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Modern animation in the United States

Modern animation in the United States from 1987 to 2004[1] is referred to as the renaissance age of American animation (or Silver Age of American animation). During this period, many large American entertainment companies reformed and reinvigorated their animation departments, following a dark age during the 1970s to mid 1980s. During this time the United States had a profound effect on animation worldwide.[2]

Many companies originating in the golden age of American animation experienced newfound critical and commercial success. During the Disney Renaissance, The Walt Disney Company went back to producing critically and commercially successful animated films based on well known stories, just as Walt Disney had done during his lifetime. Disney also began producing successful animated television shows, a first for the company, which led to the creation and launch of Disney Channel.[3][4] Warner Bros. produced highly successful animated cartoon television series inspired by their classic Looney Tunes cartoons, while also launching the DC Animated Universe.[5][6] Hanna-Barbera ceased production on low budget television series and launched Cartoon Network.[7] The Viacom-owned now Paramount Global owned television network, Nickelodeon rose to fame by creating the Nicktoons brand in 1991 which led to more TV shows in the 1990s and 2000s.

In addition, new animation studios rose to prominence during this animation renaissance. Most notably, Pixar debuted with the extremely successful Toy Story, the first feature film to use computer animation.[8][9][10] DreamWorks Animation debuted late in the era, but would become a major competitor to Disney in the subsequent decade.[11]

During the renaissance age of American animation, animation technology also experienced revolutionary shifts. Cel animation declined in favor of computer generated digital ink and paint animation beginning in the late 1980s. In turn, hand drawn traditional animation declined in favor of CGI computer animation beginning in the late 1990s.[12] The era of American animation since the mid-2000s has been referred to as the Modern age of American animation (Millennium age of American animation or Current age of American animation).

Trends Edit

Disney Edit

At the start of the 1980s, The Walt Disney Company had been struggling since Walt Disney's death in 1966, and the 1979 departure of Don Bluth and eleven other associates from the animation department dealt Disney a major blow. Bluth formed a new studio, in direct competition with Disney.

Disney's "Nine Old Men", the animators responsible for Disney's most famous earlier works, and their associates began to hand their traditions down to a new generation of Disney animators. New faces such as Glen Keane, Ron Clements, John Musker, Andreas Deja, and others came to the studio in the late 1970s and early 1980s, a period that produced such features as The Rescuers, Pete's Dragon (a live-action/animation hybrid), and The Fox and the Hound, as well as the featurettes The Small One (Bluth's only Disney-directed credit) and Mickey's Christmas Carol (the first screen appearance of Mickey Mouse since 1953).

At the same time, animator Steven Lisberger brought to the studio a concept about a computer programmer who is launched into a computerized world. The film would mix live-action sequences with computer animation, which had not yet been used to such an extent. The studio was impressed with the idea; the result was an ambitious $17 million film ($51.6 million in today's dollars)[13] entitled Tron. While Disney's stock dropped four percent after a screening for unenthusiastic investment analysts,[14] and in spite of only moderate grosses at the box office,[15]Tron received enthusiastic praise from film critic Roger Ebert,[16] became a cult favorite and turned out—many years later—to have a greater influence on animation (at Disney and elsewhere) than expected.[17]

In 1984, Disney became the target of a corporate raid by Saul Steinberg, who intended to break up the company piece by piece. At the same time, Roy E. Disney, who had already resigned as President in 1977, relinquished his spot on the Board of Directors to use his clout to change the status quo and improve the company's declining fortune. Disney escaped Steinberg's attempt by paying him greenmail, but in its aftermath CEO Ron W. Miller resigned, to be replaced by Michael Eisner. Roy Disney, now back on the Board as its Vice-Chairman, convinced Eisner to let him supervise the animation department, whose future was in doubt after the disappointing box office performance of its big-budget PG-rated feature, The Black Cauldron.[18] The studio's next release, The Great Mouse Detective, fared better in relation to its significantly smaller budget, but it was overshadowed by Don Bluth's An American Tail,[19] another film featuring mice characters that competed directly with Mouse Detective in theaters.

In 1988, the studio collaborated with Steven Spielberg and Robert Zemeckis, producing Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a comedic detective caper that mixed live-action and animation while paying homage to the Golden Age of Cartoons. Disney characters appeared with characters from Warner Bros., Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Universal Pictures and other rival studios for the first time in animation history. The film was a huge box-office success, winning four Academy Awards, reviving interest in animation made for theaters, and popularizing the in-depth study of the history and techniques of animation. Several aging legends in the business, such as Chuck Jones and Friz Freleng, suddenly found themselves the center of attention, receiving acclaim and accolades after decades of being virtually ignored by audiences and industry professionals alike[citation needed]. Additionally, the release of many older Disney features and short cartoons on home video, and the 1983 launch of the Disney Channel, renewed interest in the studio.

Disney followed up Who Framed Roger Rabbit with Oliver & Company in 1988[20] and The Little Mermaid, an adaptation of the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale, in 1989 with songs by Broadway composers Alan Menken and Howard Ashman. The Little Mermaid was a huge critical and commercial success won two Academy Awards for its song score, and became the first of a series of highly successful new Disney animated features.[3]

The studio invested heavily in new technology, creating the Computer Animation Production System to be used in tandem with traditional animation techniques. The first film to use this technology, The Rescuers Down Under, only grossed $27,931,461[21] ($62.6 million in today's dollars), not even equalling the take of the original 1977 film.[22]

However, the films that followed it, Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin, won rave reviews, received multiple Oscars, and topped the box office charts. Beauty and the Beast would eventually become the first animated feature to win the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy and the first animated feature to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, followed by 2009's Up.

In 1993, Disney released The Nightmare Before Christmas, the first feature-length stop-motion animated film. Disney's success peaked in 1994, when The Lion King grossed $328,541,776 ($649 million in today's dollars). As of 2010, The Lion King ranked as the 22nd highest grossing motion picture of all time in the United States.[23] Subsequent Disney films from 1995 to 2000, including Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hercules, Mulan, Tarzan, and Fantasia 2000 were box office and/or critical successes as well, albeit modestly so when compared to Disney's early-1990s releases.

In 1994, the death of Disney President and Chief Operating Officer Frank Wells, and the departure of studio chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg to co-found DreamWorks, left Michael Eisner in full control of the company. At the turn of the century, films such as Dinosaur (Disney's first CG animated feature), Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Treasure Planet and Home on the Range failed to meet the critical and commercial expectations set by the 1990s phenomena, in spite of exceptions such as The Emperor's New Groove and Lilo & Stitch. At the same time, the high level of popular acclaim bestowed upon Toy Story, the first film animated entirely using computer-generated imagery (CGI), sparked an industry trend. Based on the commercial success of Pixar's computer-generated animated films and another CGI fare (especially DreamWorks' Shrek, which contained numerous jabs at Katzenberg's former workplace and boss), Disney came to believe that CGI was what the public wanted—so it ceased producing traditional two-dimensional animation after Home on the Range, and switched exclusively to CGI starting with 2005's Chicken Little.

