Showing posts with label Bolt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bolt. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

What Made Joe Jump...

Wakka, wakka, wakka...


As of yesterday there was a change in the schedule at Walt Disney Animation Studios...

We've talked recently about the road ahead for the Mouse in ink and paint a couple weeks ago, so consider this an addendum that will be followed by more addendums. The schedule for the next few years remains relatively the same. Next year comes "Rapunzel" and then the following we get the new "Winnie the Pooh" film, but then things start to get a bit bumpy. 2012 will possibly see a different film as that year's offering, "King of the Elves" has been pulled off the rails temporarily as it gets retooled. As to what that means, well, it's the direction the story is heading isn't where Lasseter and the Story Trust were expecting it to be. Being as they have time before it's supposed to start animation (approximately late next year), this doesn't mean the end of the project. Remember that this happens on many films at Disney and Pixar. Ratatouille was the last example of the Lamp retooling a project. I've heard that there were story problems as early as a couple months ago with the departure/removal of Robert Walker. Aaron Blaise will most likely get another co-director but that hasn't been announced yet.

Being as that project will be tinkered with, another computer animated project that was thought dead a couple years ago could now possibly take it's scheduling place. I mentioned "Joe Jump" coming back from development hell in a post earlier in the month. It appears that it may move from a tentative 2013 release to 2012. Kind of the way Pixar moved "Cars 2" up to 2011 from 2012.

Animation takes a long, long time to make; sometimes it takes detours and other times it takes extended pit stops. Disney Animation's "Joe Jump" has taken a long, winding road. A road where good and bad things happened. Animated films go through metamorphosis from early conception through the development process, all the way to opening up all across the world. Sometimes it turns into a Frankenstein project like "Chicken Little," and sometimes it turns into something of a gem like "Bolt."

Hopefully, JJ will turn into that one. As a matter of fact, it's looking that way right now. Remember how Bolt began life as something called "American Dog" from Chris Sanders? Well, that's the case with Joe Jump. There are enough elements of the story that survive, but the project has taken a different route that what Sam Levine intended. Joe Jump was his baby. He storyboarded his heart into this project with his writer and created something that was decidedly different that what Disney is known for. When Lasseter came in, all projects that weren't deemed "Disney" enough were cast aside. Levine knew that there was trouble even though John kept him and his writer on board for another year working on the project. After it started to languish he asked for a status. What should he do? Go on working on a project that there didn't seem to be a lot of love for, or move over to another project? He wasn't given a clear answer. And so Joe J. faded into the background. And Sam? I believe he moved on.

The new incarnation of the film bears elements to the original, but there is enough difference to consider it an entirely different film. Rich Moore, the film's new director is taking a different approach and Levin is nowhere to be seen, although his influence is felt. Notice there is one director attached to it? As of now, that's the case, although a co-director could be added later if problems arise. But that's the case for the next couple of projects. Remember that other untitled hand-drawn film that is supposed to come out in 2013? It also only has one director, as of right now, Chris Buck. But again, things change as the news about KOTE shows. Of course, the other news about Chris Williams new project will be interesting to hear when it finally gets announced. Hopefully that will happen next year. Let's just hope it doesn't get "retooled."

But let's not think it would be the end of the world if it happened...

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Monday, March 23, 2009

JoBlo Interviews Rhino...


The promotions with Rhino are starting to come out...

The JoBlo website got an interview with the little fella while he was outside his ball. Take a look and remember that it was all recorded live. This wasn't a setup...

And if you're a morning person, check out KTLA5 at 7:15 a.m. tomorrow and watch who Mark Kriski has helping him with the weather.

It'll be awesome...

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Life Is A Ball...


If you're watching the entertainment shows in the next few days you may get a little treat...

With the impending release of "Bolt" on DVD/Blu-Ray, they're going to be interviewing a lot of the cast and you should expect a few surprises. When shows like Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood and the like start interviewing characters like Rhino the hamster.

Actually live.

Live? Yup. You can expect a live interview about the release of the film with Rhino the little fella with ADD talking up a storm about how awesome Bolt(film and star) is to work with. Now the way they're doing this is through WDI's Living Character Initiative. Through that advanced technology, interviewers like Mary Hart and others will be able to ask animator Mark Walton about how it was to star with the white doggie. And it'll be very believable and very cute, so watch for it.

