Save Disney's Traditional Animation! -- PLEASE READ!
Posted: Sun Oct 05, 2003 12:13 pm
Jake and I have started an email campaign to create awareness for the upcoming film, Brother Bear. We are also trying to communicate to people the importance of seeing this movie. We ask you to pass this message along to everyone on your mailing lists to help in the cause. If you are going to copy and paste this, please make sure that BROTHER BEAR is in bold or just ask one of us to forward a copy to you! Thanks!
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Friend,
A lion who would be king once said, “Danger? Ha! I walk on the wild side. I laugh in the face of danger. Ha-ha-HA-HA!”
That was Simba, the lion cub of Disney’s all-time animated classic The Lion King. Now, nine years later, another Disney character will walk on the wild side, too. Literally. His tale comes in a time of great danger for a beautiful art form, a danger that we cannot simply laugh in the face of. The art form is the traditionally animated feature, and the danger is extinction. So join in the fans’ fight to save it – The Ink and Paint Campaign!
You may have heard of the new Disney movie Brother Bear, coming to theaters Saturday, November 1 (and earlier in select cities on October 24.) It is the epic story of three brothers. One is tragically killed by a bear. His brother, Kenai, kills the bear with vengeance, only to be turned into a bear by the great spirits of the forest. Meanwhile, his other brother comes upon him in bear form, and thinking that the bear killed Kenai, he swears a revenge of his own. Now brother hunts brother, and Kenai’s only hope for survival is to take a walk on the wild side in a quest to regain his human form.
Brother Bear is the latest spectacle from the animation team that brought us Mulan and last year’s energetic hit Lilo & Stitch. It features new songs written and performed by Phil Collins (Tarzan) as well as an opening title performed by the legendary Tina Turner. It promises to be a wonderful, touching family film, and we hope you’ll enjoy it.
Unfortunately, Brother Bear will be one of the last traditionally animated (also a wonderful, touching family film, and we hope you’ll enjoy it.
Unfortunately, Brother Bear will be one of the last traditionally animated (also known as hand-drawn or 2D) movies produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation. (WDFA.) With the notable exception of Lilo & Stitch, Disney’s recent 2D animation efforts have not been performing as well at the box office as the more technologically advanced computer-generated movies they distribute for Pixar Animation Studios. Toy Story, A Bug’s Life, Monsters, Inc. and Finding Nemo have all been phenomenal successes, breaking all kinds of records and gaining praise the world over. Thus, the top Hollywood animation studios, including Disney, are abandoning traditional animation altogether in favor of doing all movies in CGI. Spokeswoman Terry Press of Disney rival studio DreamWorks (responsible for such traditional hits as The Prince of Egypt and Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron as well as the CG success Shrek) recently told the press, “Until audiences show some affection for 2-D, we're not going to get back into it,"
David Stainton, the current head of WDFA, recently told the press, “I absolutely stand firm that 2-D is not dead.” But actions speak louder than words, and Disney has been taking some very drastic actions. For the first time in ages, the company does not have any new completely traditionally animated projects in production after Brother Bear and next year’s Home on the Range. Disney executives have been closing several international branches of WDFA, including WDFA Paris and WDFA Japan.
Thus, it is becoming increasingly important that Brother Bear performs well at the box office and on DVD so that Hollywood, and Disney in particular, will see that people still love a good, traditionally animated feature film and begin to produce them once more. Computer-generated movies like Finding Nemo and Monsters, Inc. are wonderful, but so is traditional animation, and it would be a shame to see the nearly 70-year-old tradition of hand-drawn animation at Disney become extinct just because the executives think that people no longer enjoy and appreciate traditional product.
As a child, chances are you grew up on Disney’s classic traditional animation, and if you did, you probably want the same for your children and grandchildren. Well, Disney’s classic and innovating new traditional animation might not be there for them to grow up on unless Brother Bear and Home on the Range are big hits.
If you care about high-quality family entertainment and the future of 2D animation, please take a couple hours out of your day to go see Brother Bear in theaters this fall. See it opening weekend (November 1-2, 2003) and continue to support it throughout its run in any way you can. See it again, buy merchandise, and above all, please spread the word! Tell friends, family, coworkers and others to go see it as well. Forward this email to as many people as you possibly can!
In the realm of fantasy, Disney has always been the driving force, but in the modern world, the driving force is money. If Brother Bear falls, the long legacy of hand-drawn animation will fall with it.
For more information on Brother Bear, please visit <http://www.disney.com/brotherbear>
For more information about our campaign to save traditional animation, please visit our web site at <http://www.ultimatedisney.com/inkandpaint>.