Public rifts grew between the animation staff and management, as well as between Michael Eisner and Roy E. Disney. Roy resigned from the board of directors in 2003 with a scathing letter that called the company "rapacious and soulless", adding that he considered it to be "always looking for the quick buck."[24] He then launched the internet site SaveDisney.com[25] in an attempt to preserve the integrity of the company and to oust Eisner, who resigned in 2005 after public opinion turned against him.[citation needed]

Robert Iger succeeded Eisner; one of his first acts as CEO was to regain the rights to Walt Disney's first star Oswald the Lucky Rabbit from NBCUniversal (Iger did so by offering NBC the services of Al Michaels, a play-by-play host then under contract to Disney subsidiary ABC Sports, as a trade). After Disney's acquisition of Pixar in 2006, Pixar executive producer John Lasseter became Chief Creative Officer at both Pixar and Disney, with a plan to reintroduce two-dimensional animation, starting with The Princess and the Frog in 2009, but was abruptly halted after Winnie the Pooh was commercially unsuccessful in 2011.

Television animation Edit

After 30 years of resisting offers to produce television animation, Disney finally relented once Michael Eisner, who had a background in TV, took over. The first TV cartoons to carry the Disney name, CBS' The Wuzzles and NBC's Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears, both premiered in the fall of 1985. Breaking from standard practice in the medium, the productions enjoyed substantially larger production budgets than average, allowing for higher-quality writing and animation, in anticipation of recouping profitably in rerun syndication. While The Wuzzles only lasted a season, The Gummi Bears was a sustained success with a six-season run.

In 1987, the TV animation division adapted Carl Barks' Scrooge McDuck comic books for the small screen with the syndicated hit DuckTales. Its success spawned a 1990 theatrical film entitled DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp and an increased investment in syndicated cartoons. The result of this investment was The Disney Afternoon in 1990, a two-hour syndicated television programming block of such animated cartoon shows as: The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1988-1991), Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers (1989–1991), TaleSpin (1990–1991), Darkwing Duck (1991–1993, also airing on ABC), Goof Troop (1992–1994, also airing on ABC), Bonkers (1993–1994), Marsupilami (1993–1995), the critically acclaimed and still-popular Gargoyles (1994–1997), and Pepper Ann (1997–2000). TV animation also brought some animated feature film characters to Saturday morning, including The Little Mermaid (1992–1994), Aladdin (1994–1995), Timon & Pumbaa (1995–1999), Hercules (1998–1999) (the first three on CBS), and later The Legend of Tarzan (2001–2003) and House of Mouse (2001–2003).

Direct to video sequels Edit

DisneyToon Studios was founded in Paris in the late 1980s to produce DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp, which is not considered by the studio to be part of the Disney animated "canon".[26] The practice of making non-canon direct-to-video sequels to canon films began in 1994 with The Return of Jafar, a sequel to Aladdin. This was a reversal of the long-standing studio policy against sequels to animated films (which did not apply to live-action films); Walt Disney has often been quoted on the subject as saying "you can't top pigs with pigs", a reference to how the Three Little Pigs short managed to get more than three sequels.[27] Because of strong video sales, the studio continued to make these films in spite of negative critical reaction; 2002's Cinderella II: Dreams Come True received a rare 11% rating from the review-aggregating website Rotten Tomatoes.[28]

Under John Lasseter, the studio has brought this practice to an end.[29][30]

DisneyToon also produced several non-canon entries that did receive theatrical releases, such as A Goofy Movie and The Tigger Movie. The latter brought the Sherman Brothers back to the studio for their first Disney feature film score since Bedknobs and Broomsticks in 1971.

Don Bluth Edit

Don Bluth's company had been driven to bankruptcy twice: once, as Don Bluth Productions, after the disappointing box office take of The Secret of NIMH coincided with an animator's strike; and again, as the Bluth Group, after the Video game crash of 1983—when Cinematronics, in an attempt to cut its losses, charged fees and royalties of over $3 million ($8.45 million adjusted for inflation) to Bluth's company while it was working on a sequel to the laserdisc-based animated arcade videogame Dragon's Lair.

Bluth formed Sullivan Bluth Studios with backing from businessman Morris Sullivan, while film director Steven Spielberg—a long-time animation fan who was interested in producing theatrical animation—helped Bluth to produce 1986's An American Tail. The film was a hit, grossing $47,483,002 ($127 million in today's dollars).[31] During its production, the studio relocated to Ireland, taking advantage of government tax breaks for film production. Bluth's 1988 follow-up The Land Before Time was a slightly bigger hit, grossing $48,092,846 ($119 million in today's dollars)[32] and spawning 12 sequels and a TV series. Neither Bluth nor Spielberg were involved with any of the Land Before Time sequels; Spielberg produced the 1991 sequel An American Tail: Fievel Goes West without Bluth.

To gain more creative control, Bluth parted company with Spielberg on his next film, the 1989 release All Dogs Go to Heaven. While the film had the misfortune of opening the same day as Disney's The Little Mermaid, it fared much better on home video.[33]

The early 1990s were difficult for the studio; it released several box office failures. In 1992, Rock-a-Doodle was panned by critics and ignored by audiences; its dismal box-office performance of $11,657,385 ($24.3 million in today's dollars)[34] contributed to Sullivan Bluth's bankruptcy. Bluth's next feature, 1994's Thumbelina fared a little better critically but even worse commercially, while A Troll in Central Park, also released in 1994, barely got a theatrical release, grossing $71,368 against a budget of $23,000,000 (or $140,909 against $45.4 million in current terms).[35]

Sullivan Bluth Studios closed in 1995. Bluth and Goldman returned to the United States a year earlier to discuss the creation of a feature-animation division at 20th Century Fox; the studio's three previous animated films (FernGully: The Last Rainforest, Once Upon a Forest, and the live-action/animation combo The Pagemaster) had all failed. Anastasia, a musical remake of the 1956 film with Ingrid Bergman, did far better than any Bluth film since All Dogs Go To Heaven,[36] but the 2000 release of Titan A.E., a film far different from the ones Bluth had been making up until then, was a flop. Fox Animation Studios closed soon afterwards; nearly all Fox feature animation was produced by its Blue Sky Studios unit until the Fox Animation Studios imprint was revived, without Bluth or Goldman, in 2009.