Awesome...

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Super Awesome...


Here's the first still from the new Disney short "Super Rhino" that will be on the DVD/Blu-Ray of Walt Disney Animation Studios "Bolt" next week...

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Next Week Look For A Dog...



It comes out next week in America, but it's still doing very good box office overseas...

By the time you buy your DVD or Blu-Ray copy next week the little dog will be within striking distance of the big 300 number. By the beginning of April it will have crossed that line. It would have already passed it weeks ago if Calvin Klein Vampires Models hadn't blinded Disney's marketing department...

Friday, March 6, 2009

$elling Bolt$...



With Walt Disney Animation Studios' "Bolt" only days away from it's DVD/Blu-Ray release I remembered going to see it once again...

I remember stopping by The Disney Store to see what merchandise they had for it and finding very little, but also hearing that many of the plush, stuffed figures they had were constantly sold out. I went to another store and found the same problem. While Bolt merchandise didn't light marketing on fire, it did do surprisingly well, even though I didn't see much of it.

So in light of the new formats being released this month and the approaching $300 million dollar figure at the box office, I figured I'd see some of what Disney Consumer Products had made for the dog that I hadn't seen...












































Wednesday, February 18, 2009

A $300,000,000 Bolt Coming Soon...


So the domestic take of "Bolt" has been a disappointing release based on going head to head with a horrible episode of Dawson's Creek that stared vampires...

But it opened up Numero Uno at the British box office on it's first week grossing an amazing £2.8m from people spared the fight with "Twilight" that was had here in America.

Elsewhere in the world the film continues to make bucks and the international take of this Disney film will be more than double the amount it made on home turf.

Looks like John Lasseter's first outing may not be a giant blockbuster, but ain't going to be a disappointment when the final numbers are tallied either...

Thursday, January 29, 2009

A 200,000,000 Dog...


It's taken longer to get there and is still a disappointment more than Lasseter and the Suits at the Mouse would like to admit, but "Bolt" passed the two hundred million dollar mark yesterday(that's 200,000,000 for you UCLA graduates!).

The film has had a steady growth rate overseas and will wind up a modest hit, but a hit none the less. The little white dog is a step in the right direction for Disney animation and those that didn't go and see it in theaters will have a chance to realize they made a mistake in March. This was the beginning of Disney rebuilding its reputation and that takes time... part two will be the DVD release and the next step will be that little animated film coming out on Christmas day...

Artwork by Brooks Campbell.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Oscar Likes Animals & Robots...


It appears that a Robot, A Dog and a Panda will compete for the Best Animated Picture Award at the Oscars this year...

Good odds for the Mouse.

And naturally, a Bat was shut out because it was just too popular, I guess. If you missed the rundown on what was nominated for what, here are the main nominations:

Best Picture:


The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Frost/Nixon

Milk

The Reader

Slumdog Millionaire
*


Best Director:

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - David Fincher

Frost/Nixon - Ron Howard

Milk - Gus Van Sant

The Reader - Stephen Daldry

Slumdog Millionaire - Danny Boyle
*


Best Animated Picture:

Bolt

Kung Fu Panda

Wall-E
*


Best Animated Short Film

La Maison de Petits Cubes - Kunio Kato

Lavatory - Lovestory - Konstantin Bronzit

Oktapodi - Emud Mokhberi, Thierry Marchand

Presto - Doug Sweetland *

This Way Up - Alan Smith, Adam Foulkes



Best Original Screenplay:

Frozen River - Courtney Hunt

Happy-Go-Lucky - Mike Leigh

In Bruges - Martin McDonagh

Milk - Dustin Lance Black

Wall-E - Andrew Stanton, Jim Reardon, Pete Docter
*


Best Adapted Screenplay:


The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - Eric Roth, Robin Swicord

Doubt - John Patrick Shanley

Frost/Nixon - Peter Morgan

The Reader - David Hare

Slumdog Millionaire - Simon Beaufoy
*


Best Actor:

Richard Jenkins - The Visitor

Frank Langella - Frost/Nixon

Sean Penn - Milk

Brad Pitt - The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Mickey Rourke - The Wrestler
*


