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The Future of Disney Animation
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:13 am
by DisneyAnimation88
With only Tangled and Winnie the Pooh in the pipeline for Disney Animation, what projects do you think they are currently planning?
There are obviously rumours about King of the Elves, Snow Queen and an apparent Jack and the Beanstalk adaptation but it seems the future of the department is especially up in the air at the moment, apparently as management are planning a radical downsize.
What direction do you think Disney animation should go in and are there any projects you are hoping they undertake?
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 12:41 pm
by Mickeyfan1990
There's possibility of a Roger Rabbit sequel if I'm not mistaken.
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 1:37 pm
by TheSequelOfDisney
Musker and Clements have pitched a few ideas to Lasseter, so they will more likely than not have another project in the works soon.
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 2:13 pm
by Neal
Jack and the Beanstalk was not greenlit
Joe Jump is still in the works and from my understanding King of the Elves has been resumed yet again?
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 5:51 pm
by DisneyAnimation88
I wish they would put "My Peoples" back into production. I recently read about it in a book about abondoned Disney animation and it sounded like an intriguing idea, especially as Andreas Deja was so heavily involved in planning it. Maybe if Tangled is a success, Disney and Deja will resume work on planning the film.
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 6:08 pm
by Disney Duster
Okay I gotta say it, I feel a video game (Joe Jump) is not a very Disney subject. I feel something like Fraidy Cat is, I feel anything organic dealing with real life or books which are about real life is, but not a video game. You can try to explain against it all you want but I'm sure you all feel a Disney movie about a video game...well, think about it, not as a movie itself, but as a Disney movie, a movie for Disney.
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 6:55 pm
by DisneyAnimation88
[quote]Okay I gotta say it, I feel a video game (Joe Jump) is not a very Disney subject.[/quote]
I kind of agree with you there. Maybe a project like Joe Jump would work better as a live action feature rather than an animated one but we fans are calling out for more diverse and original ideas so I wouldn't completely dismiss anything they're planning until more concrete details are revealed.
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 6:58 pm
by toonaspie
Neal wrote:Jack and the Beanstalk was not greenlit
Joe Jump is still in the works and from my understanding King of the Elves has been resumed yet again?
I'm kinda relieved actually. Disney is gonna have to eventually take a break from fairytales and find more diverse material for their films.
Disney Duster wrote:Okay I gotta say it, I feel a video game (Joe Jump) is not a very Disney subject. I feel something like Fraidy Cat is, I feel anything organic dealing with real life or books which are about real life is, but not a video game. You can try to explain against it all you want but I'm sure you all feel a Disney movie about a video game...well, think about it, not as a movie itself, but as a Disney movie, a movie for Disney.
Thank you...I'm glad I'm not alone on this.
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 7:02 pm
by Goliath
Didn't we already have a thread about this?
Albert?

Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 9:04 pm
by Escapay
A thread about the future of Disney Animation?
Hmm...
Disney Duster's
To Save Disney this 2010 is about Disney Animation Studios and how the mere name of "Tangled" can potentially make or break the studio.
Neal's
Full Slate Of Upcoming Disney Animation hasn't been updated since last December but was meant to be a continuing source of Disney Animation news. Later on he made the thread
Traditional Animation Is Back (It Seems For Good) At Disney! celebrating the news that there was another 2-D film in the works after
The Princess and the Frog.
BDF's
A Kiss Before Dying... [2D Animation] is not about a future WDAS project involving a princess whose kiss is deadly, but his concerns that 2-D animation is dead at Disney.
I'm sure I missed a few. But four threads seem to cover enough ground.
albert
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 9:10 pm
by Polizzi
What if Disney does this movie, when the time comes? Just a thought.
The Banshee and Fin Magee (Originally titled The Banshee) - Dean DeBlois, co-writer and co-director of Lilo & Stitch, tries his hand at live action with this period ghost story set in Ireland. In writer-director-producer DeBlois's own words, "It's the story of a little boy who is ignored by the world and pretends to be a ghost, who (then) comes into contact with a real ghost." DeBlois claims this "story of friendship, love and loss" is aimed at the Harry Potter audience; he hopes older kids will enjoy this supernatural mystery. Production was supposed to begin spring 2005, but as of now, nothing has been shot and there is no firm release date yet set. In February 2006, it was reported that Robert Nelson Jacobs had been hired to rewrite DeBlois' script. Jacobs was Oscar-nominated for his Chocolat screenplay, but got fewer raves for his work on Dinosaur, Out to Sea, and The Shipping News
http://www.dvdizzy.com/disneyintheaters.html
Posted: Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:09 pm
by Neal