Warner Bros. Animation Edit

After parting ways with Bluth, Spielberg turned to television animation, working with the Warner Bros. Entertainment Co. to bring back its animation department, which it had abandoned in the 1960s. A team of former Hanna-Barbera employees led by Tom Ruegger formed a new studio, Warner Bros. Animation, to produce Tiny Toon Adventures, an animated series that paid homage to the Warner Bros. cartoons of Termite Terrace. The popularity of Tiny Toon Adventures among young TV viewers made the studio a contender once again in the field of animated cartoons. Tiny Toon Adventures was followed by Steven Spielberg Presents Animaniacs and its spinoff Pinky and the Brain. Not only did these cartoons bring in new viewers to Warner Bros., but they also captured the attention of older viewers. Warner Bros., minus Spielberg, continued with work such as Batman: The Animated Series. Batman quickly received wide acclaim for its animation and mature writing, and it also inspired a feature film. Combined, these four Warner Bros. series won a total of 17 Daytime Emmy Awards.

When Disney's feature animation surged in the 1990s, Warner Bros. tried to capitalize on their rival's success with animated feature films of their own, without the assistance of Spielberg. Their films—Cats Don't Dance, Quest for Camelot and The Iron Giant—failed to come close to Disney's success, although Cats Don't Dance and The Iron Giant both received critical praise and developed cult followings. The 2001 live-action/animation hybrid Osmosis Jones, starring Bill Murray, was a costly commercial failure,[37] although its home video performance proved successful enough for the studio's TV animation department to produce a short-lived spin-off series called Ozzy and Drix.

The perennially-popular Looney Tunes characters made a comeback. While the older shorts continued to enjoy countless reruns and compilation specials (and a few compilation films), new Looney Tunes short features were made in the 1990s. Inspired by the success of Disney's Who Framed Roger Rabbit and a series of Nike and McDonald's commercials teaming the characters with basketball superstar Michael Jordan, the studio produced the live-action/animation combo Space Jam in 1996. The film received mixed reviews, but was a major commercial success.[38] However, another 2003 feature, Looney Tunes: Back in Action, was a box-office flop, grossing about three-quarter of its $80 million budget worldwide ($127 million in current terms),[39] but received more positive critical reviews. Other modern Looney Tunes projects were in a different vein. Unlike the original shorts, Taz-Mania (1991-1995) and Baby Looney Tunes (2001-2006) were aimed primarily at young children, while Loonatics Unleashed (2005-2007) was a controversial revamping of the characters in the distant future. The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries (1995-2000) and Duck Dodgers (2003-2005) were very well received shows and were relatively more faithful to the original shorts. The Looney Tunes Show (2011-2014) was a modern more adult-oriented sitcom and Wabbit: A Looney Tunes Production (2015-2020) was a modernized series of Bugs Bunny shorts in the Looney Tunes tradition, but both shows still got a slightly better reception from audiences than Baby Looney Tunes or Loonatics Unleashed.

Ralph Bakshi Edit

Ralph Bakshi, director of ground-breaking animated films like Fritz the Cat and the original Lord of the Rings film, returned to animation after taking a short break in the mid-1980s. In 1985, he teamed up with young Canadian-born-and-raised animator John Kricfalusi to make a hybrid live-action/animated music video for The Rolling Stones' "The Harlem Shuffle", which was released in early 1986.

The music video put together a production team at Bakshi Animation whose next project was the short-lived TV series Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures. Bakshi and company worked on several other projects in the late 1980s, but his biggest project, 1992's Cool World, was a critically panned commercial disappointment.[40] In 2005, Bakshi announced that he would begin working on another feature film, Last Days of Coney Island, which he is financing himself and producing independently. Bakshi suspended production on the film in 2008,[41] but resumed in 2013 after a successful Kickstarter campaign.[42]

Outsourcing animation Edit

The major reason for the increase in the quantity of American animation was the ability to outsource the actual physical animation work to cheaper animation houses in countries in South and Southeast Asia. Writing, character design, and storyboarding would be done in American offices. Storyboards, model sheets, and color guides would then be mailed overseas. This would sometimes cause troubles as none of the final product would be seen until the completed cels were mailed back to the United States.

While budget became much less of an issue, overseas production houses would be chosen on a per-episode—or even per-scene—basis depending on the amount of money that was available at the moment. This resulted in obviously different levels of quality from episode to episode. This was particularly noticeable in shows like Gargoyles and Batman: The Animated Series, where at times characters would appear wildly off-model, requiring scenes to be redone to the dismay of their directors.

First-run syndicated animation Edit

The older Bugs Bunny and Popeye cartoons made way for first-run syndicated cartoons such as He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, Rambo: The Force of Freedom, ThunderCats, Dennis the Menace, My Little Pony, The Transformers, G.I. Joe, Voltron, and reruns of Scooby-Doo, Garfield and Friends and The Pink Panther, among many others.

In 1987, The Walt Disney Company tried its luck at syndication; DuckTales went on the air that September and lasted 100 episodes. The success of DuckTales paved the way for a second series two years later, Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers. The following year, the two shows aired together under the umbrella title The Disney Afternoon. In 1991, Disney added another hour; the block aired in syndication until 1999.

These cartoons initially competed with the nationally broadcast ones. In the 1980s, national TV only aired Saturday mornings, not competing with the weekday and Sunday blocks of syndication aired by local independent stations but; however, by the 1990s, Fox and then WB started airing weekday afternoon blocks. By the end of the 1990s, both syndicated and national TV ended up losing most of its children's market to the rise of cable TV channels like Nickelodeon, Disney Channel and Cartoon Network which provided appealing children's entertainment throughout the week at nearly all hours.

The fall of Saturday morning Edit

From Hanna-Barbera to Cartoon Network Edit

The late 1980s and 1990s saw huge changes in the Saturday-morning landscape. By now, the once-prosperous Hanna-Barbera Productions was beleaguered by several factors. First of all, its dominance over the networks' schedules was broken by other studios' shows. Second, when The Smurfs was cancelled by NBC in 1990, Hanna-Barbera had no other hits on the air. Finally, its ability to successfully exploit older characters like The Flintstones and Scooby-Doo with new shows was coming to an end; Scooby-Doo would end a near-continuous 22-year first-run after its most recent juniorized version, A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, ended its run in 1991. The 1990 theatrical release of Jetsons: The Movie was a success for the fading studio and earned $20 million ($44.8 million in today's dollars).[43] In 1987, Great American Insurance Company owner Carl Lindner Jr. became the majority shareholder of Hanna-Barbera's parent company, Taft Broadcasting, renaming it Great American Communications.

Great American wanted out of the entertainment business, and Hanna-Barbera was sold to the Turner Broadcasting System in 1991. Ted Turner had expressed that he mainly wanted ownership of the studio's back catalog; its launch of Cartoon Network on October 1, 1992 provided a new audience for Hanna-Barbera and Warner Brothers cartoons, both old and new.

