn't move this. How To Train Your Dragon 2 is poised to be 2014's biggest animated film, box office-wise. It's possible that this sequel will soar past the original, much like how Despicable Me 2 did this summer.

If the two are to be released on the same day, what would happen?

Finding Dory is the sequel to one of Pixar's most beloved films. Finding Nemo's then-record breaking domestic gross adjusts to $459 million today. The sequel is definitely opening with more than $100 million on its opening weekend - Monsters University most likely didn't reach that threshold on opening weekend because it was a prequel. The general public will be ecstatic about the sequel, loyal fans will be, it'll probably break the record for biggest opening weekend for an animated feature.

How To Train Your Dragon 3 will undoubtedly be big if the sequel breaks out. The first film was huge because of the excellent word of mouth and lack of competition, if Dragon 2 does very well (which it should, no way this sequel should not make as much as the original), this ought to be really big. $100 million could be in the cards, actually.

The problem is, both films' grosses will be affected. I think it would be wise if one of the studios were to move their film. I think Disney should be the one to do it, because Fox really can't move Dragon 3, plus Disney would want the best possible gross from a Pixar film - especially a sequel to one of their biggest.

Disney could very well take Pixar's film and move it forward. Something like May 27, 2016 would work out quite well. Or Fox could take that date, but again, I think DreamWorks would want to stick to the mid-June date and also... They got it first.

I think the best scenario would be this (including other summer blockbusters/ big releases)...

Marvel Untitled - May 6, 2016
Some blockbuster... - May 13, 2016
Some blockbuster... - May 20, 2016
Finding Dory - May 27, 2016
Some blockbuster... - June 3, 2016
The Amazing Spider-Man 3 - June 10, 2016
How To Train Your Dragon 3 - June 17, 2016

It would give both films room to breathe in the blockbuster battlefield. Andrew Stanton and crew will still have more than enough time to fine-tune Finding Dory, since that release date is only a few weeks ahead of the current one. DreamWorks can keep their date, and their film will be successful despite any competition. (Does anyone really think that Angry Birds will take a toll on Dragon's box office performance?)

Interestingly enough, since Disney opted to release a Pixar film on the same day as Dragon, Fox retaliated by slating an animated film to open on the same day as Pixar's summer 2017 release - Disney claimed that date first. Now if this whole "duel" between Dory and Dragon 3 is canceled, and that both open on separate dates, then maybe Fox will move DreamWorks' June 2017 release to another date.

What do you think will end up happening? Sound off below and be sure to vote in the poll!

Update (10/8/13): Okay folks, here are the results!

10 of you think that Disney will have to move the Pixar sequel to another date.

21 readers think that Fox will end up moving How To Train Your Dragon 3.

12 readers say that both films will just end up opening on the same day.

Seems like many of you can see Dragon 3 being moved, and honestly, that's looking to be more plausible than Disney moving Finding Dory. Disney is an entertainment giant, and would they move a Pixar film just because a DreamWorks film had that date first? If anything, that answer will be no - I'm just surprised that no one has a move yet... But a lot of you think that it'll be DreamWorks who will end up moving their film.

It may just happen. Again, thanks for voting, people!

Friday, September 20, 2013

Minions on the Move


Illumination Entertainment made some changes to their release schedule... Some rather interesting ones...

The currently untitled Despicable Me spin-off prequel about the Minions is no longer opening on December 19, 2014... It's now slated to open on July 10, 2015, which was Pirates of the Caribbean 5's original spot. A very smart decision if you ask me, because Minions seemed to be in a tight spot anyway, being sandwiched between many family films and also going up against Brad Bird's Tomorrowland and the Hobbit trilogy's finale.

Illumination's untitled 2015 release is now set to open on February 12, 2016. Little by little, February is becoming a big month for animation. Gnomeo & Juliet showed that a small-scale film could generate good revenue during that time, due to the fact that families don't have anything to go see between the holidays and the March-April hit season. This year's Escape from Planet Earth also had good legs, The Lego Movie will more than pummel previous February box office records.


This makes me wonder, will DreamWorks move Home (formerly Happy Smekday!) to the December spot now that the Minions have packed up and moved? They could distance it from Disney's Big Hero 6... But it would still have competition to fight no matter what. I'm thinking that the December spot will be left blank, animation-wise, but you never know... These distributors always surprise us. Maybe something from 2015 could move up... Maybe Paramount Animation's SpongeBob SquarePants 2. They wanted that to be a 2014 release from the get-go to mark the 10th anniversary of the first film.

Maybe? Who knows...

What do you think will take the December 2014 spot? Or will anything take it at all? Do you think moving the Minions to a summer spot was a good idea? Sound off below!

