Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Poster Rush: 'Cars 3' Teaser Posters Unveiled


Unusually arriving a little after the release of the teaser, the Cars 3 posters are here!

Both are, for the most part, not unusual for Pixar teaser posters. Minimal, not needing much, just a few images and such to get the point across. The American one and the international one are both radically different...

Our poster aligns with the film's much talked about teaser. McQueen's big wreck...


The international one is the beach scene that we saw in the great concept art earlier in the year.


Both are quite nice, the first is rather striking for some. For many who aren't all that fond of the Cars series, the rather gritty mood of the teaser and the US poster could be off-putting, almost laughable in a way. Others who are accustomed to Cars' lighter side have been surprised as well.

For me, I see the wreck itself as being no different from what Doc Hudson or The King went through. I'm seeing all this talk, all this "McQueen died!" talk, and I can only scratch my head. The Cars series may be lightweight compared to some other Pixar heavies out there, but for me the series didn't hold back on some rough stuff. Races can be dangerous, and death is a thing in the world of cars. Several autos are blown up or killed in Cars 2, Cars climaxes with the King getting in a very bad crash. The first Cars nearly had a sequence where McQueen ends up in a graveyard of broken cars after getting separated from Mack, and of course Stanley has been long dead.

As for the wreck, McQueen is essentially following in the tire tracks of Doc Hudson, and having him wreck makes sense for this kind of a story. We were told back in June that Cars 3 will have a lot of focus on the deceased Hudson Hornet. I can understand how the tone itself has shocked some folk, but you see... Disney marketing did their job! They got people talking! "A gritty Cars movie? What the heck?!" It's still buzz. I have a feeling the first full trailer for this thing will be the typical "gags-story-gags-story" ping-ponging.

The international poster eschews the grit, and focuses on vibrant colors and pretty scenery. No wreckage, no greyed out racetracks, just a pretty, sunny beach and a really cool shot of McQueen kicking up water. It's very nice to look at, and in a way it's not much different from some other Cars-related promo materials. One of the earlier posters for the first Cars was very minimal as well, it was Lightning covered in a tarp, and you could only see some of his smile.

Anyways, both are very cool. The US one doesn't show the film's proper logo, Disney has been doing this with posters and teasers these days. The teaser for Pirates of the Caribbean: Insert Super-Long Subtitle Here ends with the Pirates skull, but no logo. The poster itself doesn't have the logo, either. Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2? That teaser just ends with "Coming Soon", but the poster shows the logo. I wonder if Spider-Man: Homecoming and Thor: Ragnarok's marketing will be similar.

What say you?

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Weekend Lookout: 'Moana' Makes Big Waves


To the shock of no one, Walt Disney Animation Studios' new, big, epic musical about a princess that happens to star The Rock is going to come in like a tidal wave...

Collecting $15.6 million yesterday, it's almost on par with Frozen's opening Wednesday - $15.1 million. Frozen went on to score the biggest 5-day Thanksgiving week gross: $93 million. If Moana follows a similar trajectory, it could very well top Frozen. This means it could make roughly $65-70 million for the three-day alone. It's all set, and will be locked and loaded when Rogue One rolls in next month.

In the long run, I don't think it'll pull a Frozen. Frozen was one of those leggy phenomenons that came in out of nowhere, had little-to-no major competition (Walking with Dinosaurs? Hobbit 2? Zzzz?), and impressed. Moana is sure to be very leggy in its own way, but I'm not quite sure if it'll make it to $400 million domestically. Ahead are some prime hits, like Disney's own Rogue One, Illumination's Sing, and maybe something else. I'm ready to be wrong on this one, though. One thing's for certain, I think... It'll breeze past the big three-oh-oh.

It's great to see directors Ron Clements and John Musker score a huge hit again. Their last three pictures either flopped or underperformed.

Sadly, I probably won't be seeing the film until next Friday due to plans and such. So far, the reception is outstanding and I've heard nothing but great things about it.

This situation will be the opposite of what happened in 2002. That year, Walt Disney Feature Animation readied two films: Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois' weirdo sci-fi family drama Lilo & Stitch, and Ron Clements and John Musker's sci-fi quasi-steampunk retrofuturistic adventure Treasure Planet. While Lilo hit big, Treasure Planet crashed and burned. A shame, because Treasure Planet - in my opinion - is a pretty good film.

In a way, this year is a teensy bit similar. We have one Ron & John movie in the autumn/holiday season, while the more experimental flick came out first - Zootopia. Zootopia cleared $1 billion, Moana could do it if it has the oomph worldwide. Imagine that! Disney Animation releasing two films in the same calendar year for the very first time in 14 years... And getting monstrously good results.

Give it time, I think we'll be hearing about what the duo are going to tackle next. The reason Moana arrived 7 years after their previous film is because it wasn't going to be their next. After the release of The Princess and the Frog, Ron and John wanted to adapt one of Terry Pratchett's Discworld stories - Mort. It had a lot of promise, but by late 2010, Disney couldn't quite secure the rights. Ron and John then pitched three ideas to John Lasseter, Lasseter okayed the Oceanic adventure...

Thanksgiving Gross Update...

Moana did quite well on Thanksgiving, though it fell a bit behind Frozen. Suffice to say, it still can make more than $85 million for the five-day...

I got to see footage of it today. Remember how I said I won't be able to see the full movie until next Friday at the earliest? Well, I'm currently down in Walt Disney World, and I checked out the roughly 15-minute preview at Disney Hollywood Studios. This alone got me more excited for the film than any of the trailers or TV spots, but it's no surprise, for marketing isn't made to get people like interested. It's worked so far, so can't complain there. Just a personal sidenote.

The wait - because life gets in the way sometimes - to see this one is going to be a little bit of a bummer, but I'm going to try my dardnest to see it as soon as possible!

Friday gross...

$21 million, a good $5 million behind Frozen. Not bad, not bad. The five-day should now be in the low 80s... Still #2, topping Toy Story 2. Three-day weekend gross should be in the high 50s...

The three-day...

$55 million estimated. $12 million less than Frozen, $20 million below Zootopia, just a million less than Big Hero 6. Very solid opening... Where could it land? Well, let's look at Tangled's multiplier. $200 million off of a $68 million five-day, that's 2.9x. If Moana does that, $234 million in the bag. If it plays like Toy Story 2 did back in 1999, we get $248 million. Cool, cool.

Worst case scenario, I think, would be Good Dinosaur legs. If it plays out like that Pixar film, which is doubtful at this point, it would still pocket a fine $181 million domestically. I've seen some here and there worry that Moana isn't cutting it. No worries, it's doing quite fine!

Since parts of the world aren't getting Moana for a little while, it's only at $16 million overseas. Like most fall Disney Animation and Pixar releases, the international roll-out will be staggered. Poor Japan, as usual, has to wait til March to get it. I'm so sorry for reminding you of this...

Elsewhere in animation land...

Trolls eased, thankfully. Down 40%, now at $135 million domestically and $291 million worldwide. It's little by little climbing. No numbers for Storks yet, as that's pretty much on its way out.

Actuals

Moana actually made a little bit more than Big Hero 6 for the three-day. $56.6 million, barely eked by $82 million for the five-day. Great launch! Make Trolls' 40% dip 39%. $291 million worldwide, c'mon pick up some steam!

The Secret Life of Pets and Storks are pretty much on their last few legs, the latter looks to make around $180 million worldwide when all is said and done. The former inches up on $875 million worldwide.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Aliens and Mutants: Fox Updates Tentpole Slate, 'Avatar 2' Dated?



20th Century Fox has re-shuffled their line-up of tentpoles...

The biggest gasp here is the inclusion of an Untitled Fox/Lightstorm Film...