In 1989, producer Tom Ruegger had led an exodus of Hanna-Barbera staffers to restart Warner Bros. Animation. At first, the studio was constantly under threat of closure.[44] However, under Fred Seibert's guidance, Hanna-Barbera's new staff (whose ranks included Seth MacFarlane, Butch Hartman, and Genndy Tartakovsky) created a new generation of Hanna-Barbera cartoons in the 1990s such as 2 Stupid Dogs, Dexter's Laboratory, Johnny Bravo, Cow and Chicken, I Am Weasel and The Powerpuff Girls. Alongside these Hanna-Barbera cartoons, shows from other companies also premiered on the channel such as Space Ghost Coast to Coast, Ed, Edd n Eddy and Courage the Cowardly Dog. These shows were designed to appeal to adults as well as children, and thus incorporated plenty of "adult humor", such as pop-culture references and veiled sexual innuendos. Cartoon Network continued to make a string of award-winning popular acclaimed iconic shows in the 2000s such as Samurai Jack, The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy, Codename: Kids Next Door, Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends, Camp Lazlo, Ben 10, Chowder and many others. In the 2010s, Cartoon Network started to make groundbreaking iconic beloved cartoons that changed the industry such as Adventure Time, Regular Show, The Amazing World of Gumball, Steven Universe, We Bare Bears, Craig of the Creek, Infinity Train, and many others such. However, their schedules in the later half of the 2010s were and still are dominated the popular Teen Titans Go! causing many fan favorite shows such as OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes and Mao Mao: Heroes of Pure Heart to be overshadowed during their prime run on the channel.

Time Warner acquired Turner in 1996, and thus inherited the rights to all of Hanna-Barbera's creative properties. This allowed Cartoon Network to begin airing all of the classic Looney Tunes shorts as well (previously, Turner had owned only the Looney Tunes shorts produced before August 1948, which had become part of the MGM/UA library).[45] Cartoon Network's success with original programming lead them to move the reruns of old Hanna-Barbera and Looney Tunes cartoons to their spin-off channel Boomerang.

In 1997, Fred Seibert left Hanna-Barbera to found his studio.[46] In 1998, Hanna-Barbera moved to the same building as Warner Bros. Animation; the use of the Hanna-Barbera name for new productions ended with William Hanna's death in 2001. Hanna and Barbera continued to work as Time Warner employees and consultants until their respective deaths in 2001 and 2006; the name is still used for productions based on properties created during the Hanna-Barbera era. Cartoon Network Studios now handles most original animation for the network.

Nickelodeon Edit

In 1991, Nickelodeon introduced The Ren & Stimpy Show. Ren & Stimpy was a wild and off-beat series that violated all the restrictions of Saturday morning cartoons, instead favoring the outrageous style of the shorts from the Golden Age period. The series' creator, John Kricfalusi—a Ralph Bakshi protege—was largely influenced by the classic works of Bob Clampett. Despite the show's popularity, the show was beset with production delays and censorship battles with Nickelodeon, which fired Kricfalusi in 1992. The show continued under the production of the network-owned Games Animation company until 1996, though many animators departed with Kricfalusi. TNN revived the show in a more risqué form in 2003, with Kricfalusi receiving more creative freedom, but it only lasted ten episodes.

Nickelodeon also gave birth to hit shows such as Doug, Rugrats, Rocko's Modern Life, Hey Arnold!, The Wild Thornberrys, SpongeBob SquarePants, Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Loud House. Many of these shows spawned successful theatrical films as well, most notably Rugrats (which garnered 3 films), SpongeBob SquarePants (which has garnered 3 theatrical films and several TV movies) and Avatar: The Last Airbender (which garnered both a sequel series and a live action film.)

Other cable networks Edit

The Disney Channel switched from pay-cable to basic cable in the late 1990s previously having hit cartoons in the late 80s and early 90s such as Adventures of the Gummi Bears, DuckTales (1987), Darkwing Duck, and Recess of the Disney Afternoon cartoons and launched several successful animated shows in 2000s such as The Proud Family and Kim Possible. Around the same time, it launched Toon Disney, a channel specifically intended for animation (which has since been replaced by Disney XD) before the cartoons went back to airing on Disney Channel or premiering instead on Disney's streaming platform Disney+. Disney's current most successful cartoon series are Phineas and Ferb, Gravity Falls, Star vs. the Forces of Evil, DuckTales (2017) which was their first reboot, Big City Greens, Amphibia, The Owl House, and The Ghost and Molly McGee. On cable TV, Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, and Disney Channel all grew to a point where they were and are still competitive with the broadcast networks around the world.

Premium cable also experimented with original animated series, such as Spawn.

Broadcast networks Edit

As the 1990s began, the "Big Three" networks (ABC, NBC, and CBS) were no longer a three-way oligopoly. The fledgling Fox network launched their Fox Kids programming block on weekdays and Saturdays in 1990, while The WB joined the competition with a kid's programming block shortly after the network's 1995 launch.

When NBC compared the success of the live-action youth sitcom Saved by the Bell to the paucity of their animated hits, they gave up on cartoons in 1992, instead concentrating on live-action teenage shows with their Saturday-morning TNBC block. ABC was purchased by Disney in 1996, and Disney transformed ABC's Saturday schedule into a series of Disney-produced animated cartoons collectively named One Saturday Morning. CBS was simply never able to come up with any new hits once the shows that anchored its late 1980s/early 1990s Saturday morning lineup—Muppet Babies, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Garfield and Friends, etc.—ran their respective courses. When CBS was purchased by Viacom, which also owned Nickelodeon, Viacom simply repurposed much of the Nick Jr. lineup—in addition to adding a Saturday edition of the CBS morning-news program The Early Show.

As a result of years of activism by Action for Children's Television and others against shows they believed blurred the line between entertainment and advertising, the Children's Television Act was passed in 1990. It began to be strictly enforced in 1996. The Federal Communications Commission began requiring three hours a week of educational and informational program intended explicitly for children, at times when children were awake. Since this required three hours to be "off-limits" to programs aimed at the general public, the networks naturally chose to air them on Saturday morning, when children were already watching. As a result, almost every Saturday-morning network show is required to contain some educational content. Fox and The WB worked around this problem by airing short one-hour weekday children's blocks instead of morning news shows, but those weekday blocks no longer exist (with the notable exception of PBS, which continues to have large weekday children's programming blocks as of 2010). Nonetheless, there were still a few toy-based children's programs in the 1990s, particularly Power Rangers and Pokémon.

Cable networks were not subject to these—or most other—FCC requirements, which allowed their series to have more leeway with content than network shows. The impact of the new regulations was almost instantaneous: by 1997, Nickelodeon had rocketed past its broadcast competitors to become the most-watched network on Saturday mornings.[47]

Animation for adults Edit

The 1990s saw the beginnings of a new wave of animated cartoon series targeted primarily to adults and sometime teens, after a lack of such a focus for over a decade.