Thursday, September 19, 2013

DreamWorks' Dogs


Unveiled by Bleeding Cool earlier today, it looks like DreamWorks is moving forward with their planned loose adaptation of Berkley Breathed's Flawed Dogs novels...

They've also named the director... None other than Noah Baumbach!

Who is that you might ask? Well Noah Baumbach is not only a well-respected live action director (The Squid and the Whale), but he's worked in animation as well. Baumbach co-wrote Wes Anderson's wonderful Fantastic Mr. Fox and also co-wrote DreamWorks' Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted. I felt that the third entry was not only better than its entertaining-but-problematic predecessors, but also just a well-made, good film overall and another winner for DreamWorks.


He's said to be secretly working on this project, but when will we get it? Well considering that the 2013-2016 schedule is already determined, the earliest that we'll see this film is in 2017. Other DreamWorks candidates for a 2017 release include The Croods' announced sequel and the shelved Me and My Shadow. If anything, I can see this happening...

March 10, 2017: The Croods 2
June 16, 2017: Flawed Dogs
November 3, 2017: Me and My Shadow

But DreamWorks' schedule is never absolute, as the last couple of years have proven. Watch it shuffle time and time again later this year, next year and beyond that. Otherwise, I'm glad that they picked Baumbach to direct this film. My excitement shot up a bit. What do you think?

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Moving Away


It looks like Pixar's big green brontosaurus is not stomping into theaters next summer...

Yes, in a rather shocking but inevitable move, Pixar's The Good Dinosaur has been delayed. It makes sense because no new director was announced for the project after Bob Peterson was booted off. Only a few Brain Trust members are "shepherding" it and fixing whatever problems they have with it.

So when is it opening now? November 25, 2015...

That was Finding Dory's original release date, now that sequel has been moved back... To June 17, 2016. This one will go head-to-head with How To Train Your Dragon 3, and it'll make for a very interesting animation box office battle. If I were Fox, I'd move Dragon 3 as soon as possible. Finding Dory is poised to be a box office gargantuan, and if Dragon 2 pulls a Despicable Me 2 next summer, then it'll be massive as well.

On top of that, it looks like we'll have to wait till summer 2017 at the earliest for Lee Unkrich's "Day of the Dead" project... Disney not officially announcing that his film wasn't the summer 2016 release makes a lot more sense now, ditto its absence from D23...

Inside Out is still slated for a June 19, 2015 release...

2014 will be a Pixar-less year...

It makes me wonder if Party Central - the Monsters University short that was supposed to be attached to the dinosaur film - will end up going on the Monsters University Blu-ray. That is, if they haven't produced the actual discs yet...

Pixar's higher ups can't deem that Inside Out is strong enough to enter production for the summer of 2014, there's very little time and Disney decided to fill The Good Dinosaur's original May 30th spot with tentpole/pointless fairy tale reboot Maleficent.

Could this be like the old times? When you didn't get a Pixar motion picture event every summer?

If anything, this could be a very good thing. You heard that right, a good thing...


I'd rather have a good Good Dinosaur than a rushed Good Dinosaur, and I think Lasseter & Co. are well aware of this. They've already got a bad reputation for firing directors, so it's better that they give whoever takes the throne a lot of time to sort out the problems. I just sincerely hope that this is not a Newt situation where they delay the film, only to outright cancel it. I still think that Newt isn't dead in the dirt, it's just sitting on the shelf, waiting to be re-evaluated.

Logically, nothing can really take the summer 2014 spot now, so we'll have to wait till a 2-a-year deal the following year. It's almost like Walt Disney Animation Studios' schedule, two films in 2016 and two in 2018 due to Pixar releasing two of their films in 2015 and 2017. Maybe Pixar will release two films every other year (was Ed Catmull alluding to this a couple months ago?), rather than one each year. If it ensures quality/non-rushed films, then I welcome that. It'll be abrupt, since we've been used to getting one Pixar film every year.

When Peterson was removed from the project, I speculated that Pixar's recent director-change problems were due to their one-a-year schedule and the fact that their films' release dates are set in stone a long while before they hit theaters. Maybe breaking that current one-a-year tradition will relieve the animators and directors of tremendous pressure, so they'll be able to have their stories in fine shape before production begins thus... No more director changes! That is... If it's not true that John Lasseter is an evil tyrant hellbent on tooling everything to be his way.

Anyways, see where I'm going with this?

No films are scheduled for release in 2014, thus allowing Pete Docter to perfect his film, the replacement director to perfect The Good Dinosaur, and Andrew Stanton to perfect Finding Dory. Unkrich will have more than enough time with his film, and Teddy Newton's film could very well be the autumn 2017 release rather than what a lot of people think will be the autumn 2017 release - a sequel. Give them time, I say.