Lightstorm is James Cameron's studio. What has Mr. Cameron been working on all these years? No, not Alita: Battle Angel. He's producing that, while Robert Rodriguez directs. That's also already set for July 2018. If the answer wasn't obvious... Avatar 2...

Word on the street is that James Cameron is playing nice with Disney, and the reason makes sense... Pandora - The World of Avatar in Disney's Animal Kingdom. Some rumors from earlier in the week suggested that Disney was going to move the untitled Han Solo Anthology film to the mid-December slot, but it looks like the smuggler will remain in the traditional mid-May station. It adds up, since the first Avatar was a big December release back in 2009.

I mean, what else could it be? A long-awaited sequel to The Abyss?

Several other Fox biggies moved around.

Alien: Covenant has sort-of traded places with Kingsman: The Golden Circle. Alien: Covenant is now set to open on May 19, 2017, Kingsman: The Golden Circle is set for October 6, 2017. Slight bummer on the latter.

The Marvel side of things saw big updates. The 10/6/2017 Fox/Marvel film is now off the slate. Their slate now...

03/02/2018 *previously scheduled*
06/29/2018 *previously scheduled*
11/02/2018 *new addition*
02/14/2019 *new addition*

The Fox/Marvel slate has been something of a jumble these days. Deadpool 2 lost director Tim Miller, Fox hastily got his replacement. New Mutants has been on the table, X-Force has been teased, and Gambit has been on-and-off. I'm thinking Deadpool 2 nabs the Valentine's Day 2019 slot, much like its predecessor. Not sure about the other dates.

Interestingly, Paramount scheduled an untitled "event" film for 11/2/2018. So it'll be duking it out with an untitled Fox/Marvel film and Disney's live-action Mulan. I have a feeling it's going to be hauling its way out of that slot.

Anyways...

Alien: Covenant? Could be good, but I kinda want Alien 5 more. Kingsman: The Golden Circle? I adored the first one, I'm there day one. Avatar 2? I don't dislike the first film, if two has more of a story and fleshes out characters, I'll check it out. All the upcoming Fox/Marvels? I'm interested to see what direction they go in, because Deadpool was like a turbo shot, Logan looks great, and we'll see a new beginning after we bid the old X-Men crew adieu.

What say you?

Monday, November 21, 2016

Not-So-New Blue: 'Smurfs: The Lost Village' Trailer Surfaces


Well, a real look at the revamped Sony Animation Smurfs is here... The full trailer for Smurfs: The Lost Village...


Honestly, I'm not too impressed.

Visually, it's gorgeous. Of course, anything other than a tired half live-action "they come to the real world" thing was already nice, but they actually did go all out here. The color work and lighting in particular is very pretty, as is the art direction. Too bad the writing doesn't seem to stack up. Lots of forced one-liners here, and the picture seems like it will be another fast-paced, loudmouth, frenetic romp.

But a trailer is a trailer, so maybe the film could be pretty decent. See, I was hoping for something a little more, because it was emphasized many times how much this Smurfs movie was not going to be like the two hybrid movies, and that it would be closer to the Peyo comics. To me, it looks like just another hyperactive kids flick, and it just happens to star the Smurfs. Hopefully I'm wrong on this one. There were a few funny bits here and there - like one of the Smurfs eating all his rations, but that was about it.

What say you?

Big Vroom!: 'Cars 3' Teaser Goes an Unexpected Route


After quite a wait, the teaser trailer for Pixar's next is finally here!

For a while, we've heard that Cars 3 was not going to go the route of its maligned predecessor. It would go back to racing and the road and everything that worked about the first film. The teaser confirms that racing is indeed the main focus, and we get some glimpses of new characters of like Jackson Storm, the new sort-of antagonist of the picture.


Just look at it... The muted colors, the rather dramatic tone, the ending. This is far away from most Pixar teasers, this puts it more in line with Brave's humorless teaser. Pixar teasers are normally fun little skits with a few jokes here and there, these two are real anomalies, as is the teaser for The Good Dinosaur, which was a set-up of the premise followed a dialogue-less montage of scenes from the movie. I love this, it's to the point, and it establishes nicely in 50 seconds what it will be about: Lightning McQueen might not be to able stack up against all the new competitors in the field...

As I've said before, I love the first Cars, I don't mind the second one, and I'm looking forward to this third installment because of what's been said about it over the last few months. Now that the teaser is out, I'm in!

What say you?

Sunday, November 20, 2016

Weekend Box Office Report: Small Stumbles


With Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them expectedly topping the chart, a few movies have seen some pretty good-sized drops.

Trolls is currently in third place, and it's a smidgen behind Doctor Strange. Both movies dropped over 50% this weekend, the Marvel sorcerer seeing an unsurprisingly harsher drop. Trolls collected $17 million (estimate) for the weekend, and is at $116 million here in the states. Overseas numbers are a little sluggish right now, as the picture's still below $300 million worldwide. Next weekend, I think, will also be something of a test for Trolls. It could either hold up quite nicely against Moana, or get hit a little hard.

Even films outside the Marvel and DreamWorks wheelhouses dropped pretty hard this week, so all-around it's just an okay week for holdovers. I expect Fantastic Beasts to see a bit of dipping next week, as Moana is sure to be open big.

Storks fell off 60%, it has crept to $71 million here and $175 million worldwide. This is the final set of laps, methinks. I wonder how much higher it'll go overseas. It has officially made 2 1/2x its budget. I hope Warner Bros. is happy with it. Kubo and the Two Strings is pretty much done, I doubt it'll make much in the two markets that haven't gotten it yet: Poland and Bulgaria. $47 million domestically and $69-71 million worldwide it is.

Finding Dory is still juicing in some small venues, total is pretty much the same here. $1,026 million worldwide, still a few clicks above Zootopia. It's the year's biggest animated film. The Blu-ray cover for the film states that it's the biggest, too... But only at the domestic box office. The covers for these things are made and printed looooong before they hit stores, so I guess at the time, Disney bean counters weren't sure if the fishies would overtake the animals. In a way, that's quite exciting.

See, I thought the Pixar sequel to the beloved hit from 13 years ago would've easily been this year's animated champion. While Finding Dory is the champion, it literally eked by Zootopia to claim the trophy. No, Disney Animation's little animal movie was the little animated movie that could. Projections said it would do good but no exceptionally, it did more than just that. Reminds me of how Disney wasn't so sure about an animal picture some 22 years ago. It just proves that old William Goldman quote... "Nobody knows anything... Not one person in the entire motion picture field knows for a certainty what's going to work."

Some thought Trolls would open with a meager $25-30 million and finish up with $90 million at best, that's clearly not the case, three weeks in.

Anyways, prime time will truly be in full swing by next weekend.

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Army Dog: Mikros To Produce Fun Academy's 'Sgt. Stubby'


A newcomer studio is coming around the bend...

Fun Academy Motion Pictures is the name of the studio in question. Their debut feature? Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero.

Sgt. Stubby was real. A stray who was assigned to the 26th Yankee division during World War I, he was supposedly the first dog to ever be designated "sergeant". The film adaptation is aiming for a spring 2018 release, the centennial of World War I's ending. The dog was known for saving units from mustard gas attacks, even holding a German soldier in his place until US soldiers arrived.

The film has been known in some circles for a little while, now the studio has joined forces with Mikros Image to bring it to the big screen. Mikros is little by little making it big in the features world, as they have done the animation for DreamWorks' Captain Underpants and will do the animation for Paramount/Rocket Pictures' Sherlock Gnomes. They also did work on The Little Prince.

