Hand-Drawn Animation Dead at Disney
Exactly. There is nothing to say that Disney is "turning it's back" or "giving up" on traditional animation, as a LOT of sites seem to be reporting. We know for sure that right now, they are taking traditional animation in a different direction. But there is absolutely nothing to say that a year or two (or five) down the road they won't do another fully traditional film. This isn't anything like the infamous announcement from 2005 or whenever that was. There are no plans to "shut down" traditional animation.
I'm getting seriously sick of this conversation. (And yet, here I am talking about it, I know lol)
I'm getting seriously sick of this conversation. (And yet, here I am talking about it, I know lol)

Let me just listen to this song as a funeral of Hand Drawn.
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/aJEWmDna_cI?rel=0" frameborder="0"></iframe>
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/aJEWmDna_cI?rel=0" frameborder="0"></iframe>
- disneyboy20022
- Signature Collection
- Posts: 6868
- Joined: Tue Aug 23, 2005 2:17 pm
I hope the new Mickey Mouse shorts will be in hand drawn animation though......TsWade2 please stay calm about this statement. They said they don't have plans for traditionally hand drawn films, not shorts so it will probably be hand drawn
Want to Hear How I met Roy E. Disney in 2003? Click the link Below
http://fromscreentotheme.com/ThursdayTr ... isney.aspx
http://fromscreentotheme.com/ThursdayTr ... isney.aspx
Sorry. It seems people can't make up their freakin' mind. It would of been nicer if Super Aurora stop scolding me.disneyboy20022 wrote:I hope the new Mickey Mouse shorts will be in hand drawn animation though......TsWade2 please stay calm about this statement. They said they don't have plans for traditionally hand drawn films, not shorts so it will probably be hand drawn
- thelittleursula
- Anniversary Edition
- Posts: 1235
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2012 3:15 am
- Location: Europe
- Super Aurora
- Diamond Edition
- Posts: 4835
- Joined: Wed Oct 04, 2006 7:59 am
Well if you didn't act liike such a paranoia retard over every fricken news, you wouldn't get such comments from me. Use your head for once.TsWade2 wrote:Sorry. It seems people can't make up their freakin' mind. It would of been nicer if Super Aurora stop scolding me.disneyboy20022 wrote:I hope the new Mickey Mouse shorts will be in hand drawn animation though......TsWade2 please stay calm about this statement. They said they don't have plans for traditionally hand drawn films, not shorts so it will probably be hand drawnP.S. I'm a Broadway musical fan.
Because people here don't read or just pick and choose what they want to read just so they can bitch and cry.SWillie! wrote:I still cannot for the life of me understand how "we have no traditional films in development as far as I know" has turned into "Disney will no longer be making traditional films."
<i>Please limit signatures to 100 pixels high and 500 pixels wide</i>
http://i1338.photobucket.com/albums/o68 ... ecf3d2.gif
http://i1338.photobucket.com/albums/o68 ... ecf3d2.gif
Yep, hand-drawn animation is not being made anymore...except from Studio Ghibli and other Japanese studios, Ralph Bakshi, the French and other Europeans, Disney's new Mickey Mouse shorts, that Phineas & Ferb movie in development. But, otherwise, sure, no hand-drawn animation.TsWade2 wrote:How am I going to survive without hand drawn? It's not fair! It's the end of the world!
"There are two wolves and they are always fighting. One is darkness and despair. The other is light and hope. Which wolf wins? Whichever one you feed." - Casey Newton, Tomorrowland
- Sotiris
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 21113
- Joined: Sat Sep 23, 2006 3:06 am
- Gender: Male
- Location: Fantasyland
Disney is not going to announce that they are shutting down traditional animation. Not after Lasseter's big claims that he would be bringing hand-drawn animation back and that 2D animation had become a "scapegoat for bad storytelling". It would make Lasseter and the studio look bad in the press. Iger's casual response was unexpected and unplanned.SWillie! wrote:This isn't anything like the infamous announcement from 2005 or whenever that was. There are no plans to "shut down" traditional animation.
There's nothing left to 'shut down' anyway. Disney had to announce it back in the day because they were closing all of their 2D animation studios, laying-off their 2D animators and removing all of the 2D equipment from the Burbank studio. They couldn't hide it.
It's become obvious they have now chosen to quietly stop developing any more hand-drawn features instead of making a formal announcement about it.
I would say that they're taking CG into a different direction since this hybrid form of animation is predominantly CG.SWillie! wrote:We know for sure that right now, they are taking traditional animation in a different direction.
Likewise, there's absolutely nothing to say they will.SWillie! wrote:But there is absolutely nothing to say that a year or two (or five) down the road they won't do another fully traditional film.
Even if, hypothetically, Disney did produce one last hand-drawn feature in 10 or 15 years, that wouldn't mean they would be bringing hand-drawn animation back.
Usually when people talk about the "death of hand-drawn animation" they are referring to the lack of widely-released, Hollywood-produced, feature-length films.estefan wrote:Yep, hand-drawn animation is not being made anymore...except from Studio Ghibli and other Japanese studios, Ralph Bakshi, the French and other Europeans [...]
Kind of silly, in my opinion. Animation is an art practised around the world and while Hollywood animation is great (I would argue we're in a current Golden Age), Japan, France and the United Kingdom are doing some excellent work as well.
In a way, the three top producers of animation all have their own signature technique of choice that they currently specialise in. The United States with computer animation, Japan with hand-drawn animation and Great Britain with stop-motion animation. It actually doesn't require a lot of searching to find new hand-drawn features being produced.
In a way, the three top producers of animation all have their own signature technique of choice that they currently specialise in. The United States with computer animation, Japan with hand-drawn animation and Great Britain with stop-motion animation. It actually doesn't require a lot of searching to find new hand-drawn features being produced.
Of course, it's going to reach a point where at one press conference or another, John Lasseter will be asked about the current status of hand-drawn animation. He's either going to be completely straight or (more likely) give a bulls--t, PR-written answer. But people are going to ask him about comments he made at the time The Princess and the Frog was released. Heck, there's a YouTube video on Pixar's own page with him talking about how much he loves hand-drawn animation and how it was ridiculous when certain studios stopped producing it.Sotiris wrote: Disney is not going to announce that they are shutting down traditional animation. Not after Lasseter's big claims that he would be bringing hand-drawn animation back and that 2D animation had become a "scapegoat for bad storytelling". It would make Lasseter and the studio look bad in the press. Iger's casual response was unexpected and unplanned.
There's nothing left to 'shut down' anyway. Disney had to announce it back in the day because they were closing all of their 2D animation studios, laying-off their 2D animators and removing all of the 2D equipment from the Burbank studio. They couldn't hide it.
It's become obvious they have now chosen to quietly stop developing any more hand-drawn features instead of making a formal announcement about it.
"There are two wolves and they are always fighting. One is darkness and despair. The other is light and hope. Which wolf wins? Whichever one you feed." - Casey Newton, Tomorrowland
Sotiris, you're definitely right that there's nothing to say they WILL make another traditional film - but that doesn't negate what I'm saying. Iger didn't say ANYTHING we didn't already know, period. So why is it being reported as news?
You say that there isn't anything to shut down, and yet as we speak, there is an entire team of traditional artists at work at Disney. Regardless of what they're working on, they are still traditional animators. Regardless of whether you think the hybrid is more in the vein of CG, it DOES require traditional animation.
I just think this whole issue is a non-issue. They'll create a traditional film when they create a traditional film. Hopefully sooner than later, but regardless of when, Disney is doing great animation, and that's all that should matter.
You say that there isn't anything to shut down, and yet as we speak, there is an entire team of traditional artists at work at Disney. Regardless of what they're working on, they are still traditional animators. Regardless of whether you think the hybrid is more in the vein of CG, it DOES require traditional animation.
I just think this whole issue is a non-issue. They'll create a traditional film when they create a traditional film. Hopefully sooner than later, but regardless of when, Disney is doing great animation, and that's all that should matter.