We might see even more changes to the schedule, but in the mean time, I hope that The Good Dinosaur turns out to be a fine film whoever is directing it. Maybe things will start looking up, and all these troubles with director changes will be a thing of the past. A rather rough phase, if you will.

Stay optimistic...

And just watch... People think Pixar is on the decline? Well what's a better "comeback" than two great, original films being released the same year?

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

A Giant Movie


Leave it to Brendon Connelly at Bleeding Cool to get details on upcoming Walt Disney Animation Studios films. He got some details on Zootopia before a title was even announced, along with several other things. Today, he got some information on one of their four upcoming releases... Giants.

Now if you were quick, you knew that the title of this Nathan Greno-directed film was leaked a couple months ago by Honor Hunter at Blue Sky Disney. Immediately, I thought Jack and the Beanstalk, as did many others. Disney Animation had an adaptation of the tale in the works until it was canned in 2010, possibly because of Warner Bros.' big-budget tentpole based on the same tale... Which ended up bombing. It could've been canceled because at the time, Disney had little-to-no faith in fairy tales, skeptical of Tangled because of how The Princess and the Frog underperformed. This explains The Snow Queen/Frozen's absence at the time, but then that film was announced for 2013 after Tangled came out. So I'm guessing since Tangled more than exceeded Disney's expectations, Frozen was immediately rebooted and Giants got the greenlight as well.

Nathan Greno promoting
Tangled...

Anyways, the film is in fact a new take on Jack and the Beanstalk, much like how Tangled and Frozen are new spins on the classic tales they are based on. For the better, because I like this idea of Disney crafting their own original stories around some of the elements of the fairy tales. In a way, they can tiptoe their way around critics who take it upon themselves to bash Disney every time they alter a classic story for one of their films. You know, the dreaded "Disneyification"! Plus, it's a bit more creative and it allows them to justify adapting something. The "Disney Version" has always been talked about, such as the idea of Walt Disney taking classic stories and making them his own. Well that's what Lasseter and Disney's story trust are doing. Literally.

Connelly confirmed some of the story details...


  • There are five main giants in the film, all of which are brothers: Feebus, Fifen, Fogel and Fobert. Clever play with the Fee Fi Fo Fum saying! The oldest brother is named Faustus, he'll be the film's villain.
  • Jack has a love interest named Angelina, who is of a higher class than he is. She is from a family of merchants who low down on Jack.
  • There's also a love triangle, as a rich man named Marco is in love with Angelina. There will be a rivalry of course, and he's named Marco because he's essentially like the real Marco Polo.
  • There's also a human named Inma, who Connelly describes as a "scrappy tomboy type" and "something of a class warrior". She wants to fight injustice, but no one really takes her seriously because she's only a pre-teen. Connelly likens this to David and Goliath.
  • The story is about the "Storm Giants" making a pact with humans. They will protect humans if the humans are willing to work for them. But Faustus may be screwing the humans over. After all, he is the villain.
  • All of that is a backstory, the film itself will be about the journey and Jack actually becoming friends with one of the giants, setting the story in motion!

Now I like this spin, plus it introduces characters that already sound interesting and likable. I'm interested to see what they do with the villain as well, since Connelly does mention that he's got a "relatable point of view". The whole class thing should be good too, as this kind of depth and development is what's expected from a Disney animated feature. It's nice to see Disney coming up with great ideas that weren't in the originals, and I was happy with that in Tangled and I'm sure I'll love these elements in Frozen as well.

Going by a pattern, and what Honor Hunter says, Giants should be the November 23, 2016 release following Zootopia. Connelly suggests that it's definitely not set in stone, and that it could move or be removed from the schedule (I sure hope not!), but it seems to be going along quite well so I can definitely see it hitting theaters for Thanksgiving that year. Also, it seems like Disney will do a fairy tale adaptation every 3 years. Tangled in fall 2010, Frozen this autumn and Giants in autumn 2016. Say, will they do another one for fall 2019?

Overall, I really like what I'm hearing. Connelly also mentions that the animation will resemble the painterly, traditional-esque look of Tangled and Frozen (I guess Disney's saving that style for fairy tales, unless Moana uses it), while also implying that Big Hero 6 and Zootopia will go for different styles. He believes that the style will be pushed to its limits, and it could possibly be the first film done in the Meander style. Our Paperman-style film could be here before we know it! Now if only Disney would officially announce the title and plot soon, since it's now known.

What do you think? Does the film excite you? When do you think it will come out? Sound off below!

Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Real Animation Domination

VS.