Helena Bonham Carter and Gerard Depardieu are currently set to provide their voices. The director is former Disney and DreamWorks animator Dan St. Pierre, who directed Everyone's Hero (remember that? It was that film about Babe Ruth's baseball and the 1932 World Series featuring a talking baseball and baseball bat) and the superb Legend of Oz: Dorothy's Return. Of course, we can't hold that against him... Those movies were undone by their writing and other behind-the-scenes issues. Perhaps St. Pierre will really prove himself with this picture.

According to PR Newswire, Sgt. Stubby will "directly address war for young audiences". Depardieu erroneously claimed that it will be the first animated family war movie to hit the US, but he did mention that the script will be "sensitive", will give the viewers "a feel" of the war itself, and will focus on the bonding between the dog and one of the doughboys.

While there are plenty of adult-oriented animated films about war, going the family-friendly is kind of risky to me. You can indeed keep the impact and even some of the horror intact, but in order to get that PG, you'd probably have to skirt around some areas. Skirt too much, and try too hard to get the kids laughing, you get a movie like Valiant. We certainly don't want that with Sgt. Stubby, as this dog was actually in the trenches and then some, and that kind of humor has no place in this story.

The concept art looks pretty good, it suggests that the film could be decent...


What say you?

Friday, November 18, 2016

Going Inward: Another Look at 'Inner Workings'


Disney has been unusually zip-mouthed on Inner Workings, the very cool-looking short that's set to debut with Moana this coming Wednesday...

Entertainment Weekly interviewed director Leo Matsuda, and he went over some things that he already mentioned about the short, like how it's personal to him and both sides of his family (Japanese and Brazilian). He also mentioned how the encyclopedias he read as a kid inspired the short, how the short is ultimately about balancing things out in life, and that it'll be set in a "surreal", Wes Anderson-inspired (!) 80s California...

In addition to that, here are some stills...



I'm really digging the stylized design they went with. Even though I have praised Walt Disney Animation Studios' current output, I do think that their CG should branch out. This short makes me think of Toot, Whistle, Plunk & Boom, which definitely clashed with Disney's then-new house style that was developed in the post-war years. Even the Mary Blair-tinged films! Ward Kimball's abstract ideas dominated the whole short, a style that was definitely at odd ends with what we saw in many of the features of the era, to say nothing of all the short films. Some works pushed into new directions (Mars and Beyond immediately comes to mind), and eventually we got an animated feature that looked unlike any previous Disney animated production... Sleeping Beauty.

Basically, I'd love to see a new Walt Disney Animation Studios film go down an Inner Workings-esque route. Just something completely different, but still very appealing and palatable to audiences. Visually, the newest stuff is nice, but outside of Zootopia I think it's also nothing too special. Frozen, Big Hero 6, and what I've seen of Moana (minus the 2D tattoos) have great lighting and color work, but in terms of the character design and art direction, it's nothing really new. I don't want to say bland because the work is there, the sweat and dedication is on the screen, but...

Zootopia at least played with a very cool-looking city set in another world, and had excellent character designs that translated well to CG. Zootopia to me was Disney Animation's most visually exciting film since Wreck-It Ralph. That film worked off of three different styles of art direction (and even had some variety in its character animation, like the Nicelanders moving like 8-bit characters), it's quite something.

Matsuda confirmed that his short didn't use any new techniques, and that it isn't going to be a Paperman-esque leap forward, but some 2D is still there. Whatever was used, I love the style of the CG, I want to see more of that in the modern Disney feature animation. Hopefully one day we'll get a CG equivalent of Sleeping Beauty, the out-there work of a concept artist blown up into a roughly 100-minute movie.

Another interesting bit is that this short was actually set to be attached to Zootopia... It was delayed because the studio "needed all hands on deck", pushing this short back a bit. I still think Disney could've filled the gap by putting a classic Mickey short in front of the movie, but hey.

What say you?

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Creecher Feature: Second, Short 'Monster Trucks' Trailer Surfaces


Ahhhhh, Monster Trucks.

Paramount Animation's mostly live-action movie with hyper-real CG creatures is something of a joke right now, as it was revealed months back that Paramount is treating this like an oncoming band-aid ripping. Its first trailer drew very mixed responses, some taking note of the original and gleefully kooky premise, others saying it looks really, really stupid. Me? I like the premise fine, the execution just seems rather "there". Who is really excited about it?

(I'll make an exception for Mister Coat, for he is unabashedly a big fan of director Chris Wedge!)

The company has already issued a $115 million write-down on the $125 million-costing movie, one that they couldn't crack since its inception. Was it a PG-13 blockbuster? Or was it going to be a family-friendly funfest? Delayed for nearly two years, there were problems. Big problems. The original, fully animated creature reportedly terrified half of the young audience at a test screening, prompting a complete re-design as the movie went from big PG-13 tentpole to family picture. Its live action portions were filmed as far back as spring 2014, and supposedly several reshoots occurred. Also notice that Nickelodeon Movies is finally mentioned. Original, there wasn't going to be any Nick connection.


I guess it doesn't matter to Paramount, they are dumping this film and they pretty much know it's not going to be a profit-maker. The trailer is unusually short, clocking in at under a minute and a half. It doesn't really show anything new, it feels like a remake of the teaser: Boy meets monster, monster goes into his truck, mayhem ensues. For some reason, the trailer emphasizes the heck out of the creature's nickname... Creech. Meet Creech, like he's the next big lovable character out there.

Paramount Animation seemed to start off on the wrong foot. They function similarly to Warner Animation Group, having a variety of studios handle the animation for their films. Unlike WAG, they don't have a special logo. Monster Trucks comes from Disruption Entertainment, while 2018's Sherlock Gnomes will be a co-production between Rocket Pictures, Starz, MGM, and Mikros. 2019's Amusement Park will be done by Ilion, SpongeBob 3 of course is obviously going to be a UPP/Nick pic.

While Sponge out of Water was quite the success story, Paramount tripped up by ditching The Little Prince at last minute, not like they were marketing it very well to begin with. Then months later, they made up their minds about this festering movie. Viacom recently saw a CEO change, so maybe Paramount Animation will set off on a different path in the coming years. For now, they'll be dealing with the consequences of the product of the previous guard.

Again, ripping the band-aid.

Beyond the Sky: Fox Animation Stacks Up on Animation


I normally don't talk much about 20th Century Fox Animation as a whole...

Blue Sky is pretty much their main animation house, who makes all of their releases. Before that, things were different.

20th Century Fox really got into the animation game in the mid-1990s, establishing a house of their own - Fox Animation Studios - to compete with Disney. Their main weapon at the time was Don Bluth and his partner Gary Goldman. Don Bluth had struggled after he and Steven Spielberg split up in 1989, the films he put out afterwards were heavily compromised by the powers-that-be. His studio, Sullivan-Bluth, went out of business in 1995, the year their final picture came out: The Pebble and the Penguin. Bluth and Goldman Alan Smithee'd themselves out of it.

Instead of challenging Disney by coming up with something unique that could stack up against the mouse giant, Fox Animation Studios simply made a Disney-esque film with two guys who used to work for Disney... The result was Anastasia, a film that some of the general public mistake for a Disney film. That film did fine, so what did Fox, Bluth, and Goldman fire up next? Titan A.E. It was a bomb, and should be a cautionary tale. A film aimed squarely at the preteen boy crowd, who unsurprisingly rejected it. Bluth knew it would happen, but the heads did not listen. Fox Animation Studios was shut down shortly after the sci-fi adventure opened nationwide.


That's where Blue Sky stepped in, who actually animated a sequence for Titan A.E. Blue Sky's first feature was all-CG, and it came out at the right time. 2002 when was computer animation was super-hot, so audiences ate up Ice Age. Thankfully for them, Ice Age was a pretty good comedy that kept people coming back. The following Blue Sky features did good to some degree. While the Ice Age sequels always tore up the overseas box office, non-sequels like Rio did quite well, others like Epic did decently enough.