Best Supporting Actor:

Josh Brolin - Milk

Robert Downey Jr. - Tropic Thunder

Phillip Seymour Hoffman - Doubt

Heath Ledger - The Dark Knight *

Michael Shannon - Revolutionary Road



Best Actress:

Anne Hathaway - Rachel Getting Married

Angelina Jolie - Changeling

Melissa Leo - Frozen River

Meryl Streep - Doubt

Kate Winslet - The Reader
*


Best Supporting Actress:

Amy Adams - Doubt

Penelope Cruz - Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Viola Davis - Doubt

Taraji P Henson - The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Marisa Tomei - The Wrestler
*


* Honor's pick for what will/should win the Academy Award.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Bring This Dog Home...


It appears that Disney has announced the release date for the DVD/Blu-Ray of "Bolt" according to UltimateDisney...

March 24th.


Both the DVD and Blu-Ray will include the new short we mentioned a while back and it now has a name: "Super Rhino."

I wonder who it could be about?

Monday, January 5, 2009

Honor's Top Ten Of 2008...





Since everyone seems to be compiling "Best Of" lists I figured I'd join in. Honor Hunter is nothing if not a sheepish slave to conformity. Or so some commentors would say...

It was a great year for film...

Despite the fact that Disney didn't have a great year, there were a lot of very good films for Movie Buffs/Film Geeks to go out and see not made by the Mouse. Without further ado, here are my favorite ten of the year:


Number 10: Valkyrie

More a caper film than a war movie. An extremely well crafted film featuring an all-star cast led by Mr. Box Office himself. The only flaw was in not having Cruise do an accent, which at times took you out of the film to realize you were watching a Tom Cruise. Brian Singer does a great job of making you root for these men to succeed in killing Hitler and ending the war. Although we know it didn't succeed, you feel that there is a possibility it will. Again, a great film.


Number 9:The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

David Fincher continues to make amazing films. This telling of a man who grows younger as he grows older is pure Hollywood. Many actors would love to be able to do this, btw... Brad Pitt does a great job of being the muse to Fincher's song, so to speak. This film is the anti-Gump film with a much more bittersweet screenplay by Eric Roth(Forrest Gump). If you love sweeping epics and seeing why Hollywood invented the Oscar then this film is for you.


Number 8:Wall-E

The guys at Pixar did in again by bringing a piece of metal to life and making you care for it. Although I feel the first act is the strongest, this film is filled with genuine heart and strong storytelling by Andrew Stanton. If the Lamp has done anything right over the past decade it's been to populate their films with memorable characters and the little robot has plenty of them to share screen time with. John Lasseter and his crew still know how to show the other guys how to make a film, not that they're listening when you see some of what gets made.


Number 7:The Wrestler

Mickey Rourke is nothing short of astounding in this gut wrenching tale of a has-been wrestler whose best days are behind him. He tries to reconnect with his estranged daughter and strike up a romance with a has-been stripper played by Marisa Tomei. A heart wrenching portrait of a man who abandoned his past and has no future. Not for the timid, but worth seeing none-the-less...


Number 6:Forgetting Sarah Marshall

This acidically innocent romantic comedy produced by Judd Apatow and staring its writer Jason Segel as a television music composer who gets dumped by his more successful TV star girlfriend is just fun. Fun in all the right ways. It's message of love is truly crude and naive all at once. Some have said this film is this years "40 Year Old Virgin" because of the Judd Apatow association, but I'd say it's more akin to this decade's "Something About Mary" than any other film.


Number 5:Iron Man

Robert Downey Jr. was the one Jon Favreau fought for in this adaption of the Marvel Comic character and I'm so glad he got his way. This film would have lost so much had Downey not been in the role. This was a great, faithful adaption of the super-hero with demons in his past that the casting gets so right. Not as somber or bleak as a film like "The Dark Knight," but an extremely entertaining one. I look forward to the sequel and Favreau being able to paint Tony Stark's world on broader canvas.