The Simpsons and Fox Edit

In 1987, "The Simpsons", an animated short cartoon segment of The Tracey Ullman Show, debuted. Matt Groening's creation gained its own half-hour series in 1989, the first prime-time animated series since The Flintstones. Although 70 percent of the first episode's animation had to be redone, pushing the series premiere back three months, it became one of the first major hit series for the fledgling Fox network. The Simpsons caused a sensation, entering popular culture and gaining wide acclaim for its satirical handling of American culture, families, society as a whole, and the human condition.

The show has won dozens of awards, including 24 Emmy Awards, 26 Annie Awards and a Peabody Award. Time magazine's December 31, 1999 issue named it the 20th century's best television series. A film version grossed over half a billion dollars worldwide.[48] On February 26, 2009, Fox renewed The Simpsons for an additional two years, "...which will secure its place as TV's longest-running prime-time series."[49] Its 21st season began on September 27, 2009, breaking the 20-season record it once shared with Gunsmoke.[49]

The success of The Simpsons led Fox to develop other animated series aimed at adults, including Bob's Burgers, King of the Hill (created by Mike Judge), Futurama (also by Groening), Family Guy, American Dad! and The Cleveland Show (all created by Seth MacFarlane). King of the Hill was an instant success, running 13 seasons. Both Futurama and Family Guy were cancelled by the network; after strong DVD sales and ratings in re-runs, both returned to the air—Family Guy on Fox, and Futurama on Comedy Central.[50]

Spike and Mike Edit

In 1989, a festival of animation shorts, organized by Craig "Spike" Decker and Mike Gribble (known as "Spike & Mike") and originally based in San Diego, began showcasing a collection of short subject animated films. Known as the Classic Festival of Animation, it played in theatrical and non-theatrical venues across the country.

The collections were largely made up of Oscar-nominated shorts, student work from the California Institute of the Arts, and experimental work funded by the National Film Board of Canada. Early festivals included work by John Lasseter, Nick Park, Mike Judge, and Craig McCracken. Judge's piece, Frog Baseball, marked the first appearance of his dimwitted trademark characters Beavis and Butt-head, while McCracken's short The Whoopass Girls in A Sticky Situation featured the introduction of the trio of little girl superheroes that would later gain popularity under their new moniker The Powerpuff Girls.

The festival gradually turned into a program of films called Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation, an underground movement for adult humor and subject matter.

Cartoon Network and Adult Swim Edit

In 1994, the U.S. cable television network Cartoon Network approved a new series entitled Space Ghost: Coast to Coast. In a particularly postmodern twist, this show featured live-action celebrity interviews mixed with animation from the original Space Ghost cartoon. It was the beginning of the now common practice of using old Hanna-Barbera cartoon characters for new edgier productions, such as the surrealistic Sealab 2021, based on the short-lived early 1970s environmentally themed cartoon Sealab 2020. Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law was about a lackluster superhero, Birdman—originally the star of Birdman and the Galaxy Trio—who has become a lawyer. His clientele, as well as most of the other characters on the show, are made up entirely of old Hanna-Barbera characters.

Adult Swim, a scheduling block of adult-oriented cartoons appearing on Cartoon Network beginning after primetime, premiered in 2001. Originally limited to Sunday nights, as of 2018, Adult Swim now remains on the air every night until 6:00 a.m. Eastern time. Animated series produced exclusively for Adult Swim include The Brak Show, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Sealab 2021, Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law, Squidbillies, The Venture Bros., Perfect Hair Forever, Stroker and Hoop, Tom Goes to the Mayor, Robot Chicken, Rick and Morty, Metalocalypse and Smiling Friends. In addition to american animation, Adult Swim also runs popular anime series such as Cowboy Bebop, Ghost in the Shell, Eureka Seven, the Fullmetal Alchemist series, Bleach, InuYasha and My Hero Academia.

Other cartoons for adults Edit

Other TV networks also experimented with adult-oriented animation. MTV produced several successful animated series especially for its adolescent and young adult audience, including Liquid Television, The Brothers Grunt, Æon Flux, Beavis and Butt-head (and its spin-off Daria), The Maxx, and Celebrity Deathmatch. They would continue experimenting with animated series into the early 2000s with shows such as Clone High, Spy Groove, and 3 South. Their original animated programming slowed to a halt by the end of the decade. USA Network's Duckman, starring the voice of Jason Alexander, found a cult following.

Another successful adult-oriented animated series was Trey Parker and Matt Stone's South Park, which saw its beginnings in 1995 with the short cartoon The Spirit of Christmas. Like The Simpsons, Beavis and Butt-head and South Park were given the big-screen treatment as Beavis and Butt-head Do America and South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut both of which met with box office success.

Cartoonist Bill Plympton transitioned from print to animation in the late 1980s and has continued to make adult-oriented shorts. Don Hertzfeldt began in animation in the 1990s and won an Academy Award in 2001 for Rejected.

Feature-length films like Cool World and Bébé's Kids helped establish a market for adult animation films.

The rise of computer animation Edit

The 1990s saw major growth in the use of computer-generated imagery to enhance both animated sequences and live-action special effects, allowing elaborate computer-animated sequences to dominate both. This new form of animation soon dominated Hollywood special effects; the films Terminator 2: Judgment Day and Jurassic Park included Oscar-winning special effects sequences which made extensive use of CGI. After decades of existing as related-but-separate industries, the barrier between "animation" and "special effects" was shattered by the popularization of computerized special effects—to the point where computer enhancement of Hollywood feature films became second-nature and often went unnoticed. The Academy Award-winning Forrest Gump (1994) depended heavily on computerized special effects to create the illusion of Tom Hanks shaking hands with Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and to make Gary Sinise convincingly appear to be a double amputee, winning a special-effects Oscar. The film Titanic used computer effects in nearly every scene of its three-hour running time; one of the film's 11 Oscars was for special effects.

While Disney had made the film Tron—which extensively mixed live-action, traditional animation, and CGI—in 1982, and introduced the CAPS system to enhance traditional animation in 1990's The Rescuers Down Under, a completely computer-animated feature film had yet to be made. In 1995, Disney partnered with Pixar to produce Toy Story, the first feature film made entirely using CGI. The film's success was so great that other studios looked into producing their own CGI films. Computer-animated films turned out to be wildly popular, and animated films returned the highest gross margins (around 52%) of all film genres in the 2004-2013 timeframe.[51]

Computer animation also made inroads into television. The Saturday morning animated series ReBoot won a large cult following among adults; it was the first of several CGI-generated animated series, including Beast Wars, War Planets, and Roughnecks. The quality of the computer animation improved considerably with each successive series. Many live-action TV series (especially science fiction TV series such as Babylon 5) invested heavily in CGI production, creating a heretofore-unavailable level of special effects for a relatively low price.