20th Century Fox Animation, for a long while, has tried to firestart more projects - some that will be done at Blue Sky, others? Elsewhere. Technically, the likes of The Simpsons Movie, Fantastic Mr. Fox, and The Book of Life fall under the 20th Century Fox Animation umbrella. Movie one was done by Gracie Films/Rough Draft (obviously), film two was done by Wes Anderson and various studios, film three was a Reel FX production.

Recently, it was announced that Frogkisser! - an upcoming Frog Prince-inspired book - was picked up and will be done at Blue Sky. It'll be a live-action/CG hybrid, I'm assuming the CG part will be caricature animation and not the hyper-real Jungle Book kind of CG. Nate Hopper, longtime exec, was put in charge of future hybrid flicks.

Now, it looks like Fox Animation has locked up some more things...

Recent pick-ups include...

Momotaro: Xander and the Lost Island of Monsters - Based on a novel series that draws from the stories of Japanese folk hero Momotaro, it's described as a sort of Percy Jackson-esque story. I think this one has potential, being about magic and monsters and such, doesn't sound dissimilar to Blue Sky's Anubis. That one works off of Ancient Egyptian stuff.

The Girl Who Drank The Moon - This will be a hybrid, according to The Hollywood Reporter. This one - based on the book by Kelly Barnhill - pretty interesting, it's about a town that sacrifices newborns to a forest witch who is actually friendly. She raises them and feeds them starlight, but one is accidentally given moonlight and as a result she gains magical powers.

Zita the Spacegirl - Based on a more child-friendly comic book series about a girl taking on weirdo creatures on another planet in order to save her friend from being sacrificed (wow, two in a row about sacrifice!), this one could be fun. This one appears to be an all-animated pic, so I think they could match the books' colorful style with stylized CG.

The Littlest Bigfoot - Yet another bigfoot story in animation, this one sounds like it could be pretty resonant. It's about a lonely girl whose ignored by her parents and is sent to boarding school, and befriends a bigfoot who is part of a whole clan of bigfoots.

Lastly, is a big one...

The Dam Keeper.


Yes, a full-length feature based on ex-Pixarians Dice Tsutsumi and Robert Kondo's short of the same name, one they produced through that Pixar co-op program that made Borrowed Time happen. Tonko House will be doing it, Tsutsumi and Kondo will direct, but it'll be in CG. That being said, they could probably get the CG to resemble 2D or the moving painting-like feel of the short. If Disney Animation could do it with Feast, I can think Tonko could as well.

20th Century Fox is going to bunker down on animation. Two months ago, Fox's chairman Stacey Snider moved up to CEO position, and she's going to be instrumental in really re-launching Fox Animation as a real competitor. Some of these pictures in development will be Blue Sky works, others won't, so it's good to see Fox reaching out to other animation houses rather than just one mainline studio.

Now, what does this mean for several other projects that Fox Animation announced in the past? You know, things like Nimona, Welcome to the Jungle, Fortunately, the Milk, Cardboard, A Hero's Guide to Saving Your Kingdom, and Confessions of an Imaginary Friend... Studios these days typically announce a boatload of projects, only to announce another boatload that seem like they'll move ahead.

That all being said, it makes sense... Fox is losing DreamWorks after the summer 2017 release of Captain Underpants, so they want to expand. While part of me is skeptical about the whole hybrid thing (again, will these be Jungle Book-esque? Or not?), I am interested to see what direction they'll go in. The Dam Keeper news is certainly super-exciting, and if it is to take off, I can only imagine what Fox could scoop up after that. Will they ever team up with Reel FX again? So many questions...

What say you?

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Another Crack at It: Lin-Manuel Miranda Teaming Up With Byron Howard for Mystery WDAS Feature


Perhaps Lin-Manuel Miranda is the new Ashman-Menken for Disney Animation, if the Lopez duo already weren't.

It's no secret, Mr. Miranda's everywhere in the world of the mouse. Prior to doing the music for Moana, he contributed some Cantina material to Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and is currently locked for Mary Poppins Returns and the planned live-action remake of The Little Mermaid. Yes, you could say he's quite ingrained in Disney. Of course, his work with Disney Animation won't stop with Moana...

In an interview with Vulture, the Hamilton creator mentioned that he's working on an all-new project with none other than Byron Howard. Howard, for those who don't know, conceived Zootopia and directed it with Wreck-It Ralph director Rich Moore. He was also one of the directors of Tangled, and one of the directors of Bolt. Prior to directing, he was a story man at the studio since the mid 90s. Apparently they're building this one from "the ground up", which I think indicates that it'll be another original story that's not based on any pre-existing IP. Mr. Miranda says...

"That's the fun thing about working with someone and having it go well — you go, 'Okay, what else can we do?' Lasseter took me aside and said, 'I have an idea: Here's Byron, and you guys should start talking.'"


He went on to mention that the project could take years to come together, which is of course unsurprising given how animation development usually goes in features-land. Walt Disney Animation Studios, according to the Bancroft Brothers themselves in this great interview conducted by my friend Iry of Impero Disney, have things planned out for the next ten years. A whole pipeline, a tentative decade-long chart of projects. Odds are, Lin-Manuel and Byron's project is on that very roster.

Whatever these two conjure up, it's sure to be something to look forward to. Howard's Zootopia is a triumph, not only one of the best animated films of the decade, but my pick for best post-Walt animated feature from the Disney powerhouse. (Yes, I understand that's a bold, bold claim.) Mr. Howard's other works, I think, are damn fine too! Tangled seriously grew on me not too long ago, the story in that one is top-notch and it's got a particular stretch in its middle act that's absolute perfection.

Then there's Bolt. Say what you will, I think Bolt's a rock-solid buddy picture with a consistently good script and great characters. Yes, what it did was nothing new then and now. Yes, it didn't re-invent the animation wheel. Yes, it was not American Dog... But I really don't care at this point, what matters to me is, it was a necessary step to into a new, successful era. Walt Disney Animation Studios seriously needed to bounce back from the Eisner/Stainton days, so I can understand why Bolt is risk-averse. While it all didn't amount to a huge hit in the end, it at least got the best critical reception for a Disney animated film since Lilo & Stitch.

So yes, sign me up for Howard's next! Lin-Manuel being involved leads me to believe that it will be a musical, or at least something that involves songs. (Could be a Tarzan situation where most of the songs are sung off-screen.) Whatever it may be, I am excited nonetheless.

Now of course, Disney Animation should be careful. The work of Lin-Manuel Miranda is certainly great, and currently hot. That being said... Don't overuse him.

What do I mean by that? With the future musicals, vary things up a bit!

In the 1990s, I feel that Disney Feature Animation was walked into a tiger trap. Howard Ashman and Alan Menken brought something indelible to the studio, that's undeniable, but Disney tried too hard to keep repeating such a winning formula after the huge success of Beauty and the Beast. Executives wanted more Beauty and the Beast-type pictures, and soon they wanted more Lion King-esque films. The following films were forced to fit into this kind of mold, and by the late 1990s it seemed like Disney was making the same film over and over again.

Luckily, this hasn't been the case recently. Lasseter-era Disney's first musical, The Princess and the Frog, brought Randy Newman on board. Newman hasn't done a Disney animated musical since, sadly. I'm one of the few who really dug his soundtrack for that film. Menken came back for Tangled, alongside Glenn Slater. Winnie the Pooh brought in Robert and Kristen-Anderson Lopez, new blood. They went on to do the music for Frozen, and look what happened there. They'll return for the studio's next musical in line, Gigantic.