Number 4:Kung Fu Panda

My favorite animated film comes not from Disney or Pixar this year, but from the hit and miss studio of Jeffrey Katzenberg's Dreamworks. I love, love, love "Kung Fu Panda." I had heard good buzz going in so I expected it to be a nice film. I was stunned. This tale of a Karate loving, overweight Panda is so spot on in its humor and the homage to 70's Hong Kong films. If Dreamworks starts doing more films like this there's going to be a lot of sweating going on the Disney lot in Burbank. I can't recommend this film enough...


Number 3:Quantum of Solace

While not as good as "Casino Royale," this James Bond film is a great sequel that feels like the second part of a mini-series we've waited two years for the conclusion of. Daniel Craig returns as the less refined 007 that's on a mission for country and conscious. I love that we get to see him slowly evolve into the character audiences have come to love for over forty years. Some want the next one to continue right after this one like Solace did with Royale, but once you get to the end you know that can't happen. Craig's Bond is finally becoming the Bond we love. By the closing credits you know he's ready to order that Martini shaken, not stirred.


Number 2:Slumdog Millionaire

Wow. What can I say about this film, but that it's truly a parable of life. A fairy tale of love that transcends race and culture. I had to grapple with whether or not this was better than "The Dark Knight." Chris Nolan's film won out... barely. This film is an astounding achievement that I thought couldn't happen. Boyle's "Trainspotting" has always been his best achievement until now. He topped it with this amazing cinematic experience. If there is one film on this list that you should see, it's this one. I can't wait to get the Blu-Ray for this one to show my friends that don't live near a theater showing it. But the home experience doesn't do it justice. If you have the opportunity, go and see this film in a theater...


Number 1:The Dark Knight

Ever once and a while a pop-culture film moves beyond being a money machine and achieves that rare form of art. This is such a film. It works on so many subtle levels. Everything from the acting to the directing to the script is perfect. I know that some of the performances have been overshadowed by Heath Ledger's performance/passing, but everyone in this film deserves to be acknowledged for the great work they did. This is the opus of all comic book films. While it is faithful to the comic book character, it evolves into something far more resonate. If ever a comic book movie could show Suits the potential of these things to be true art and truly profitable, this was that film.

Honor(able) mention:

There were a lot of films that were very good, but didn't make it into the top ten. Of special note are "Bolt," "Hellboy II: The Golden Army," "Tropic Thunder," "Burn After Reading" and "The Incredible Hulk" which just missed getting in...

Saturday, December 27, 2008

100,000,000.00 Dog...


It's taken longer to get there than expected, but Walt Disney Pictures "Bolt" passed the hundred million dollar mark as of yesterday...

The film has already made more than "Meet the Robinsons," so that's an improvement. While Twilight took the wind out of it's sails during the opening days it's recovered to do decent business. Not what the Mouse would have liked, but it's gotten more respectable legs as time has passed. Hopefully It'll do good when the DVD/Blu-Ray is released early next year...

Good boy, Bolt. Good boy.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Pixar Short, Disney Film...



Starting this Friday, December 12th you can catch the "Cars Toons" Short, "Tokyo Mater" in front of prints showing Walt Disney Pictures "Bolt"at your local theater.



It should be pretty entertaining... and it blurs the line between what is and what isn't a Disney film as the characters become more integrated. Not to mention that it's fun to have a short in front of Disney's animated films again. Besides the mistake in thinking "Twilight" wasn't going to be a threat and canabalize the same market Bolt was going for, I believe removing "Glago's Guest" from the front of the film was an error as well... We'll see where it winds up soon though.




For those that haven't seen the film, you now have another reason to buy a ticket...

UPDATE: Moriarty over at Ain't It Cool News has an article with a couple of hi-res images from the short up you might want to see.

UPDATE 2: It appears Latino Review has another pic as well and a review of the short. Thanks, El Guapo.

UPDATE 3: And over at Rotten Tomatoes you'll find another exclusive pic and review of the film as well. Those Disney publicity people really know how to get the word out, don't they?

UPDATE 4: Coming Soon now has an article up along with a couple exclusive pics also... Man, if only the Mouse had done as good a job marketing the movie as they are this short!

Monday, December 1, 2008

3 Pigeons/Three Interviews...


And continuing our 24/7 dog coverage...

First off, no I'm not calling these guys pigeons. It just sounded like a catchy title for the post. There are three interviews with various animators/writers/designers out there I thought you'd be interested in if you hadn't seen 'em yet:

Cinzia Angelini, the lovely and talented animator on "Bolt" has a nice interview here.