Pixar Edit

The most popular and successful competitor in the CGI race turned out to be Pixar. It originated in 1979 when George Lucas' Lucasfilm was able to recruit Edwin Catmull from the New York Institute of Technology to start the Graphics Group of its special-effects division. In late 1983, Catmull was able to bring in as a freelance independent contractor a Disney animator, John Lasseter, not long after Lasseter (then unbeknownst to Catmull) had been fired by the Walt Disney Company for his vigorous advocacy of computer animation; Lasseter was hired as a full-time employee about a year later.

Lucas experienced cash flow issues after his 1983 divorce, and in 1986 Pixar was spun off from Lucasfilm as a separate corporation with $10 million in capital from Apple Computer co-founder Steve Jobs. At that time, Pixar primarily developed computer animation hardware, but Lasseter helped the company make a name for itself by creating acclaimed CGI short films such as The Adventures of André and Wally B. (1984). After the spin-off, he would go on to produce Tin Toy (1988), which won an Oscar. The company transitioned into TV commercial production and projects such as the Computer Animation Production System for Disney. After the success of Tin Toy, Pixar made a deal with Disney to produce feature films. The first of these films, 1995's Toy Story, was a smash hit, which in turn led to additional successful films such as A Bug's Life and Toy Story 2. By then, Jobs had become the owner of Pixar by keeping it alive with additional investments over the years; he had often considered selling it but changed his mind after Toy Story.

Pixar's string of critical and box-office successes continued with Monsters, Inc., Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Cars, Ratatouille, WALL-E, Up and Toy Story 3 all receiving rave reviews, earning huge profits, winning awards, and overshadowing Disney's in-house offerings until Cars 2 in 2011 ended the streak when it proved a critical disappointment, albeit still a commercial success. Disney produced a CGI/live-action feature film of its own without Pixar (Dinosaur), but the film received a mixed reaction, even though it was a financial success. During the later years of Michael Eisner's management, friction between Disney and Pixar grew to a point that Pixar considered finding another partner when they could not reach an agreement over profit sharing.[52] When Eisner stepped down in 2005, his replacement, Robert Iger, arranged for Disney to buy Pixar in a $7.4 billion all-stock deal ($11.1 billion in today's dollars) that turned Steve Jobs into Disney's largest individual shareholder.[53] The deal was structured so that Disney Animation and Pixar Animation would continue to operate as completely separate studios under the Disney corporate umbrella; Lasseter was placed in charge of greenlighting all-new animated films for both studios in his new role as Chief Creative Officer.

DreamWorks Animation Edit

When Jeffrey Katzenberg left Disney to become a co-partner of Steven Spielberg and David Geffen in the new studio DreamWorks Pictures, the studio naturally became interested in animation.[11] Its first film, Antz, did not do as well as the Disney-Pixar releases but was a critical success. However, DreamWorks succeeded in its partnership with the British stop motion animation studio Aardman Animations with Chicken Run in 2000, and later the Oscar-winning Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in 2006.

Furthermore, DreamWorks finally had their own success in 2001 with the computer-animated feature film Shrek, a gigantic box-office hit that overpowered Disney's summer release for that year, Atlantis. Shrek established DreamWorks as Disney's first major competitor in feature-film animation. DreamWorks' commercial success continued with three Shrek sequels, Shark Tale, Madagascar, Bee Movie, Kung Fu Panda, Monsters vs. Aliens, How to Train Your Dragon and The Croods. DreamWorks Animation eventually became a separate company from its parent; it is now owned by Universal Studios through its parent company NBCUniversal/Comcast as of 2016.

Walt Disney Animation Studios Edit

In 2003, noting the growing success of studios that relied on computer animation, Walt Disney Feature Animation announced it would be converted into a CGI studio.[citation needed]

Two years later, Chicken Little, the first computer-animated film from the studio, was released to moderate success in the box office and mixed critical reception. On January 24, 2006, Disney announced that it would be acquiring Pixar (the deal successfully closed that May),[54] and as part of the acquisition, executives Edwin Catmull and John Lasseter assumed control of Walt Disney Feature Animation as President and Chief Creative Officer, respectively.[55] Lasseter later acknowledged that there had been discussions back in 2006 about closing Feature Animation as redundant since Disney now owned Pixar, which he and Catmull flatly rejected ("Not on our watch. We will never allow that to happen."); they resolved to try to save Walt Disney's creative legacy by bringing his animation studio "back up to the creative level it had to be".[56][57]

To maintain the separateness of Disney and Pixar (even though they share common ownership and senior management), it was outlined that each studio is to remain solely responsible for its own projects and is not allowed to borrow personnel from or lend tasks out to the other.[58][59]

In 2007, the studio released Meet the Robinsons, which experienced a poor response at the box office despite the lukewarm critical and audience reception. The following film, 2008's Bolt, had the best critical reception of any Disney animated feature since Lilo & Stitch, and became a moderate success. An adaptation of the Brothers Grimm's "Rapunzel" tale entitled Tangled was released in 2010, earning $591 million in worldwide box office revenue, and signified a return by the studio to fairytale-based features common in the traditional animation era. This trend was followed in 2013's global blockbuster hit Frozen, a film inspired by Hans Christian Andersen's The Snow Queen tale, which released to widespread acclaim and was the first Disney animated film to earn over $1 billion in worldwide box office revenue[60][61][62] and is currently the highest-grossing animated film of all time, surpassing Pixar's Toy Story 3. Frozen also became the first film from Walt Disney Animation Studios to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature Film.[63] They also had critical and commercial success with Oscar winner Big Hero 6, Zootopia and Moana alongside (following in Pixar's footsteps) their own animated shorts Feast and Paperman; the latter shown before Wreck-It Ralph.

Independents and others Edit

Other studios attempted to get into the CGI game. After ending its relationship with Don Bluth, 20th Century Fox released a hugely successful CGI-animated feature in early 2002 entitled Ice Age, as the first full-length feature film under Blue Sky Studios. In 2001, Paramount offered Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, TWC offered Hoodwinked! in 2005, and Columbia produced Open Season in 2006. Warner Brothers had a major success in 2006 with the Oscar-winning feature film, Happy Feet, while Sony produced films under Sony Pictures Animation including Open Season in 2006, Surf's Up in 2007, and the successful film franchises Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and Hotel Transylvania which began in 2009 and 2012, respectively. Universal Studios attempted several times to become a viable participant in the market, finally achieving the goal in 2010 with Despicable Me, the first feature film from Illumination which provided more hits for them within the following decade. STX Entertainment offered UglyDolls in 2019.