It's fantastic that Disney has brought in someone new, but hopefully they'll continue to get more new songwriters for their heavy-on-singing features. I think they should go beyond Broadway for their upcoming musicals, beyond that bombastic, sweeping style that many associate with modern Disney. When can we see a rock musical from these guys? Or a more folksy musical? Or something that really goes beyond?

Another ramble for another day, I'm still excited to see and hear what Lin-Manuel Miranda will bring to Walt Disney Animation Studios. He's only one feature in, so perhaps getting a little antsy about him being overused is hyperbole on my part.

What do you think about Byron Howard and Lin-Manuel Miranda teaming up for a Disney animated feature? Sound off below!

Digging Up the Bones: Warner Animation Revives 'Bone' Movie


It looks like Bone is back on!

A Bone movie has been on the table as far back as the late 1990s. Jeff Smith's lauded blend of the cartoony and the epics of high fantasy got picked up by Warner Bros. in 2008, Animal Logic was set to do the animation for the adaptation. It went through a few writers over the years, even a director was attached at one point, but it never came to fruition.

It seemed like a no-brainer, for the series was family-friendly, and blended humor and adventure. I'll admit that I've barely read Bone, but from what I've seen of it over the years, I can't get enough of its style. In some ways, it has influenced some of my own work. While I'd prefer a traditionally animated film that really works off of the graphic novel's aesthetic, I'm glad it's happening.

Now, Warner Animation Group has tapped Mark Osborne - director of Kung Fu Panda and The Little Prince - to helm the long-gestating adaptation. Holy wow if this isn't a great choice, I don't know what is!

Osborne will be co-writing the script with Adam Kline. Mr. Kline is supposed to write the Artemis Fowl movie, if Disney ever gets around to approving it. I figured Bone would eventually be on Warner Animation Group's docket, and they intend to launch a franchise with it. I'd say one was long overdue, and it would be a nice break from the familiar Hanna-Barbera and Lego franchises that the group is going to expand in the future.

Animal Logic sounds right for this kind of picture, as they did tackle a similarly big, high fantasy story, The Owls of Ga'Hoole. That was based on a series of books, sadly that one came and went. Regardless of whether how good or bad it was, it was at least something that was a wee bit different. Happy Feet, issues notwithstanding, was also a little different and certainly stood out in a basket of mostly generic fluff. 2006, young'uns, was really not a good year in feature animation. It also helps that Happy Feet was a George Miller film, and even though the released film is very much a watered down version of what Miller had in mind, watered down George Miller is still George Miller.

Fun fact, at one point he wanted Mad Max: Fury Road to be a computer animated film. Now that would've been something! I wonder if he'd reconsider that for a future installment, because more are supposed to come.

Anyways, I think this is fantastic news all around. What say you?

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Weekend Report: 'Trolls' Barely Slips


In the midst of all the recent DreamWorks happenings, it looks like the studio's latest is going to have some very strong legs...

Updated Sunday November 13th, original article follows...

Trolls opened with a very solid $46 million last weekend, and this weekend it might gross around the same amount if all goes well. The Friday estimates are in, and it's $12.2 million. Trolls' opening day gross was $12.3 million...

Is this film going to pull a Puss in Boots?

Puss in Boots was released by DreamWorks some five years ago. It had an unusually low opening, and this was before the days of Rise of the Guardians and Turbo. $34 million it was, it seemed like audiences weren't quite into this one... But then something happened. Weekend two came, it took in $33 million, just 3% down from opening weekend! Puss in Boots ended up making 4.38x its opening weekend gross.

Not dissimilar is Disney Animation's Bolt. Opened with a paltry $26.2 million, the second weekend gross was $26.5 million. It went up 1%! Films mostly drop on second weekend, Bolt was a rare exception that went up. Bolt also ended up making 4.38x its opening weekend gross.

So does Trolls repeat that? Or do things go a little differently today and on Sunday? Box Office Mojo is thinking it makes $34 million this weekend, BoxOffice thinks so as well. That is still super-fine. That would be a great 27% drop, landing the film at $92 million domestically. If it makes $46 million, then $104 million. It's doing quite well already.

I saw parts of the film at work, and I was honestly pretty impressed. I can also see why audiences are flocking to this one, especially in times like these. I expect it to hang on tightly, and co-exist with Moana next month.

Update...

Trolls didn't quite perform like the feline, but it slipped just a little. A strong 24%, with a fantastic $34 million, and a $93 million finish. It's only a few steps behind the #1 film, too, Marvel's Doctor Strange. Worldwide, Trolls is now at $223 million. In a few weeks, it's already set to leave Turbo and Mr. Peabody & Sherman in the dust. The only countries it hasn't opened in yet are Austria and Australia. They get it at the beginning of next month.

Storks (#17) is now entering its last set of laps, the film looks to top off at roughly $73 million when all is said and done, it's at $173 million worldwide, nearly 2 1/2x the budget. The Secret Life of Pets (#21) crossed $367 million stateside, $872 million worldwide. Finding Dory (#30) showed no major change - $486m domestically and $1,024m worldwide. Kubo and the Two Strings (#35) saw no change, either. $47 million here and $69 million all around the globe.

The animation domination looks to continue, what with Trolls holding up well and Moana around the corner, followed by the sure-to-be-big Sing.

Friday, November 11, 2016

No Longer Evolving: DreamWorks Cancels 'The Croods 2'


Right now, there are rumors going around that DreamWorks is going to see some good-sized cutbacks...

These rumors arrived right on the heels of the announcements that DreamWorks was going to cease doing work with their India-based Dedicated Unit studio. One of those rumors said that lots of layoffs will occur at the mainline Glendale studio, and that there is a new plan in place: A plan to ready just one picture every calendar year starting in 2018. That's the year Universal will distribute their first film. Some of this turned out to be true...

Now, a big bomb has been dropped. The Croods 2 has been cancelled...

The Croods 2 seemed like a definite, being a sequel to a film that actually pocketed a good amount of money. The Croods was one of the only DreamWorks hits released between the box office collapse of Rise of the Guardians in late 2012, and the flopping of Penguins of Madagascar in late 2014. The sequel, for the longest time, carried a Christmas 2017 release date. When Comcast acquired DreamWorks earlier this year, The Croods 2 left 2017 (presumably to avoid competing with Episode VIII) and was in limbo. The "to be determined" pool, as I like to call it. 2018 was the movie's new target, but there was no exact date.

While Larrikins and How To Train Your Dragon 3, two 2018 releases from DreamWorks, were confirmed to stay in that year, we heard nothing on The Croods 2. Then we heard that it wasn't ready to go into production, and that it needed fixing... So it got new writers, and the script was going to see rewrites... But now? It's a goner. Around 30 people who were working on it are now off the project, and it's up in the air whether they'll remain at the studio or not. Now according to Variety, DreamWorks was already uneasy about this sequel to their 2013 smash hit. Apparently Universal, whose execs oversee DreamWorks right now, hammered the final nail.

Despite being halted, a Universal insider did say "The Croods is still very much in the DreamWorks catalog. It’s not unheard of that it might be something someone takes a look at in the future."

On the plus side, director Chris Sanders will probably begin working on a new project, something that perhaps really suits him. Sanders has been with DreamWorks since 2007, and his first feature for them was How To Train Your Dragon, which he directed with his long-time partner Dean DeBlois. Sanders and DeBlois swept that project up after the original director left it. Sanders was already working on The Croods before that all went down, and after completing Dragon, he went back to the stone age while DeBlois continued to soar with the dragons. Sanders was set to direct the sequel with the other chap who directed the first one, Kirk DeMicco.