Mark Cotta Vaz, the writer of "The Art of Bolt" gives his two cents right here.

Joe Moshier, one of the character designers on "Bolt," "Rapunzel" and several others talks here.

Good reads one and all. It gives you another little glimpse into the Hat Building...


Hat Tip to Animated Views.

Bolt's Jolt...


Apparently getting bit by a vampire isn't permanent or fatal...

The Disney animated film's box office take was up around 2 percent more this week than the opening weekend based on strong word of mouth. It came in neck and neck with "Twilight" over the three day weekend, but according to initial estimates just beat it with $26,596,000 versus $26,370,000. Twilight's box office take plunged 62 percent which means those tweens and young girls aren't enough to keep it going into the new year.

Bolt ended the weekend with just shy of $67 million dollars, reversing a disappointing opening weekend that was expected to take in between 40 and 50 million, not the 27 million it actually made. Still, this weekend shows that audiences have warmed to the film and it should continue to make a fair amount of green for the Mouse. The international market hasn't opened up for WDAS latest film and the foreign territories tends to be where studios make the majority of their coin these days.

It appears the Suits in Burbank have a lot to be thankful after this Thanksgiving weekend...

Monday, November 24, 2008

Interview With The Hamster...


There's a nice, short video interview with Mark Walton(aka: Rhino the Hamster) over at CNN online...

You can tell he really is passionate about his work. Mark caught Lasseter's eye(and ear) and he and the directors couldn't find anyone, no matter how many actors they auditioned for the role that was as good as his portrayal. In "Bolt," Walton's Rhino steals ever scene he's in.

Give it a read/look...

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Blue Sky Disney Review: Bolt




Sorry about the lateness of the review, I've been running around and living in the real world.

When it comes to "Bolt", many of you know it's taken a long winding road to the screen. There have been fans that have had their aspirations and hearts broken along the way. When I saw the film last week I had high hopes for it. I will admit that Chris Sanders designs were more appealing, but everything I've heard about this project told me that that was the only thing appealing about his version. As I said, I've trusted John Lasseter because up till now he's not let me down. And he really seems to know how to keep the audience interested.

He still does.

Bolt is a road picture, but it starts off in another world to establish this. I won't go into the details of the story because if you've seen the trailer then you know the premise. But you haven't seen the heart. This story has the warmth and attention that has been missing from Disney animation for a decade now. It's kind of ironic that the last Disney animated film to have this much heart was also the product of Sanders. Yes, "Lilo and Stitch" was the last animated film I thought was totally worthy of the Disney moniker. Not there haven't been attempts made, but all of them have faltered in one way or another. This is the first one in a long time to remind me why I like Disney and why their animation stirs my emotions.

I'm not a big fan of John Travolta, I don't have any hate for him like some of you, but other than "Pulp Fiction" and "Saturday Night Fever," I've just never took much of an interest in his work. I know he sounds familiar in the role, but very quickly I forgot it was him. The character seemed real to me, but the secondary characters were even more so. This is trademark at Pixar that Lasseter has wisely brought over to WDAS. The character of Rhino and surprisingly Mittens truly shine in this film. Unlike films I wanted to love like "Atlantis," these characters actually engage me and don't seem to be thrown in because someone said: "We need a cute little girl that's tough." Of all the voices, the one that kept bringing me out of the film a bit, was Miley Cyrus. She does a good job, but her recognizable voice would bring images of the Disney Channel from time to time. Don't worry, she's not in it that much. This is a road picture, remember?

I felt that the back stories and the depth of emotional involvement in the film were a great welcome from what I've had to endure(Chicken Little, Home on the Range, ect.) for most of the last decade. This is a story that kids and adults can enjoy just as much as a couple out for a date movie. It's not a film that talks down to you. It doesn't try to be hip like certain films from a former Disney Animation Head. It just tells you a compelling story that is worth watching, worth spending money on and most of all, worthy of being called Disney.

Chris Williams and Byron Howard have a great future at the Hat Building. They're clearly very talented storytellers and knowing that half of that team is working on getting "Rapunzel" fixed and ready for 2010 is a comforting feeling. I've not heard what Williams is doing next but excitedly look forward to whatever he's working on.

