Thursday, February 08, 2007

2D Or Not 2D: My Prayers Have Officially Been Answered

OhMyOhMyOhMyOhMyOhMyOhMyOhMyOhMy. . .

Disney is going to revive their 2D animation department after all!!! It's Official! I'm just a little excited by this, if you can't tell. =)

The decisions the bigwigs at Disney kept making concerning their animation departments—axing animators, selling off equipment, closing studios nationwide, switching completely to 3D—kept breaking my heart. But once I had heard that the Pixar/Disney connection had been reforged though the New Deal of '06, and that Lasseter would be head of all the animation departments, I kept hoping news like this would come to light. I am so happy my heart is squeeing. Squee!

2D and 3D are two completely different mediums in which to tell stories; they are not and should never be in competiton with each other, which unfortunately is what ultimately started taking place in the 90's. But I think the glut of bad 3D films and the thirst audiences will always have for traditional cell-type, hand-drawn animation—a thirst currently being quenched, thank all that is holy, by Miyazaki—are reaffirming the worth of 2D, which hopefully will lead to a renaissance of this beautiful and vital medium. (Hint: have good stories. Whether they are original or, as Miyazaki did with Howl's, gleaned from children's storybooks. I don't care where they come from, as long as they are told well and look fabulous.)

The full article is below. Be still my still-pounding heart. And it also lists the upcoming Disney/Pixar movies in the works, which is exciting. =) One of my prime missions as a child was to always know what movies Disney had in production, at least 2-3 movies ahead of the one currently in theaters. While that has not been the case for a while, that part of my girlish heart is pleased at seeing such a long list of features to look forward to.

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Walt Disney Rescues Hand-Drawn Animation

By Gina Keating 20 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) — Hand-drawn animation, out of fashion in the computer age, experienced a rescue worthy of a fairy tale on Thursday, when Walt Disney animators announced they would bring back the art form to the big screen.


"We will be bringing back hand-drawn (two-dimensional) films," said Disney's Ed Catmull, the President of Pixar and Disney Feature Animation.

Animators refer to hand-drawn animation as "two dimensional," as opposed to computer-generated animation, referred to as 3D.

Pixar created "Toy Story" and other computer animation hits, but was acquired by Walt Disney Co. last year.

Speculation has swirled since then over whether Catmull and Chief Creative Officer John Lasseter, who took control of the ailing Disney animation facility, would reestablish the art form that made Disney the world's preeminenent animator.

All of Disney's feature animation films in production at the time of the Pixar deal were computer animated.

"Now that's we're a year into it, people want to know how it's going," Catmull told analysts at a Disney conference monitored by Web cast. He said Disney would do both computer animation and hand-drawn animation.

Lasseter spent several years as a Disney animator, but left over creative differences to form Pixar, where he was considered the main creative force. He revered Walt Disney, who with a group of legendary animators known as the "Nine Old Men," made such hand-drawn classics as "Cinderella" and "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs."

When Disney bought Pixar to try to revive its flagging animation program, Catmull and Lasseter took charge of both studios, which are run separately.

At least 300 Disney animation staff were laid off or reassigned in the months following the leadership change.

Catmull and Lasseter gave the first descriptions on Thursday on how they reshaped story lines of Disney films already in production, canceled others and restructured how the Disney artists work.

"Pixar is still Pixar -- nobody left," Catmull said. "At Disney, you have these remarkable artists there ... they were not kneaded together in the right way. At the heart of it there has to be a director and the director has to have a vision."

Catmull said there were no plans to merge the studios or to limit them to a certain type of animation.

"We always believed that quality is the best business plan," he said.

He and Lasseter showed clips from upcoming films, including "Ratatouille," "Meet the Robinsons," "Wall-E," "American Dog" and "Toy Story 3."

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