It seems strange, because The Croods was not just profitable, it was a big hit. $187 million here, $587 million all around the world. It seemed like a definite franchise-starter, and while it got a TV series, it's not getting a cinematic follow-up anytime soon. Unusual that the studio put the quality concerns above all, and canceled what was probably going to do quite well... Or maybe they were worried that a 5-year wait would kill it? Who knows, but apparently DreamWorks was losing faith in it before Universal had them pull the plug. Shocking indeed...

How does this fit into those rumors? VFX Soldier brought up some claims, which sounded kind of vague. One said that How To Train Your Dragon 3 was going to be pushed, another said Larrikins will be pulled back into story, back to the drawing board.

Some of us assumed that by "pushed", they meant: "Pushed back", as in losing that 5/18/2018 release date. This contradicted a recent announcement saying that the film - after becoming a Universal-distributed project - was going to keep that date. Something didn't seem right. So now 2018 has dragons and the Aussie musical.

Now, it's possible that Dragon 3 will move again, but maybe by "push" they mean "support". Maybe it's being amped up, like they're pushing it to be the 2018 release. I think that this theory adds up, for it is a sequel, it's aiming for a pre-Memorial Day bow, and the previous installments in the series made $494 million and $618 million respectively. On top of that, both films got widespread critical acclaim. There's a TV series, too! Larrikins on the other hand is an all-original story that isn't based on any pre-existing IP, it looks to be quirkier than the usual DreamWorks fare, and is arguably a pretty good-sized risk. Trolls it is not.

So going by the "one-a-year" rumors, one of those films will have to move. Going off of the "Larrikins pulled back into story" claim, Larrikins will be pushed to 2019. Then Shadows and Shrek 5 duke it out for a 2020 slot. Or vice-versa, Shrek 5 hits in 2019 while Larrikins ends up arriving in 2020. Hopefully Larrikins is not a casualty of the transition, because out of all of DreamWorks' upcoming features, that one intrigues me the most... And DreamWorks has recently axed a lot of things I was really looking forward to, like Bollywood Superstar Monkey.


Anyways, as for The Croods 2... I wasn't all that big on the first one, though I do understand that it has its fans. I thought it had excellent visuals and a very cool-looking setting, but was anchored by a generic cast of characters, been there-done that writing, and a hyperactive tone. Sheds of Chris Sanders' quirkiness shine through in some parts, but on the whole it feels rather watered down. If you look at Sanders' concept art for the film, the finished film looks a bit conservative in comparison.

My logic with sequels to movies that needed a little work... Room for improvement! There's no room for The Croods 2 anymore. We shall see what happens next with the moon boy studio.

What say you?

Thursday, November 10, 2016

More Monster Mashing: 'Pacific Rim' Sequel Begins Production, Warner Bros. Dates 'Rampage' Movie


For a while, we've heard about an adaptation of the arcade classic Rampage...

I mean, how could one go wrong? It's a game where you get to play as a cartoony giant monster, and destroy the living daylights out of cities! The original game hit arcades in 1986, and got a couple sequels, the most notable being Rampage: World Tour. The film is set to star The Rock, so that makes it cooler. The Rock squaring off against three giant monsters! Or will The Rock be one of the monsters? In the games, the monsters are humans that have morphed into towering behemoths.

Let's just hope they get this one right, because if they take it too seriously and make it a generic gritty monster movie, I won't be a happy camper. Rampage is meant to be over-the-top fun and bonkers destruction, and I think it would honestly work better as an all-animated film, but live-action/HRCG it is (I'm going use that from now on: Hyper-real CG). Brad Peyton, director of The Rock's recent actioner hit San Andreas, is at the helm of this. The same writer, Carlton Cruse, returns as well. I actually happened to see San Andreas, I thought it was just "there". Good, competent action, some thrills, but little else. Hopefully Rampage is not just like that.

Anyways, it's finally seemingly going forward. Turns out, Rampage will be that picture WB will be releasing through New Line on April 20, 2018. That's actually over a month after Wreck-It Ralph 2 opens, and of course Ralph's game world was partially inspired by Rampage. I think that's kind of a cool coincidence, no?


Just as cool is the fact that this will open about two months after Pacific Rim: Maelstrom, which is also now an official thing. Cameras are rolling, production has begun! For a little while, we didn't have many monster movies like this, just a few inbetween... But now we're seeing more and more of them, maybe because of the big success of Gareth Edwards' Godzilla? Pacific Rim - a $190 million-costing giant - was a domestic crawler after a low opening weekend gross, but the overseas markets saved it, and a few other things too. More than anything, this sequel is being made for the country that flocked to see the original: China. If Warcraft gets a sequel, that's also going to be for China.

Anyways, Godzilla had godawful legs after a massive opening bow back in 2014 (I, for one, loved the film), thankfully it made just enough here and elsewhere to ensure a sequel, a crossover with Legendary's own King Kong, and a possible shared universe of giant monsters. Kaiju have returned! Now let's get an animated kaiju movie a-firin', huh? When will Paramount get around to making Trey Parker and Matt Stone's Giant Monsters Attack Japan? What about Original Force's geriatric kaiju comedy OldZilla?


What say you?

Next Phase, Indeed: Status on DreamWorks' Indian Unit, Donwsizing Rumors


I guess the previous post might be moot in many ways... DreamWorks apparently made, or are going to make, some very big decisions...

Big... And not at all good...

Cartoon Brew has broken the news: DreamWorks is apparently pulling out of India. The company has a unit down there that was meant to evolve into a full-blown studio, much like their Shanghai unit. While this building isn't shutting down, it seems like DreamWorks will no longer outsource work to them. Adi Shayan, a studio manager, said that the issue isn't simply black-and-white, and that there is "more to it".

More troubling are other rumors flying around, and posts made by a former DreamWorks Animation employee Daniel Lay, better known as VFX Soldier. One says over 250 people will be cut from the Shanghai studio, and that nothing will be outsourced to that location either... The most shocking, though... Is this...


Wow...

DreamWorks stopping their decade-long tradition of readying more than one feature every calendar year. If true, this is a big and startling development. Maybe it isn't shocking for some, considering that a few predicted that these things could happen after the Comcast acquisition.

More layoffs to ensue at home? Apparently so. More animators out of a job, and of course I wish them the best of luck if this is all to happen. I thought Comcast wanted more out of DreamWorks, considering that their Illumination Entertainment is slowly but surely easing into doing two films every calendar year. More and more downsizing, perhaps an attempt to get budgets under control? The one-a-year plan is particularly curious...

Larrikins and How To Train Your Dragon 3 were still set to open on their dates (2/16/2018 and 5/18/2018, respectively), as confirmed not too long ago after Universal had scooped up those projects. Larrikins going back to the drawing board is quite something, considering that it has a full cast locked, a director, and whatnot. How To Train Your Dragon 3 has been pushed back two times already, on top of moving up once.


DreamWorks originally intended to open that picture this past summer, on the same day as Finding Dory. The studio then moved it to summer 2017, but then it got pushed back after the company's fallout in January 2015 following a very bad 2014. A fallout which lead to the studio opting to do just 2 pictures a year, not 3 as previously planned. So that meant that some 2017 films had to move, or disappear. 2017 originally housed this film, along with Bollywood Superstar Monkey and the currently-still-standing Captain Underpants.

Pushing it again, I think, is pretty bad. Why would it be pushed anyways? Does DreamWorks intend to release something else in 2018 instead? Remember how The Croods 2 was given a "TBD 2018" stamp after Universal picked it up? That might very well be a reason, among other things. The Croods 2 was for a long while meant to be released before How To Train Your Dragon 3. If it is true that the powers-that-be really want to scale it all down after 2017 and do just a single feature every year, that means we'll have to wait longer for certain projects.

But for now, these are rumors. Given how DreamWorks' tides have flown, they could very well be real, but let's wait and see...

Update...

Steve Hulett himself spoke...