For many decades, it seemed that Disney would remain unchallenged in the world of animated feature-length film production... Times certainly have changed!

Disney and Competition
Over the Years...

During the 1st Golden Age of Animation, the competing studios didn't have the budgets nor the ambitions of the Disney studio. Instead they broke new ground with short subjects (i.e. Warner Bros.' cartoons, Tex Avery's films and Hanna/Barbera's Tom and Jerry series), redefining animation in their own ways without making 80-minute films. A few studios gave the animated feature-length film business a try, most notably the Fleischer Brothers with their rotoscoped Gulliver's Travels in 1939 and the box office disaster that was Mr. Bug Goes to Town (which had opened just two days before the attack on Pearl Harbor).

In the early 1970s, Ralph Bakshi produced more than two animated feature length films. A good number of them did well and were praised, such as Fritz the Cat and Heavy Traffic. He was famously the anti-Disney, as most of his films were aimed at adults only (Fritz was infamously the first animated film to get an X rating from the MPAA) and had art styles that were far removed from the lavish and cute productions coming from Burbank. But Bakshi began to wind down by the 1980s, as he started producing less raunchy fare such as Wizards and The Lord of the Rings.

Ex-Disney animator Don Bluth entered the ring in the 1980s. He was an ardent admirer of the Golden Age Disney films, and he was frustrated when he was at Disney in the 1970s since the company had become rather conservative and weren't willing to take any risks with the animation studio. He left Disney in 1979, took 14 animators with him and started his own studio. The results? The well-made The Secret of NIMH and the record-breaking An American Tail.

An American Tail was released by Universal Pictures in the fall of 1986, backed by an aggressive marketing campaign that played up Steven Spielberg's producer credit. For the first time, a major animated film had taken the throne... The highest-grossing animated feature film on initial release. The film's success was what got a then-declining (all due to the new faces at the studio who initially saw no future in feature animation) Disney to get back into the game. The results? Well there was the highly successful Oliver & Company in 1988, which famously opened the same day as Don Bluth's next big film The Land Before Time. It was quite a box office battle, as both films did very, very well. Oliver ended up winning in North America, grossing a record amount and beating An American Tail.

But then after that came The Little Mermaid in 1989 and the rest is history... Don Bluth on the other hand squandered his potential, breaking away from Steven Spielberg (though to be fair, Spielberg and George Lucas had butchered The Land Before Time) and scoring a disappointment with All Dogs Go To Heaven. The films that followed were very problematic and a good number of them went through the ringer before getting a suitable theatrical release.

The Second Golden Age really fired up after Disney's successes with Oliver and Mermaid, alongside the Touchstone-released Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Other studios wanted in: Fox, Warner Bros. and many others. But they screwed up... None of their films did well, and many of them were critical duds. Many of them are essentially Disney clones, as suits thought you'd could beat Disney by copying their formula. The only film that prevailed was Don Bluth's critical and commercial comeback Anastasia (released by Fox, who were then gung ho about going head to head with Disney) in 1997, which many non-animation fans usually call a Disney film. If only executives had let writers, directors and animators try something different, the Second Golden Age would not have ended.

DreamWorks positioned themselves as the anti-Disney when their Antz and The Prince of Egypt hit cinemas in 1998, which did change the industry somewhat. They were the first successful rival to Disney in a long time, and to this day they're one of the heavy hitters. The other distributors' plans failed... Fox killed their animation studio with the teen-centric Titan A.E., Warner Bros. invested in turkeys and Universal put out a slew of unremarkable films.

But nowadays, all the distributors are releasing competent films that also make a lot of money. Pixar, Disney and DreamWorks do have some legitimate competition in the form of Blue Sky, Illumination and Sony Pictures Animation. On an artistic level, Disney and Pixar have very impressive rivals in Aardman, LAIKA and several small studios whose films are independently released.

Let's just say that this Third Golden Age of Animation is a big one... It may not reach the level of near-perfectness of the 1st Golden Age, but animation is booming. More than one big budget animated feature-length film hits the silver screen every couple of months. Some years have more films than others, but we're at a point where animation has become so lucrative that there's a lot of it out there. If anything, that's something to celebrate even though there's a good amount of subpar work out there. There's a few studios I can point the fingers to...

But now the competition looks like it's going to get hairier... Very much so...

