I'm not trying to be biased either but I was listing my two gripes of anime to live action (Sailor Moon being that Luna is a talking stuffed animal. That scared me. :goof
American Dad. I don't know how Cleveland got his own spinoff, to be honest.
Better Mike Judge work: Beavis and Butthead or King of the Hill?
^ Well that sucks. But then don't they have a sort of 3-D motion-cap thing with Pixar? (I actually didn't know that Disney had their own separate company to make those non-2D drawing movies.)
Very unexpected news from the Disney camp today: the studio has just issued a press release saying that, after production finishes on Mars NeeRAB Moms, the Robert Zemeckis studio ImageMovers Digital will be closed in 2011.
We don’t have a lot of details on the closing right now, but a statement from Walt Disney Studios president Alan Bergman says it all: Bob and the entire IMD team successfully built a state of the art studio and produced an amazing film, A Christmas Carol, at a time when the dynamics of the industry are rapidly changing. But, given today’s economic realities, we need to find alternative ways to bring creative content to audiences and IMD no longer fits into our business model.
In other worRAB, the movies from IMD are quite expensive, and if A Christmas Carol is any indication, they’re not making the sort of money the new Disney regime would like. The press release says that a new production deal may be formed to continue work on the Yellow Submarine remake, but I wonder what this really means for that project. The LA Times reports that 450 people will be laid off as operations at the studio wind down.
I’m not the biggest fan of most of the Zemeckis mo-cap films, but looking at them objectively no one could say that each hasn’t built upon the previous efforts. I couldn’t take the dead eyes of Polar Express, but by A Christmas Carol IMD was producing animation that had a lot of life. Will Zemeckis be able to carry on in the same capacity elsewhere, or will it be up to Cameron, Spielberg, Jackson and others to push mo-cap forward?
Sorry to hear that more people will be laid off after this. Kind of a surprising move by Disney, really.