"Today there was a townhall for staff at DreamWorks Animation's Glendale campus. Managers outlined upcoming changes in productions and production schedules. They also talked about other restructuring DWA will be undergoing."

It's looking to be true, I'm afraid...

To be updated...

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Editorial: The Next Phase for DreamWorks


Trolls is the third movie in DreamWorks' current phase. What phase is that?

After the big fallout in January 2015, DreamWorks had laid off over 500 staff members, dismantled sister studio Pacific Data Images, and whittled down a gargantuan slate that had - at the time - around ten different features crammed between 2015 and 2018. Former CEO and founder Jeffrey Katzenberg made it his mission to be more involved with the feature film production end of things, and his focus was: Make comedies for "kids and their parents". This was perhaps in direct response to the darker likes of Rise of the Guardians, and the confused entries like Turbo.

This sharply contrasts with the state DreamWorks was in the mid-1990s, as Katzenberg wanted to make PG films that skewed older. The 2D films took themselves very seriously and avoided the 90s Disney-isms (that Katzenberg himself helped foster in the first place) like the plague, and only one of them - The Prince of Egypt - succeeded at the box office. Steve Hulett himself recalls an animator or two telling him that the 2D flicks were like "Masterpiece Theater". Katzenberg, in recent times, came to regret going such a direction. Too bad he doesn't regret sounding the death bell for traditional animation.

After Shrek, the CG films on the other hand were loose, more comedic, less formal. Their 2D films failed to connect with audiences both young and old, whereas the CG ones - notably Shrek 2 and Shark Tale - gave audiences what they wanted. I bet if you were to release Shark Tale today, it would flop hard. In 2004, CG and overt pop cultural references were in. These were movies (and believe me, I was there) that "cool" and "edgy" preteens could go to without feeling weird, they avoided The Incredibles. I was like one of the only seventh graders at the time who was so gung-ho about Pixar's superhero epic. My peers preferred Pinocchio wearing a thong.

DreamWorks scored with this formula for a little while, but things like the Aardman co-production Flushed Away and Bee Movie kind of bit them in the rear. Kung Fu Panda began an exciting new era of strong adventure stories, balanced out with fun comedies that didn't try way too hard to be edgy. Even the Shrek installment made during this era feels like an adult, and not some 12-year-old trying to impress. Rise of the Guardians, had that not been so badly marketed, would've started a gutsier era for the moon boy studio. We would've seen pictures with a darker tone, pictures that would challenge the young audiences, and those would be accompanied by lighter comedies.

One of the first things that happened after Rise of the Guardians' implosion at the box office was the shelving of the 2D/CG hybrid feature Me and My Shadow. They kept it alive for a little while after that, before stopping it and restarting it from scratch Emperor's New Groove-style. But then they realized that the comedies weren't always a surefire thing, either. Especially when they cost over $120 million. Turbo, Mr. Peabody & Sherman, and Penguins of Madagascar all bombed, which lead to the collapse in January 2015.

DreamWorks execs chalked that up to "oh, we were aiming at preteens. We saw this one statistic that said they were seeing more animated movies!"

So Katzenberg and crew said to aim for kids and their parents. Kung Fu Panda 3 was the first picture of this era, as it was still inching towards production when all of this went down. Kung Fu Panda 3 doesn't have the bite of its predecessor, nor does it have the balance. There's way too much comedy in the film, it feels like Katzenberg going back to his Renaissance Disney roots, forcing levity into moments where it simply didn't belong. Trolls is the second, which I have still yet to see, but the consensus on that one is that it definitely skews the young while being tolerable for adults.


Next year's The Boss Baby and Captain Underpants look to continue this. This, to me, is not what DreamWorks should be settling for. Harmless comedies that parents can enjoy with their kids is aiming low, honestly... And that's also not a surefire strategy. I think they got a little lucky with Trolls, because that one could've gone south. Fox's marketing for the film looked sucky to us, but somehow, some way it worked on family audiences...

(Side note. I worked the box office on Election Day. No school for everyone. Trolls was sold out all day, from 10am to 10pm. My co-workers and I had to tell many customers, because our theater does reserved seating, it was going to be a no-go.)

Kung Fu Panda and Kung Fu Panda 2 to me represent DreamWorks at their peak, as does How To Train Your Dragon 2 and Rise of the Guardians. These are films that have good and sometimes thoughtful stories, feel pretty balanced for the most part, and have great characters. To me, films like The Croods and Turbo and whatnot are quite forgettable. Those are more for younger audiences, while the pandas, dragons, and whatnot feel like genuine family films. Mom and dad can enjoy it, the kids can enjoy it, their "hip" older brothers and sisters can get something out of it, the grannies and gramps can like 'em too!

Of course, that's not always a guaranteed win at the box office. But neither is a lighthearted, more kid-friendly romp like Trolls or Home. This is why I suggested over on my brother blog that DreamWorks seriously needs to rethink budgets now that they're under the Comcast umbrella. Something like Trolls did not need to cost over $120 million. I'm sorry, something like that just doesn't. Animation is a gamble, even for a seemingly foolproof studio like Pixar. You never know what will happen, if the public will show up for your little movie or not. Some analysts thought Trolls would bomb hard, it's doing fine. Some analysts thought The Good Dinosaur would do fine, it bombed.

Warner Animation Group was smart to outsource Storks and their other features, Storks cost $70 million and it's slowly making it back with just a $165+ million worldwide take. Sony Animation themselves try to keep it under $90 million, Blue Sky hovers a little higher. Illumination has it all done in France, the results cost less than $80 million. Reel FX goes even lower, and they plan to experiment more. Just watch The Book of Life! Stop-motion houses? LAIKA's fine for various reasons, regardless of how Kubo and the Two Strings performed. Aardman's fine, too.

I'm sure there are several contributing factors, not just too much overhead (which has been cleared out recently during a big management shift), but their location and other things. DreamWorks operates out of California, alongside Disney Animation and Pixar. Their budgets are super-high. Blue Sky's from my home state in little New England, Sony's up North, Reel FX operates in the state where everything is bigger, and the rest outsource. It must be a California thing, but I don't see DreamWorks moving anytime soon despite having units in Shanghai and Bangalore. (Update, the India facility is apparently being shuttered.) Either way, they ought to work on something. Again, animated features - no matter what audience they may go after - are more and more of a gamble these days. It's not 2004 anymore, when people would show up for each new CG flick on the block just because.

Hard to compare to 2D, because when animated features became a widespread thing, only one studio competed with Disney on that front. Two years after the release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the Fleischer studio - the innovative masterminds behind the Popeye and Betty Boop cartoons - released Gulliver's Travels to great success. Their second feature - 1942's Mr. Bug Goes to Town - was a victim of various complications and Paramount's negligence, plus the Fleischer studio was pretty much dead by the time the movie was released. Outside of Walt Disney, there were imports here and there from the late 1940s and throughout the 1950s, alongside scattered titles. They didn't make much of a mark. After Walt's death you had a few things from time to time, your Bakshis, your Watership Downs, what have you. The long-form animated feature didn't become the big thing it is now until the late 1980s, when Don Bluth was riding high and Disney was slowly beginning a resurgence.

Since traditional animation wasn't exactly new in the early 1990s, audiences saw the films they wanted to see - namely Disney's Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King - and opted to avoid the rest.

Computer animation was different.

When Toy Story took the world by storm in 1995, the studios were smart. They jumped right into it, and by the beginning of the 2000s, you saw more CG features. Pixar was now joined by DreamWorks/PDI, and Blue Sky. It was truly a novelty for audiences, which makes one wonder how things would've played out in the early 1940s if the Fleischers kept going, and if World War II never happened. Imagine Walt Disney Productions competing in the features department with Fleischer, WB, MGM, et al. The other big studios didn't touch features, the closest they got to were hybrids like Anchors Aweigh. The UPA took a shot at it when the Golden Age was coming to its slow, bitter end.