Yeah, college has been a life-sucker. I began a number of Disney threads/projects that are now on hiatus.
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 2:19 am
by Wonderlicious
Neal wrote:Jack and the Beanstalk was not greenlit
Joe Jump is still in the works and from my understanding King of the Elves has been resumed yet again?
Apparently,
Jack and the Beanstalk didn't get greenlit because some other studio has a live action
Jack the Giant Killer in the works somewhere. And of course, Disney doesn't want to confuse the public...
As for
Joe Jump, I believe it's been transformed into
Reboot Ralph (such is the way of a trip through the Disney/Hollywood development circle; I bet
The Princess and the Frog probably started life as a film about Joan of Arc

), and it's believed that
King of the Elves is indeed back on the cards, potentially in traditional animation. In all honesty, I think that the
Joe Jump/Reboot Ralph premise/concept seems better suited to short or featurette length than anything over an hour, and news of it has never really gripped me since the earliest days of it being mentioned in the same way as with
Tangled/Rapunzel, Meet the Robinsons, The Princess and the Frog, Enchanted and even the new
Winnie the Pooh film (then again, what we've heard so far may not really do full service to the idea, and we haven't actually seen any artwork for it as well). I can understand that Disney getting out of the fairy tale business (well, producing nothing but fairy tales) is not necessarily a bad idea (in fact, as much as I love a good old fashioned Disney fairy tale, Disney needs to diversify and for the fans to accept it), but I don't think that
Joe Jump/Reboot Ralph sounds all that enticing.
King of the Elves, on the other hand, does interest me quite a bit.
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 2:24 am
by Timon/Pumbaa fan
Disney Duster wrote:Okay I gotta say it, I feel a video game (Joe Jump) is not a very Disney subject. I feel something like Fraidy Cat is, I feel anything organic dealing with real life or books which are about real life is, but not a video game. You can try to explain against it all you want but I'm sure you all feel a Disney movie about a video game...well, think about it, not as a movie itself, but as a Disney movie, a movie for Disney.
But Disney did make a movie about a video-game. It's called
Tron.

Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 3:12 pm
by Disney Duster
Well...many things.
One is I meant an animated film.
Two is I'm not sure that's the kind of thing Walt would have approved of.
And three is, it's a Disney movie where human beings enter a video game world that is made up, almost like humans that enter magic worlds in past Disney films. But Joe Jump would have been about a video game character entering another video game.
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 3:33 pm
by Super Aurora
Disney Duster wrote:
Two is I'm not sure that's the kind of thing Walt would have approved of.
With Walt's dedication for technology and technological progress, I doubt he would be against something that focus on technology, even if it centered around a video game.
Ralph reboot would world well in Epcot for it's promotion and merchandise.
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 3:40 pm
by Elladorine
Super Aurora wrote:With Walt's dedication for technology and technological progress, I doubt he would be against something that focus on technology, even if it centered around a video game.
I agree with that. Heck, he might have even loved the concept of telling a story through the interaction that video games offer and the possibilities of combining those concepts with film-making.
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 4:00 pm
by filmmusic
Sorry to be pessimistic but I see no future at all!
the classics are dead! 2D is dead!
After Tarzan (and a bit before) Disney completely lost the game.
I remember back then, that when a new Disney film was out, it was the big event of the year for me!
Now it isn't anymore.
Thank God there's still Ghibli with its classic animation that hasn't changed!
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 4:40 pm
by DisneyJedi
filmmusic wrote:Sorry to be pessimistic but I see no future at all!
the classics are dead! 2D is dead!
After Tarzan (and a bit before) Disney completely lost the game.
I remember back then, that when a new Disney film was out, it was the big event of the year for me!
Now it isn't anymore.
Thank God there's still Ghibli with its classic animation that hasn't changed!
Excuse me, but if 2D is dead, tell that to The Princess and the Frog and Enchanted (despite that there's only ten minutes of animation in that one), Disney's most recently released 2D projects.
Now excuse me for being rude and/or childish, but if you're going to be Mr. Negative about the future of Disney and you have nothing else to say, then just sit down and shut up!
Posted: Thu Sep 23, 2010 5:12 pm
by DisneyAnimation88
I don't believe 2D is dead at all, Princess and the Frog is enough proof that Disney are still capable of making good animated features. The glory days of the 1990's are long gone but not all of the animated films Disney have produced since then have been bad, Lilo & Stitch and Emperor's New Groove are examples. John Lasseter claims on the PATF special features that Disney assembled the best group of animators in the world to produce the film so I can't see why the same group can't do so again, provided they work with capable writers and directors.