Look, some of you are dead set against going to see this simply because of your feelings about Chris Sanders. Others may not feel that it's very interesting from the trailers. But all I can do is offer my opinion on the matter. If you choose not to go see it, you're missing out on something special. You're missing out on the rebirth of Disney animation being relevant again. You're missing out on the first animated film from the Mouse that hasn't made you feel like you were being taken for a patsy for just going to see something because it had the name Disney on it. Lastly, you're missing out on a great time at the movies. When I see movies, it's rare that the audience claps and cheers at the end. That usually happens only at Pixar films. Both times I've seen it they cheered. Both times the audience sat in their seats to watch the credits. The show last night had many children there with their parents watching a bunch of boring credits scroll by. Giggling and smiling. I watched one mother walk her child out as he asked if he could see it again...

She nodded her head and said; "Tomorrow." I smiled realizing that Disney had hit the bulls eye if this is the kind of response they'd be getting from both adults and kids. A movie good enough for a parent to take here kid to see again in these difficult time. It shows that good stories are worthy of seeing again. And again. I only hope that you give the film a chance and see it once.

It's been a long time since a Disney animated film made me remember why I love the Mouse. Go see what I saw this past week. Twice, actually and more to come... Go see why you loved Walt Disney in the first place...

Friday, November 21, 2008

Bolt Is Apparently A Good Boy...


Well, I only have one word to say...

Go.

But apparently others are saying quite a lot more:

"Familiar territory, but the Disney team still knows how to bring a story to life." Rafer Guzman, Newsday
Full review here.
"I know that the knee-jerk reaction to any non-Pixar animated work from Disney is resistance and ridicule, but please allow me to be among the first to tell you that BOLT goes down easy and is a whole lot of fun." Capone, Ain't It Cool News
Full review here.

"It's charming, nicely paced, often quite funny and features well-chosen voice talent. Most important, it provides a satisfying entertainment ''meal.'' It's not a ''gourmet'' banquet on the order of ''Ratatouille'' or the first ''Shrek,'' but this peppy picture is certainly more than a cinematic ''snack,'' and for its 96-minute running time will not bore kids, the parents or other adults joining them." Bill Zwecker, SUN-TIMES COLUMNIST
Full review here.

"What is most certainly a return to form for the Disney, their animation department has not only caught up to Pixar but with their own past of telling classic tales. Bolt is easily the best film Disney has made since their silver age resurgence in the late 80’s and early 90’s. It is a hilarious, adorably sweet film that will please the whole family, and I absolutely loved almost every last moment of it." Massawyrm, Aint It Cool News
Full review here.

"Disney animation takes a tentative step out of the shadows of Pixar with Bolt, a winning 3D-animated action-comedy that marries the best Disney traditions with Pixar polish. Though this road comedy of a lost TV star dog doesn't rival the classics from Disney's computer-animation pioneer partners, it's the first in-house Disney animation -- after the middling Chicken Little, The Wild and Meet the Robinsons -- to bear comparison to the Pixar gold standard." Roger Moore, Orlando Sentinel
Full review here.

"Four Stars, one of the best movies of the year." Michael Medved, Film Critic and Talk Show Host
Full review here.

"But "Bolt" impresses on more levels than just the basic -

It's a great day in America when the complicated looks so easy, and when we expect smart storytelling as a rule, not the exception." Lisa Schwarzbaum, Entertainment Weekly
Full review here.

"I laughed, I cried, the hamster was hilarious… The gags are hilarious, the characters endearing and believable, and the settings and action are rendered with high craft. Director Byron Howard and Chris Williams and screenwriter Dan Fogelman have all worked in the trenches of some of Disney's better animated flicks and have put together an entertaining, fun gem of a movie." Vincent Janoski, Wired Magazine
Full review here.

"Fully Awesome!" Rhino, Hampster about town.
Full review here.

There are more, but I think you get the point. This is a fine restart to the Disney animation tradition... Why are you still reading?

Go.

The Lasseter Era Begins...



Today is another milestones in the long, long history of the Disney Brothers/Walt Disney Productions/Walt Disney Pictures via the Walt Disney Company...