I'd argue by the end of 2002, computer animated features were a mania. It didn't matter that Shark Tale wasn't good and was pretty much for middle schoolers, it made serious bank. It didn't matter that Chicken Little was a low point for Disney Animation, the film collected a domestic gross that put the grosses of The Emperor's New Groove, Atlantis, Treasure Planet, Brother Bear, and Home on the Range to shame. 2005 was when the cracks came... The Disney-distributed UK feature Valiant went belly-up at the box office, grosses were generally down, nothing cracked $200 million domestically. 2006 was when the rug was pulled right out... The only survivors were movies people wanted to see, and films that didn't need too much to double their budgets.


Ten years later, the situation is still the same. Quality rarely ever matters in the grand scheme of things, if the audience wants to go, they'll go on opening weekend and then the word-of-mouth does the work from there. With that all said, yes, The Boss Baby is a gamble. Captain Underpants is a little less of a gamble, as DreamWorks outsourced that film to Mikros Image, so it'll probably arrive on a significantly lower budget. Since each film is a gamble, what really is there to lose?

Larrikins was okayed when DreamWorks restructured in early 2015, but since Katzenberg stepped down, there's still time to get the film right just in case Katzenberg's little "kids and their moms!" rule has vanished. Larrikins has the potential to be this very eccentric, very out-there comedy. The director-songwriter behind it suggests this, along with the premise. Let's be honest, do we want this thing to be another Home or Trolls? Probably not, I assume. Me? I want it to be what it aims to be, without any need to tone it down, or to make it more of a sell. I don't mean visually (Trolls is one of the most psychedelic, unique-looking CG films in a while), but in terms of the writing! In other words... Don't aim at just the kids, while hoping to get the parents in.

You're capable of more, DreamWorks.

The other scheduled film on the horizon is How To Train Your Dragon 3, which also kind of worries me to some extent. Like Kung Fu Panda 2, Dragon's sequel doubled the scope, the danger, and the bite. Dragon 2 has some genuinely rough moments, and I admire its darker turn. That, perhaps, was one of its undoings. The first film in the series was just right to most audiences, it seems, while the sequel had much weaker legs. The complaints about the harsher stuff was pretty audible, as if animation can't do the rather gutsy things the movie did. To be fair, a certain character's demise is something you haven't seen quite often in animated family films these days, but still...

Kung Fu Panda 3, like I said, was almost a complete 180 turn from Kung Fu Panda 2. While some drama is intact and quite heartfelt, the bite is not there, the villain isn't all that menacing (far from the terrifying baddie exec producer Guillermo del Toro promised us a while ago), and it seems like every sequence had to have some gag shoehorned into it. One particularly annoying example was a quiet moment with Po and his father, and then the hugger panda shows up out of nowhere to break the mood. Things like that, there was too much of it. I get that Kung Fu Panda as a series is a comedy at heart, but even then, the third one overdoses. I worry this might happen to Dragon 3, especially after a great sequel that didn't pull its punches. With these two films being less than 2 years away, I don't worry as much. The Boss Baby was pretty much in the can by the time Katzenberg stepped down, as was Captain Underpants.

What's on the docket? DreamWorks' future is mostly something they know, not us. Shadows and Shrek 5 are lowkey set for 2019, and while several various projects were and are in development there, we have no idea what they'll put on their slate. DreamWorks has now firmly positioned themselves as a family-friendly outlet, they're not the bad boy class clown studio they were in the early 2000s, nor are they the studio that was ready to go down some shadowy paths earlier in the decade. While Disney Animation and Pixar are established family brands, both studios don't mess around. Illumination, perhaps another animation studio that is a recognizable brand, is content with yellow tictacs and cutesy fluff. Maybe Sing will signal a new direction for them? Who knows.

All I know is, DreamWorks has a big library and their history speaks for itself. The studio has re-invented itself many times, but should be able to try a bit of everything. The worst thing an animated family feature can be at this point is bland and forgettable, a passable Sunday matinee or Redbox rental. DreamWorks has some made films that are just this, but has also made a lot of great films. I think now is the time to really try again, and make a mark like they almost did years ago. For me, personally, their little "Renaissance" of sorts began with Kung Fu Panda and ended with Rise of the Guardians. Right now I think it's just a few higher points mixed with business-as-usual fare.

It's hard to tell which way things will head. The studio is probably still in the process of setting a new course, a new game plan, now that the management is different. Will the successes of their new, lighter weight stuff influence the upcoming stuff? Or will risks be taken? Will we see cool new things? Will we see a new phase DreamWorks?

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Lighting Up: 'Trolls' Takes Off [UPDATE]


All that doom and gloom was for naught, for DreamWorks' newest looks to be a success...

Pulling in $12 million yesterday, Trolls is looking at - per the analysts - a $44 million gross for the weekend, putting it on par with The Croods and a little bit above Kung Fu Panda 3. Both of those scored some of the highest openings for a Fox-distributed DreamWorks film, the #1 spot belongs to Home. Fox's marketing I guess paid off a bit, and it's stacking up decently enough against to-be-titan Doctor Strange. So...

For now, I think the film is in good standing.

Say it pulls a 3.5x multiplier, mostly the usual for animated features, it'll wind up with around $154 million domestically. Couple that with a fine overseas gross, this will not be a crushing flop. So now that's three in a row that have done well, according to the studio: Home, Kung Fu Panda 3, and now this. Trolls cost $125 million to make, mere millions less than what their previous string of features cost ($135-145 million), still too much. Hopefully that comes to an end with The Boss Baby. Captain Underpants opens after Boss Baby, it's an exception because DreamWorks outsourced that to Mikros.

I have no idea if Larrikins was greenlit with a $120 million budget, but I'm sure How To Train Your Dragon 3 is carrying a price that high. I wouldn't mind if it were for sequels that were locked to explode overseas, but for things like Trolls, Larrikins, Shadows, and whatnot? Nada. From here on out, I think DreamWorks should really rethink the budgets. With a lot of overhead cleared out following the Comcast acquisition, maybe they will do so. I'd say the maximum should be a Blue Sky-sized budget: Low 100s. Sony Animation typically hovers around $80 million, Warner Animation outsources (Animal Logic, ImageWorks, etc.) so they keep theirs low, Illumination's work is always done in France.

Good thing is, DreamWorks seems to be on their feet once more.

Update...

$46 million for the trolls...

This makes it the third biggest opening for a Fox-DreamWorks film, behind Home ($52 million) and How To Train Your Dragon 2 ($49 million)... Good, good... The overseas take is now $104 million, so it's already set to crack $200 million worldwide in no time. At work today, all the screenings? Packed.

Losing over 700 theaters, Storks took a dive. Nearly 65% down, the movie is still in good standing, as it has crossed $70 million here and $169 million worldwide. Currently 2.4x the budget. I hope Warner Bros. doesn't deem it a disappointment.

The Secret Life of Pets saw a small uptick, still at $366 million domestically and $871 million worldwide. Finding Dory saw yet another late-in-the-game rise, as it will settle for a $486 million gross in the end. It rose 35%, and it's now at $1,024 million, just topping Zootopia and becoming this year's highest-grossing animated feature. Animation domination!

Kubo and the Two Strings, out on Blu-ray on in matter of weeks, eased. Still at $47 million domestically and $68 million worldwide. Not all great, original movies this year were deserved smashes. Hopefully this becomes a bigger hit through video sales, TV and all.

No weekend numbers for Sausage Party. Out of theaters? Could be, because the Blu-ray arrives on Election Day.

To be updated...