Disney vs. Fox


At the end of May, Disney announced their upcoming slate that focused on their own animation studio and Pixar. They secured dates for eight - four from Pixar, four from Disney Animation - currently untitled/mystery productions (though going by the tidbits we get, we could assume what these films will be) that ranged from March 2016 to November 2018. Now this seemed a bit crazy to some, considering that November 2018 is over five years away. It certainly showed that they were ready, and they also implied that they got the spots to warn the competition from taking such dates. When's the last time a Walt Disney Animation Studios film opened in late winter/early spring? November is usually shared by both Disney and DreamWorks nowadays, sometimes they swap positions. For instance, in 2010, DreamWorks' Megamind opened at the beginning of the month and Tangled came out the day before Thanksgiving. But in 2012, Disney got the early spot for their Wreck-It Ralph while DreamWorks' Rise of the Guardians arrived a few days before Thanksgiving.

Interestingly enough, one of the dates that Disney picked was the 17th of June in 2016. That spot was picked for an untitled Pixar film, presumably Lee Unkrich's "Dia De Los Muertos" film. Last autumn, DreamWorks had announced that this was the day their How To Train Your Dragon 3 was scheduled to arrive. (It was mistakenly announced for June 18th, that's a Saturday in 2016!) So now Pixar's film and the DreamWorks three-quel are currently set to open on the same day... They are apparently going head-to-head.


Before Fox made their move earlier this week, I had assumed that one of the studios was going end up moving their film. My money was on DreamWorks, since they have occupied the first Friday of June before with 2008's Kung Fu Panda and the upcoming B.O.O., which is slated to open on the 5th in 2015. But moving Dragon 3 would be weird because the second Dragon is hitting theaters on the 20th of June next year. But where else could they have it open? Sony is releasing an animated Angry Birds film on July 1, 2016 so crunching Dragon 3 between Pixar's film and Angry Birds would be unwise... Fox didn't move it and it seems like they won't...

Not too long after Disney announced their upcoming slate, Fox announced that they had claimed dates for Blue Sky films and DreamWorks films. Their slate ended a month after Disney's! In addition to not moving Dragon 3 (Disney has not moved Pixar's film), Fox struck back... Peanuts, which is being made by Blue Sky, was originally pegged for a November 6th release in 2015. Now, it's been moved to November 25th. What else comes out that day? Finding Dory!

 
VS.

That's right, the long-anticipated sequel to one of Pixar's most popular and beloved films. Fox apparently thinks that Peanuts will put up a good fight. True, the film is based on the quintessential American comic strip, but the question is: Will the film do the strip and the iconic characters any justice? Or will it be an insulting dud that's no different from the other "retro revivals" that have been coming out? (i.e. Alvin and the Chipmunks, The Smurfs...)

This will be the first time since 1989 where two big high-profile studios will go head-to-head at the box office. (No, Anastasia opening against The Little Mermaid's re-release in 1997 does not count!) In the recent years, we've seen studios distance their films away from others. With today's ticket prices, 3D and families being choosy, releasing two animated films so close to each other could be a big risk that yields small rewards. Fox also plans on having an animated film from one of their studios open on June 16, 2017 as well, the same day as Pixar's summer 2017 film. Fox is gung ho about taking the Mouse House head on. I can see why they are so confident, they have two animation hit machines.

Finding Dory, from where I stand, will easily clear $100 million on its opening weekend and will go on to gross more than $300 million domestically. Peanuts? I honestly can't see it making a big splash on opening weekend, though we have no idea what the film will be like at the moment. If it's worthy of the original comic strip, the specials and the animated features, then it could possibly do very well on opening weekend. $40 million is the floor for it, so it won't flop, but I can't see it doing too, too good against the Pixar sequel. The legs and momentum might be cut off. It doesn't help that Fox will be releasing the fourth Alvin and the Chipmunks and Kung Fu Panda 3 a few weeks after Thanksgiving.

This leads me to ask another question...

Box Office Brawls

With so many big animated films opening so close to each other in the far future, what will the results be? Well, next month, we'll get a good idea. And no, I don't think this battle will be a brutal war or anything...


Monsters University opens this coming Friday, and shortly afterwards Despicable Me 2 will hit theaters, kicking off July's animation line-up. One film is from a beloved and generally trusted studio, it's a prequel to a film that lots of people love and families haven't had an animated film to go see since Epic, nor a "must-see" one since The Croods. Pixar also has adult appeal given their track record.


The other is a sequel to a film that lots of people loved, and kids will be begging their parents to see it again and again. The first film successfully appealed to adults as well, plus the film's Minion characters are everywhere. The marketing, as usual, is aggressive and all over the place. It's a new big franchise!

Both will clear $200 million at the domestic box office, $300 million is also very possible for both... But...