Today we have the first tangible results of Bob Iger's decision to buy Pixar Animation Studios. Rather than let the Lamp slip away and have the films it makes go on to provide profits for another studio and characters for another theme park he chose the boldest path. He bought the company George Lucas started to help out his film making with this potentially "new" computer technology, which George had to sell to pay off a nasty divorce. The one that was bought by Steve Jobs because he saw a future in the computer technology that the company was developing. He had this vision of selling the software that Pixar, as he newly renamed it, would be creating. Oh, and along the way some of the people there were working on these little shorts to develop the programs they were creating. He let them do this so long as they also did commercials to help foot the cost. Along the way they talked about experimenting with a film done entirely in computer images. So they started having discussions with the Mouse...

And the rest we all know. Animation changed. Computer graphics changed. Story changed... or did it just come back? Because at the heart of all that cold, computer programing was a small band of storytellers led by a fired animator from Disney named John Lasseter. Barely a decade after creating the first computer animated film and changing the course of most theatrical animation in the process, Pixar became a part of the Walt Disney Company. John Lasseter, whom was fired twenty years earlier, was now brought back in to do what he was fired for. Asking questions. Shaking things up. Bring life back to what used to be the crown jewel of animation... the Disney feature animation division. Oh, and he'd be given extremely broad powers. Only answerable to Iger. And carrots would be dangled. We are only beginning to reap the benefits of that right now. More to follow over the next few years. He truly inherited a division that was in a chaotic mess. Sure, there were many great people that worked there, but the creative heads of the company weren't very creative. The Suits were getting their tentacles way too much into the process of storytelling and the spark that had been lit in the late Eighties was being extinguished. Many projects were scraped or discarded all together. Several projects were sent back to the drawing board and a few were left unscathed. After sitting down to look at the story reels for what was upcoming in the near future Lasseter talked to the directors in charge about what he thought was going right and wrong with their projects. He got several directors who were actually leaving Disney to stay and also was in the process of bringing back animators that had long given up on Walt's Little Creation...

It wouldn't all be painless. In fact, much of it would be painful. Nothing in life or business is a fairytale. Projects that were long labors of love would have to go or be radically changed. And change is the enemy of the status quo. Some would reject this change and realize the consequences. The first project to be released by Lasseter under his leadership was one of these such labors of love. Bolt. This long gestating project would be his first test. It wouldn't necessarily be the longest one developing at the Mouse right now(that would be Rapunzel), but it would be the one he saw being the closest to being released. Or at least having the earliest possible opening(in a frantic 18 months, which is light years in animation).

This isn't a film that was conceived of wholly by Lasseter and his Pixar crew. Anyone that's a Disney fan tends to know the story how this one began. A few Disney animators and quite a lot of fans still have bruised egos and harsh reactions to the sacking of Chris Sanders from his pet project: "American Dog."

Many people have been highly critical of this project, but hopefully as the weekend ends the result will be a realization that this is the first of many positive projects being developed by the new Disney animation division. Clearly, "Bolt" is more low hanging fruit than a radical departure from the structural norm of the animation market and Walt Disney Studios' typical films.



But the story that Chris Sanders had put together wasn't really much of a story. And despite all the Sanders Fans out there, this wasn't the "Lilo & Stitch" follow-up project that they were imagining. Even today, many fans long for the project that they "think" American Dog was, but wasn't really. It was a collection of pretty, some would say pretty weird and eclectic images... but at its heart, it didn't have one. There was no connection to the character for the audience. At least not a close one, an appealing one according to Lasseter and the people around him that watched the reels. They gave suggestions to Sanders, but after working on the project so long and so close, he rejected almost all of them outright. That was a mistake. There have been several directors let go over at Pixar on projects that they were working. Most people don't know this because the process up in Emeryville is more secretive. But it's a process that has worked well since Toy Story and who was going to argue with success?