- Sotiris
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 21113
- Joined: Sat Sep 23, 2006 3:06 am
- Gender: Male
- Location: Fantasyland
Well, we knew but I don't think the general public did.SWillie! wrote:Iger didn't say ANYTHING we didn't already know, period. So why is it being reported as news?
Yes, I know that. I need to clarify that I didn't say that disparagingly. I like and support this new hybrid. Heck, anything that deviates from generic-looking CG is a positive development in my book. But I think it's accurate to say that this hybrid animation Disney is developing is CG-based.SWillie! wrote:Regardless of whether you think the hybrid is more in the vein of CG, it DOES require traditional animation.
That's a perfectly valid and understandable opinion. But for me the medium matters. Different mediums bring different aesthetics to a film.SWillie! wrote:Disney is doing great animation, and that's all that should matter.
No one cares about what doug has to say about this, he's not even in the industry for crying out loud.disneyboy20022 wrote:Doug Walker had this to say on Facebook regarding Disney having no plans to make 2D animation films
Doug Walker wrote:
Sad news: Disney has announced they no longer have plans to make any more hand drawn animated films. I adore hand drawn animation and how far Disney has pushed it over the years. Their art has been a large part of many childhoods, including my own, showing us how to convey great stories, great characters, and great art through animation. They have helped us grow, learn, and imagine beyond what we thought we could imagine. I connect these words to the end of any great artistic phenomenon, "I'll be back when you call me, no need to say good bye.
- Disney's Divinity
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 16250
- Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2005 9:26 am
- Gender: Male
This is what I had been thinking already.Sotiris wrote:There's nothing left to 'shut down' anyway.
I'm sure you're fine with 3D films. And if you are, that's perfectly okay for you.SWillie! wrote:I just think this whole issue is a non-issue.