Turbo is in a bit of trouble. Now coming out after these two films isn't enough, but two big family-friendly animated films open right after it debuts. Unlike the two before it and the two coming after it, Turbo is not a sequel nor is it based on a brand that people are familiar with. The film isn't really appealing to adults either but Fox's marketing isn't lazy, they want this to be a hit since The Croods pulled in close to $600 million for them! I will be shocked if it makes more than $150 million domestically. The marketing is kind of passing it off as a family-friendly Fast & Furious, something that could either work in its favor or backfire miserably.


The Smurfs 2 is a guaranteed hit much like Monsters University and Despicable Me 2, since the first was a big hit and also, it's one of those franchises that kids seem to go gaga over. Adults probably won't be there for the sequel, not sure why the original even took in $140 million+ to begin with. Films that only kids and parents go to see don't gross that much!


Then there's Planes, which Disney probably gave a theatrical release due to two things: The popularity of the Cars franchise amongst kids and the fact that they wanted to give DreamWorks' racing-themed snail flick a run for its money... Well, maybe. Anyways, this one is a bit tricky to predict but kids and their parents will be there on opening weekend... Anyone else? Who knows, but a gross of over $50 million is certainly in the cards. If the film turns out to be decent-to-good, like the early reactions imply, then $100 million is very possible. If it goes that far, then I'll also be surprised.

Now if all these films perform well (as in meeting expectations and/or not underperforming), then it'll indicate that audiences are willing to see many animated films in theaters at once. Also, these films have all of August and September to make their dough. Will any get left out? Or will all four of them do well?

In short, this summer will basically answer that question: How will audiences respond to four big, heavily-marketed animated films opening so close to each other?

More and More...

Usually, we get more than eight wide release animated features (not counting indie releases or US dubs of foreign language films) every year. But with these studios ramping up their schedules and planning to release 2-3 films in a single year, imagine how massive 2016, 2017 and 2018 will be!

- Walt Disney Animation Studios will start offering two films a year starting in 2016.
- Pixar will begin readying two films a year in 2015.
- DreamWorks normally releases 2-3 films a year. They may even try to bang four out in a single year! They've tried!
- Blue Sky may start releasing two films a year by 2017.
- Sony Pictures Animation normally has two films ready for a given year, though at other times they have just one.
- Illumination may do two a year, since their development slate is jam-packed.

On top of that, you have your occasional Aardman and LAIKA films coming out every 2-3 years. Reel FX is also entering the ring, hoping to have one film out every year starting this autumn with their questionable Free Birds, which Relativity Media is releasing. If that's a hit, Relativity may want to invest in more animated features since Fox will be releasing the studio's second film, the much more interesting Book of Life.

DisneyToon's Planes franchise is a theatrical thing now, so Disney is taking major league advantage of that regardless of how it affects Pixar's image. Lucasfilm Animation has a film in the works, their second overall and their first non-Star Wars project. Of course, Disney will release it and might promote the heck out of it... Will Lucasfilm Animation be Disney's third feature animation hit-maker? (DisneyToon shouldn't be their third, because aside from Planes, they've got nothing else that's suitable for a theatrical release. Heck, Planes isn't suitable for theaters!)

Maybe in the next 2 years, we'll see more small studios and stop motion houses successfully getting their work released nationwide. Maybe a small hand-drawn revolution will be sparked by small animation studios, perhaps from the animators Disney recently laid off. Maybe it'll motivate the big studios to invest in hand-drawn films that don't cost as much as the computer animated films.

With all these studios' plans, it's possible that animation will really dominate towards the end of the decade. The reason why we don't see more than 20 or so big studio animated films is obvious, animated films take longer to make and there's only six big studios in the American animation industry, though more are on the rise. It's amazing that a studio like DreamWorks can have three films ready for release in a single year, and they all look good... Story and screenplay is another issue, but still!

So if more and more come, what could possibly happen? Here are two theories of mine...

A Negative Effect
Glut and Potential Collapse

Now there is a negative side to all of this... There may be a ton of animated films coming, but quality... Quality! What if we get, say 20 big studio animated films in 2020? What if 6-8 are good, a few more are decent but the rest are mediocre-to-bad? Films that scream "Yeah... We're just trying to make money"? I've been saying this for a while, but distributors need to give independent animated films a chance too. A lot of them don't cost too much and you could make a good profit off of them if you promote them right. A lot of those films are hard sells, but a lot of distributors screw up with the marketing (Fantastic Mr. Fox for example), making these relatively low budget films fail at the box office.

With a lot of bad/mediocre animated films coming and going, people will start complaining "There are too many animated films these days!" Of course, no one bats an eye at the amount of terrible-to-unremarkable live action films that come out every week. Animation is still seen as that "annoying kiddie stuff" to most people, so more and more animated films may scare them away from the good stuff because ignorance speaks volumes. So much saturation in the market could produce a negative effect.