The one thing that has always mattered to John Lasseter was story. Was it good? And more importantly, was it working? If it wasn't then change was needed. If the director didn't want to change he was no longer the director. As long as the story was engaging and moving forward a director had no fear of anything from the big guy with the smile wearing the Hawaiian shirts. If you couldn't get the story going then the smile would fade and those fun shirts he wore wouldn't make your experience any more pleasant. Once it became clear that Sanders wasn't going to play ball he was removed from the project. This was heartbreaking for Chris and difficult for Lasseter, but it was not uncommon for the Pixar executive to have to do unpopular things. Such is the case in business. And despite what anyone will tell you, animation is a business. If it doesn't make money, it won't be making much animation for very long. That's a true and sometimes sad reality to the film business, to animation and to life. This isn't high school and you're not out to be liked by all the people around you. If you think you are, then you're going to be extremely disappointed in your travels.



Once that was done, Lasseter got together with his story crews and came up with likely candidates for replacements. One of the main people that he was looking at was a young animator that had proposed a short for the new shorts program he was developing named Chris Williams. Soon after discussing several alternatives for the story of Bolt, Williams was named the new director. He and his crew developed a new story with only a skeletal remains of what Sanders had worked on. Gone would be the quirky and strange style of characters in exchange for something more familiar. The new crew had just a year and a half to get this production together(half what an animated film normally takes). Sanders had left Disney and was quickly picked up by Dreamworks Animation to direct one(now two) of their animated films. But as the crew plotted on, Lasseter felt that the weight of all this might plus the crunched time schedule would be too much for even the talented Williams and he decided to bring in another director. Byron Howard joined Williams to handle the daunting task of producing this film so that it met its release date. This isn't an uncommon thing in animation and if you get the right team together you can spread the workload out so it's easier to get things done. And that's very important right now. Getting things done.



Now while all this is going on, Lasseter has many other projects to deal with. He truly has the weight of the "Disney" world upon his hands. In addition to the newly renamed Bolt, he's got to work out several other projects, both theatrical and DVD that he's become involved in(the only animated division he doesn't rule over at the Mouse is Walt Disney Television Animation). And we won't even go into the theme parks which he's advising right now.

He's working on the next Disney film to come out around Christmas next year, "The Princess and the Frog," which will finally give the world another Disney Princess. This film will be the introduction of the Mouse's first African-American princess and the project has gone through several revisions. Lasseter and company don't want to make a film that offends anyone, but they're trying to make sure that the film is respectful while compelling in the story department. From everything I've heard it's going to be a very wonderful, very beautiful film. The great thing is that we have John Musker and Ron Clements working on a film without interference from Suits. Now I know Lasseter is a Creative/Suit, but he's the kind you want. And since he demands story these two guys are the perfect ones to deliver it. I can't think of anyone I'd rather have guiding these two talented directors more than John.

Now on the other side, we have "Rapunzel," a film that I've been waiting to see with Disney Geekyness... this film has more potential than even Princess, but the story hasn't jelled completely yet. When Glen Keane came up with the new concept jettisoning the modern pop-culture elements, Lasseter was impressed with the first act but had major problems with the second and third. Cut to three years later and things haven't changed much. The first is still great, the second has improved a bit, but the last act still isn't working. So now Glen and his co-director are no longer directing it. It was difficult getting rid of Sanders, but it was much harder getting rid of Keane who was a friend and fellow animator he worked with back in the early 80's. But Lasseter did what he had to do. It wasn't working, so he brought in someone he felt could brake the logjam. And I have no doubt that by Christmas 2010(if the release date doesn't change) it will work. How could I not? Lasseter has an incredible track record. Not a perfect one, but an amazingly consistent one. The films after that are far more embryonic. It's probably too early to talk about "The King of the Elves" as it's in the story phase and has a long way to go. By 2012 when that one comes out we'll have a better gauge of what buying Pixar has done for Disney. Hopefully it'll have the same affect that Apple had buying NeXT computer... but time will tell.

I can say that after seeing Bolt I know that the patient is on the road to recovery. I believe they're heading in the right direction. I know that the films we'll get will be miles ahead of what has been put out in the last decade. Bolt is a textbook example of this. If this is the beginning of the a Third Golden Age of Disney Animation, the bottom floor so to speak, then it's great foundation. I can't wait for the next floor to go up during Christmas 2009. It's the house that Walt built, but over the years we've had some bad tenants. Thankfully, there's a new contractor working on the house and he's got an excellent resume.

I can't wait to see the beauty that it becomes...