Listening to most often lately:
Taylor Swift ~ ~ "The Fate of Ophelia"
Taylor Swift ~ "Eldest Daughter"
Taylor Swift ~ "CANCELLED!"
To be honest, I didn't feel I was stirring up anything - I certainly wasn't meaning to. On the contrary, I'm trying to stop the stirring of things that aren't actually news. But I apologize if I'm unintentionally the one doing the stirring here.Disney's Divinity wrote:I'm sure you're fine with 3D films. And if you are, that's perfectly okay for you.SWillie! wrote:I just think this whole issue is a non-issue.Hard as it is to believe, some people don't care for 3D or prefer it less than other mediums (and I personally feel it is being done better at other studios, like Dreamworks and Pixar), so for them it is an issue that Disney 2D is no longer a guarantee. I don't know why that's so hard to grasp, rather than stirring up 3 pages of back and forth everytime someone is down that there won't be any 2D films coming anytime soon.
All I'm trying to say is that, as much as it sucks that Disney isn't currently doing any full-out traditional animation, isn't it better to look forward to the day they hopefully do while enjoying what it is they're doing in the meantime, rather than whine and whine that we aren't getting what we want right now? I just feel many people's response is soo overly pessimistic, and I prefer to lean towards optimism.

- Disney's Divinity
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 16250
- Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2005 9:26 am
- Gender: Male
Hahaha well, that's fair enough then. But be hopeful! You never know, they could come put of nowhere and surprise us with something awesome.Disney's Divinity wrote:I consider it laughing bitterly through the (expected) disappointment.SWillie! wrote: rather than whine and whine that we aren't getting what we want

- milojthatch
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2646
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2009 1:34 am
If you like Japanese animation. I personally can't stand it! Maybe instead of saying I miss hand drawn, I should say I miss hand drawn American animation. These dime a dozen CG films are starting to wear on me. I'm starting to not even like Pixar films as much, and for me that's saying a lot.estefan wrote: In a way, the three top producers of animation all have their own signature technique of choice that they currently specialise in. The United States with computer animation, Japan with hand-drawn animation and Great Britain with stop-motion animation. It actually doesn't require a lot of searching to find new hand-drawn features being produced.
The world NEEDS new American hand drawn animation, especially from Disney. Hopefully we'll get more sooner than latter.
____________________________________________________________
All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles, have strengthened me... You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the world for you.
-Walt Disney
All the adversity I've had in my life, all my troubles and obstacles, have strengthened me... You may not realize it when it happens, but a kick in the teeth may be the best thing in the world for you.
-Walt Disney
- thelittleursula
- Anniversary Edition
- Posts: 1235
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2012 3:15 am
- Location: Europe
Well, if you don't care for anime, the European studios also do plenty of hand-drawn work. If you haven't seen it yet, I highly recommend The Illusionist, which is an absolutely beautiful hand-drawn animated film from France. I also hear the upcoming "Ernest & Celestine" is great.milojthatch wrote: If you like Japanese animation. I personally can't stand it! Maybe instead of saying I miss hand drawn, I should say I miss hand drawn American animation. These dime a dozen CG films are starting to wear on me. I'm starting to not even like Pixar films as much, and for me that's saying a lot.
The world NEEDS new American hand drawn animation, especially from Disney. Hopefully we'll get more sooner than latter.
"There are two wolves and they are always fighting. One is darkness and despair. The other is light and hope. Which wolf wins? Whichever one you feed." - Casey Newton, Tomorrowland