Let's say a good number of films don't do well at the box office and audiences avoid a good number of animated films from the big studios. What will the distributors and studios resort to? Look at DreamWorks. Rise of the Guardians lost quite a lot of money (that was the fault of the marketing, not the movie), grossing $303 million worldwide against a $145 million budget and presumably sky high marketing costs. Look what happened: A project that was already in production was scrapped ($40 million loss there) and over 350 members of the staff were laid off! Imagine if Sony Pictures Animation or Blue Sky were to score a disappointment on that level. It doesn't seem to matter if the next film saves them, DreamWorks still did what they did not knowing that their next film would be a smash hit. If anything, the suits should've waited to see how The Croods did in addition to taking note of Rise of the Guardians' home media sales. (Which were reportedly very good!)

But these studios are unpredictable. Focus Features seemed to be fine with LAIKA's ParaNorman failing to double its small budget, their next film is already being fired up. DreamWorks on the other hand fretted over Guardians, which still did okay enough. To their credit, they have several films planned and they know what films will be on their ever-changing slates. Someone like Sony Animation doesn't, evidenced by their announcement that two untitled films are coming in 2016 and 2017. Disney does that with Disney Animation and Pixar. Illumination's 2015 release is also untitled at the moment. Still, how would one of those studios (minus Disney and Pixar) react to a flop or money-loser?

Since I don't know too much about how the business works with each of these studios, I can only assume that the studios have different expectations. Some may be a little less demanding, while others are hoping for big profits.

A Positive Effect
The More the Merrier

Despite what attitude Americans may currently have towards animation, more and more animated films coming out (and perhaps a renaissance for indie animation) could change audiences' perceptions of animated features and animation in general. Maybe it'll be the "thing" in the coming years, since there will be more of it.

More and more people are slowly warming up to the stuff that used to be shunned as kids stuff or whatever. Audiences will show up for good animation, and more people are checking these films out. People without kids. Maybe a diverse range of films - and many to choose from - could only strengthen this current Golden Age. Animation will be more commonplace, but in a good way. We're so used to live action films and big budget blockbusters coming every week or so, the American people could damn well get used to several animated films coming in a single year.

Things could go over very well if studios keep trying with different films and not always spewing out family-friendly stuff. People will get sick of that, and they'll continue to associate the art form with family-friendly fare and kids stuff. I've been saying this for a while: The American animation industry seriously needs to invest in lower budget adults-only fare and rocket the medium to new heights. In order to make a successful thing even more successful, you have to take a risk or two. Paramount tried with Rango and it paid off, other studios should give it a try. Fox is releasing Reel FX's seemingly unconventional and perhaps not-so-family-friendly Book of Life next autumn, so that could help the medium.

I mean, I think if all 15-20 of the big studio films are only family films (G and PG), audiences will get tired of the medium and will stick with a few studios or whatever piques their interest. Studios also have to up the quality on their product, because some of them churn out clunkers. How much more Smurfs and Ice Age-type stuff can audiences take, really? Audiences are okay with bad live action films oozing out of every pore, but the amount of animated films released a year is tiny compared to the amount of live action films. Also, everyone pretty much accepts live action easily, but not everyone accepts... You know... Cartoons. Tough reality, but the medium continues to struggle in some ways.

However, if the batch of films every year is generally good, animation might just become more and more commonplace. That would be great, because it wouldn't be that once-a-month or once-in-a-while thing... That is, if studios put out a lot of stuff to choose from. A wide variety... But is the industry up to that challenge? It seems like it'll take a while before they get there, if they ever get there at all...

~

Theatrical animation has now become a growing empire, one that continues to grow with more studios launching and distributors seeing the opportunities in the medium. Many years ago, Disney dominated for the most part. Nowadays, everyone dominates. The industry is huge... But it'll be become mammoth... What the outcome will be, who knows. What do you think the future of animation has in store for us? What do you think of multiple films opening a year? Animated films opening so close to each other and/or on the same day as other animated films? What's your take on all of this?

Sound off below!

Friday, June 14, 2013

Sony Makes Their Move


Not too long after Disney and Fox announced the upcoming slates for their animation studios, Columbia has now secured two dates for Sony Pictures Animation: September 23, 2016 and September 22, 2017. I pretty much saw this coming, since Sony always nabs the late September spot for their films.

If you ask me, the 2016 film should be Popeye. No way that film comes out in 2015, since Sony has two films coming out that year: The Smurfs 3 and Hotel Transylvania. There's a possibility that they may do 3 films a year, but for now, I think Popeye should be the 2016 film. As for the 2017 film? It could be anything... The fan of original ideas in me hopes it's Doug Sweetland's The Familiars (he's currently directing Storks for Warner Bros. Animation), but it'll probably be a sequel or a film based on a well-known property. The studio has been rather gung ho about the likes of ALF and Manimal...