For more information on the ongoing struggle to maintain traditional animation’s place in the movie industry, read the following article, which was very helpful in preparing this letter.
<http://www.orlandosentinel.com/business ... 4017.story
If you care, see Brother Bear! I hope you enjoy it.
-----------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dear Friend,
A lion who would be king once said, “Danger? Ha! I walk on the wild side. I laugh in the face of danger. Ha-ha-HA-HA!”
That was Simba, the lion cub of Disney’s all-time animated classic The Lion King. Now, nine years later, another Disney character will walk on the wild side, too. Literally. His tale comes in a time of great danger for a beautiful art form, a danger that we cannot simply laugh in the face of. The art form is the traditionally animated feature, and the danger is extinction. So join in the fans’ fight to save it – The Ink and Paint Campaign!
You may have heard of the new Disney movie Brother Bear, coming to theaters Saturday, November 1 (and earlier in select cities on October 24.) It is the epic story of three brothers. One is tragically killed by a bear. His brother, Kenai, kills the bear with vengeance, only to be turned into a bear by the great spirits of the forest. Meanwhile, his other brother comes upon him in bear form, and thinking that the bear killed Kenai, he swears a revenge of his own. Now brother hunts brother, and Kenai’s only hope for survival is to take a walk on the wild side in a quest to regain his human form.
Brother Bear is the latest spectacle from the animation team that brought us Mulan and last year’s energetic hit Lilo & Stitch. It features new songs written and performed by Phil Collins (Tarzan) as well as an opening title performed by the legendary Tina Turner. It promises to be a wonderful, touching family film, and we hope you’ll enjoy it.
Unfortunately, Brother Bear will be one of the last traditionally animated (also a wonderful, touching family film, and we hope you’ll enjoy it.
Unfortunately, Brother Bear will be one of the last traditionally animated (also known as hand-drawn or 2D) movies produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation. (WDFA.) With the notable exception of Lilo & Stitch, Disney’s recent 2D animation efforts have not been performing as well at the box office as the more technologically advanced computer-generated movies they distribute for Pixar Animation Studios. Toy Story, A Bug’s Life, Monsters, Inc. and Finding Nemo have all been phenomenal successes, breaking all kinds of records and gaining praise the world over. Thus, the top Hollywood animation studios, including Disney, are abandoning traditional animation altogether in favor of doing all movies in CGI. Spokeswoman Terry Press of Disney rival studio DreamWorks (responsible for such traditional hits as The Prince of Egypt and Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron as well as the CG success Shrek) recently told the press, “Until audiences show some affection for 2-D, we're not going to get back into it,"
David Stainton, the current head of WDFA, recently told the press, “I absolutely stand firm that 2-D is not dead.” But actions speak louder than words, and Disney has been taking some very drastic actions. For the first time in ages, the company does not have any new completely traditionally animated projects in production after Brother Bear and next year’s Home on the Range. Disney executives have been closing several international branches of WDFA, including WDFA Paris and WDFA Japan.
Thus, it is becoming increasingly important that Brother Bear performs well at the box office and on DVD so that Hollywood, and Disney in particular, will see that people still love a good, traditionally animated feature film and begin to produce them once more. Computer-generated movies like Finding Nemo and Monsters, Inc. are wonderful, but so is traditional animation, and it would be a shame to see the nearly 70-year-old tradition of hand-drawn animation at Disney become extinct just because the executives think that people no longer enjoy and appreciate traditional product.
As a child, chances are you grew up on Disney’s classic traditional animation, and if you did, you probably want the same for your children and grandchildren. Well, Disney’s classic and innovating new traditional animation might not be there for them to grow up on unless Brother Bear and Home on the Range are big hits.
If you care about high-quality family entertainment and the future of 2D animation, please take a couple hours out of your day to go see Brother Bear in theaters this fall. See it opening weekend (November 1-2, 2003) and continue to support it throughout its run in any way you can. See it again, buy merchandise, and above all, please spread the word! Tell friends, family, coworkers and others to go see it as well. Forward this email to as many people as you possibly can!
In the realm of fantasy, Disney has always been the driving force, but in the modern world, the driving force is money. If Brother Bear falls, the long legacy of hand-drawn animation will fall with it.
For more information on Brother Bear, please visit <http://www.disney.com/brotherbear>
For more information about our campaign to save traditional animation, please visit our web site at <http://www.ultimatedisney.com/inkandpaint>.
For more information on the ongoing struggle to maintain traditional animation’s place in the movie industry, read the following article, which was very helpful in preparing this letter.
<http://www.orlandosentinel.com/business ... 4017.story
If you care, see Brother Bear! I hope you enjoy it.
-----------------------------------------------