Despite all its success, computer animation still relies on cartoon and stylized characters. 2001 saw the first attempt to create a fully animated world using photorealistic human actors in Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, which met with moderate critical success but did not do well at the box office.

In 2004, the live-action film Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow was released. It was notable for being filmed entirely in front of a bluescreen, with the background being completely computer-generated; only the actors and some props were real. Robert Zemeckis' film The Polar Express, starring Tom Hanks in five roles, was completely CGI animation but used performance capture technology to animate the characters. Zemeckis followed The Polar Express with two other motion capture films: Beowulf and Disney's A Christmas Carol.

The use of CGI special effects in live-action film increased to the point where George Lucas considered his 2002 film Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones to be primarily an animated film that used real-life actors. A growing number of family-oriented films began to use entirely computer-generated characters that interacted on the screen with live-action counterparts, such as Jar-Jar Binks in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, Gollum in The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers and the title character of Hulk. While computer-generated characters have become acceptable to moviegoers, there have yet to be any fully animated films featuring virtual human actors, or "synthespians".

Rise of Internet and Flash animation Edit

The late 1990s saw the rise of Flash animation—animated films created using the Adobe Flash animation software—produced in the U.S. and elsewhere, and distributed through the Internet.[64]

Some popular Flash animated cartoons include Joe Cartoons, Weebl and Bob, Happy Tree Friends, Homestar Runner, the Brackenwood Series, Making Fiends and Salad Fingers.

The decline of traditional animation Edit

At the start of the 2000s, traditionally animated feature-films were starting to fall from favor from audiences as a result of the increasing successes of computer-animated CG movies.

In 2000, Fox Animation Studios closed down due to the box office failure of Titan A.E. which cost between $75 and $90 million, but only earned $38.8 million worldwide. As a result, Fox cut ties with Don Bluth and Gary Goldman, and moved animation services to Blue Sky Studios, where they worked on their first feature, Ice Age in 2002.

Around 2001, the notable successes of computer-animated films from Pixar and DreamWorks such as Monsters, Inc. and, Shrek, respectively, against Disney's lesser returns for The Emperor's New Groove and Atlantis: The Lost Empire led to a growing perception that hand-drawn animation was becoming outdated and falling out of fashion.

In 2002, even with the box office success of Disney's Lilo & Stitch, the failure of their much-hyped Treasure Planet seemed to ensure that there would be major cutbacks at Disney's animation studio.

In March of that year, Disney laid off most of the employees at the Feature Animation studio in Burbank, closed down the Disney Animation France studio in 2003 and then the Walt Disney Feature Animation Florida in 2004, after the release of Brother Bear in the latter year; downsizing it to one unit and beginning plans to move into fully computer-animated films.

In 2004, Disney released what it announced to be its last traditionally animated film, Home on the Range. The film received mixed reviews and was not successful at the box office. After the failure of the film, Disney officially abandoned traditional animation altogether and moved to work on computer-animated films starting with Chicken Little in 2005.

In 2003, DreamWorks Animation also stopped working on traditionally animated features after the domestic failure of Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas, and the studio moved on to only work on CGI features since then.

Yet the later release of The Princess and the Frog and The Secret of Kells in 2009, both nominated for an Academy Award, marked a renewed interest in traditional animation. In the same year, Coraline and Wes Anderson's Fantastic Mr. Fox (also Academy Award-nominated) renewed interest in stop motion animation.

However, in 2011, Disney's Winnie the Pooh, while critically acclaimed, was a failure in the box office, and since then, there have been no more traditionally animated films planned for Walt Disney Animation Studios except for experimental and short film purposes. However, in 2019, it has been confirmed by animation executive Jennifer Lee that the studio is open for future hand-drawn animated projects.

Today, traditionally animated feature films are rare in America, but is still widespread all around the world, especially in Japan. In recent years, there are some traditionally animated features released later in the 2010s, with The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water (although hybrid with live-action and CGI) in 2015, the first production by the newly founded Paramount Animation following the success of Rango in 2011. My Little Pony: The Movie followed in 2017, and Teen Titans Go! To the Movies followed in 2018. Coincidentally, all are based on animated TV shows.

Animation accolades Edit

Recognition by the Oscars Edit

Historically, despite the continuation of the Best Animated Short Subject category, animated feature films seldom received much recognition from the Academy Awards for anything other than musical scores. The unprecedented nomination of Disney's Beauty and the Beast for Best Picture and five other awards changed things, even though it only won two Oscars for its song score. Animation had become so widely accepted by the beginning of the 21st century that, in 2001, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences introduced a new Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.

The three contenders for first honoree in this award were all CGI feature films: Shrek, by DreamWorks, Monsters, Inc., by Disney and Pixar, and Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, by Nickelodeon and Paramount. The award that year went to Shrek. Films that year which were passed up included the acclaimed adult-oriented film Waking Life and the photorealistic CGI film Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within.

Hayao Miyazaki's critically acclaimed Spirited Away won the Oscar in 2002. Disney/Pixar's Finding Nemo received the 2003 award, defeating nominees The Triplets of Belleville and Brother Bear. Since then, Pixar has won the most awards in this category with the current exceptions being Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit in 2005, Happy Feet in 2006, Rango in 2011, Frozen in 2013, Big Hero 6 in 2014, Zootopia in 2016, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse in 2018, Encanto in 2021 and Guillermo del Toro's Pinocchio in 2022.

In 2013, the March 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine published the ballots of eight different Oscar voters in the Academy.[65] Of those eight, four voters abstained in the Best Animated Feature category due to inadequate knowledge of the subject. They admitted to not having seen all of the nominations, one person stating "that ended when I was 6." Such disregard for animated films by the voters themselves is often criticized by American animators, who claim that "Hollywood doesn't care or know the first thing about animated films."[66]

Annie Awards Edit

The Annie Awards are presented each February by the Hollywood branch of the International Animated Film Association for achievements in the fields of film and television animation in the United States. Formed in 1972 to celebrate lifetime contributions to the various fields within animation, the awards started to honor animation as a whole, including current offerings.

Legacy Edit

Six animated features, The Little Mermaid (1989), Beauty and the Beast (1991), The Lion King (1994), Toy Story (1995), Shrek (2001) and Wall-E (2008) plus two animated shorts from Pixar Luxo Jr. (1986) and Tin Toy (1988), were each inducted into the National Film Registry.[67]

Studio Ghibli's Spirited Away (2001) and four Pixar films (2003's Finding Nemo, 2007's Ratatouille, 2008's Wall-E and 2015's Inside Out) were included on BBC's 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century poll.[68]

See also Edit

References Edit

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Bibliography Edit

  • Lenburg, Jeff (June 2006). Who's Who in Animated Cartoons: An International Guide to Film and Television's Award-Winning and Legendary Animators. Applause Books. ISBN 1-55783-671-X.
  • Solomon, Charles (1989). Enchanted Drawings: The History of Animation. New York: Random House, Inc. ISBN 978-0-394-54684-1.