What do you think the 2016 and 2017 films will be?

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Disney Slate Update: Marvel, Muppets, Planes & More!


Disney has once again changed their upcoming slate, but this change doesn't affect releases from Walt Disney Animation Studios or Pixar. The details are here thanks to Box Office Mojo and /Film...


The big news here is that two untitled Marvel productions have been slated for May 6, 2016 and May 5, 2017. Marvel usually takes the first Friday of May for most of their films (the Iron Man films, The Avengers and its sequel, Thor), and I guess Star Wars spin-offs are opening in theaters in both May 2016 and May 2017.

What will be ready? For the May 2016 film, probably Doctor Strange, though in my recent set of predictions, I thought that the film would come a month early since Marvel has locked the early April 2014 spot for Captain America: The Winter Soldier. I was thinking that Disney would release Marvel movies in April to distance them from any Lucasfilm productions (i.e the Star Wars spin-offs, since Disney wants at least one Star Wars film a year), but it looks like Disney is okay with releasing both a Marvel film and a Lucasfilm production in the same month. That is, if Lucasfilm follows the mid-May tradition for everything they release.

Oddly enough, no other Marvel production is slated for a 2016 release. This implies that Marvel may produce one film a year after 2015, but maybe we'll hear more in the coming months. I can't see Marvel ditching the 2-film-a-year strategy anytime soon since the momentum is still there. Speaking of Lucasfilm, no date for Star Wars: Episode VII yet! But I think we all know what it will be...

Yep, Ricky Gervais is going to be in this.

Some minor changes were made to one 2013 release and two 2014 releases...

Brad Bird's Tomorrowland has been moved a week forward. The film will now open on December 12, 2014... Good. The only thing that stands in its way is the finale to Peter Jackson's Hobbit trilogy, but something tells me that this Bird-directed sci-fi will overshadow the hobbits since the first one did very well, but didn't perform like a titan. In addition to George Clooney, Hugh Laurie and Raffey Cassiday, Thomas Robinson has now been cast. It'll be fun to track this one, since the marketing will be decidedly enigmatic!

The Muppets... Again! is now Muppets Most Wanted. Not really sure about that title, to be honest. It may fit in with the plot, but I think it sounds a bit awkward. What do you think of it? The release date is still the same: March 21, 2014.

This December's Disney film, Saving Mr. Banks, has also been moved a week forward. The film opens on December 13, 2013.


More films have been scheduled for release in 2014...

The first of which is Planes: Fire and Rescue, which opens on July 18th... I was hoping that this spin-off franchise wouldn't be a theatrical thing. I was already not to thrilled with the fact that Planes was getting a theatrical release, this will only cause more confusion since a lot of people assume that the series was made by Pixar. Like I need to hear any more "Planes? What are you doing, Pixar?!" complaints. Anyways, Disney is apparently very confident in the first film. After all, it probably didn't cost much to make being a DisneyToon Studios production, but I'll be surprised if it makes much more than $100 million at the domestic box office.

Opening on August 8th is a project I've never heard of before: The Hundred-Foot Journey. A Touchstone/DreamWorks production, the film is based on a book by Richard C. Morais. It's about an Indian boy living in Paris who becomes the apprentice for a chef that's a rival to his father.

This one was announced last year: Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day. An adaptation of the children's book of the same name where a boy's family has a bad day thanks to him wishing they'd experience his daily problems, this might go the way of The Odd Life of Timothy Green... It just screams unspectacular to me. However, The Jim Henson Company is working on it so there might be something interesting about it. Steve Carrell and Jennifer Garner will be in it, and Cedar Rapids director Miguel Arteta will direct. The film is set to open on October 10, 2014.

Into The Woods will arrive on Christmas Day. I had initially predicted that it would be Disney's March 2015 release, but apparently it'll be ready by the end of next year. The Rob Marshall-directed production stars quite the cast, too: Johnny Depp, Chris Pine, Jake Gyllenhaal, Emily Blunt and Meryl Streep. This ought to be a big success for Disney, though it's being released a little too close to Tomorrowland.

A total of 13 films from the Mouse House (including Marvel and Touchstone/DreamWorks films) will now be coming to theaters in 2014! I guess Disney really does want to bang 14-15 films out a year! Now I'll have to update my predictions...

What's your on this news? What do you think of Planes' sequel getting a theatrical release? Are you interested in any of the live action films that Disney has planned for 2014? Or not? What do you of think the new title for the Muppets sequel?

Sound off below!