External links Edit

  • The official site of the Annie Awards

modern, animation, united, states, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Modern animation in the United States news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Modern animation in the United States from 1987 to 2004 1 is referred to as the renaissance age of American animation or Silver Age of American animation During this period many large American entertainment companies reformed and reinvigorated their animation departments following a dark age during the 1970s to mid 1980s During this time the United States had a profound effect on animation worldwide 2 Many companies originating in the golden age of American animation experienced newfound critical and commercial success During the Disney Renaissance The Walt Disney Company went back to producing critically and commercially successful animated films based on well known stories just as Walt Disney had done during his lifetime Disney also began producing successful animated television shows a first for the company which led to the creation and launch of Disney Channel 3 4 Warner Bros produced highly successful animated cartoon television series inspired by their classic Looney Tunes cartoons while also launching the DC Animated Universe 5 6 Hanna Barbera ceased production on low budget television series and launched Cartoon Network 7 The Viacom owned now Paramount Global owned television network Nickelodeon rose to fame by creating the Nicktoons brand in 1991 which led to more TV shows in the 1990s and 2000s In addition new animation studios rose to prominence during this animation renaissance Most notably Pixar debuted with the extremely successful Toy Story the first feature film to use computer animation 8 9 10 DreamWorks Animation debuted late in the era but would become a major competitor to Disney in the subsequent decade 11 During the renaissance age of American animation animation technology also experienced revolutionary shifts Cel animation declined in favor of computer generated digital ink and paint animation beginning in the late 1980s In turn hand drawn traditional animation declined in favor of CGI computer animation beginning in the late 1990s 12 The era of American animation since the mid 2000s has been referred to as the Modern age of American animation Millennium age of American animation or Current age of American animation Contents 1 Trends 1 1 Disney 1 1 1 Television animation 1 1 2 Direct to video sequels 1 2 Don Bluth 1 3 Warner Bros Animation 1 4 Ralph Bakshi 1 5 Outsourcing animation 2 First run syndicated animation 3 The fall of Saturday morning 3 1 From Hanna Barbera to Cartoon Network 3 2 Nickelodeon 3 3 Other cable networks 3 4 Broadcast networks 4 Animation for adults 4 1 The Simpsons and Fox 4 2 Spike and Mike 4 3 Cartoon Network and Adult Swim 4 4 Other cartoons for adults 5 The rise of computer animation 5 1 Pixar 5 2 DreamWorks Animation 5 3 Walt Disney Animation Studios 5 4 Independents and others 6 Rise of Internet and Flash animation 7 The decline of traditional animation 8 Animation accolades 8 1 Recognition by the Oscars 8 2 Annie Awards 9 Legacy 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Bibliography 12 External linksTrends EditDisney Edit Main article Disney Renaissance At the start of the 1980s The Walt Disney Company had been struggling since Walt Disney s death in 1966 and the 1979 departure of Don Bluth and eleven other associates from the animation department dealt Disney a major blow Bluth formed a new studio in direct competition with Disney Disney s Nine Old Men the animators responsible for Disney s most famous earlier works and their associates began to hand their traditions down to a new generation of Disney animators New faces such as Glen Keane Ron Clements John Musker Andreas Deja and others came to the studio in the late 1970s and early 1980s a period that produced such features as The Rescuers Pete s Dragon a live action animation hybrid and The Fox and the Hound as well as the featurettes The Small One Bluth s only Disney directed credit and Mickey s Christmas Carol the first screen appearance of Mickey Mouse since 1953 At the same time animator Steven Lisberger brought to the studio a concept about a computer programmer who is launched into a computerized world The film would mix live action sequences with computer animation which had not yet been used to such an extent The studio was impressed with the idea the result was an ambitious 17 million film 51 6 million in today s dollars 13 entitled Tron While Disney s stock dropped four percent after a screening for unenthusiastic investment analysts 14 and in spite of only moderate grosses at the box office 15 Tron received enthusiastic praise from film critic Roger Ebert 16 became a cult favorite and turned out many years later to have a greater influence on animation at Disney and elsewhere than expected 17 In 1984 Disney became the target of a corporate raid by Saul Steinberg who intended to break up the company piece by piece At the same time Roy E Disney who had already resigned as President in 1977 relinquished his spot on the Board of Directors to use his clout to change the status quo and improve the company s declining fortune Disney escaped Steinberg s attempt by paying him greenmail but in its aftermath CEO Ron W Miller resigned to be replaced by Michael Eisner Roy Disney now back on the Board as its Vice Chairman convinced Eisner to let him supervise the animation department whose future was in doubt after the disappointing box office performance of its big budget PG rated feature The Black Cauldron 18 The studio s next release The Great Mouse Detective fared better in relation to its significantly smaller budget but it was overshadowed by Don Bluth s An American Tail 19 another film featuring mice characters that competed directly with Mouse Detective in theaters In 1988 the studio collaborated with Steven Spielberg and Robert Zemeckis producing Who Framed Roger Rabbit a comedic detective caper that mixed live action and animation while paying homage to the Golden Age of Cartoons Disney characters appeared with characters from Warner Bros Metro Goldwyn Mayer Universal Pictures and other rival studios for the first time in animation history The film was a huge box office success winning four Academy Awards reviving interest in animation made for theaters and popularizing the in depth study of the history and techniques of animation Several aging legends in the business such as Chuck Jones and Friz Freleng suddenly found themselves the center of attention receiving acclaim and accolades after decades of being virtually ignored by audiences and industry professionals alike citation needed Additionally the release of many older Disney features and short cartoons on home video and the 1983 launch of the Disney Channel renewed interest in the studio Disney followed up Who Framed Roger Rabbit with Oliver amp Company in 1988 20 and The Little Mermaid an adaptation of the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale in 1989 with songs by Broadway composers Alan Menken and Howard Ashman The Little Mermaid was a huge critical and commercial success won two Academy Awards for its song score and became the first of a series of highly successful new Disney animated features 3 The studio invested heavily in new technology creating the Computer Animation Production System to be used in tandem with traditional animation techniques The first film to use this technology The Rescuers Down Under only grossed 27 931 461 21 62 6 million in today s dollars not even equalling the take of the original 1977 film 22 However the films that followed it Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin won rave reviews received multiple Oscars and topped the box office charts Beauty and the Beast would eventually become the first animated feature to win the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy and the first animated feature to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture followed by 2009 s Up In 1993 Disney released The Nightmare Before Christmas the first feature length stop motion animated film Disney s success peaked in 1994 when The Lion King grossed 328 541 776 649 million in today s dollars As of 2010 The Lion King ranked as the 22nd highest grossing motion picture of all time in the United States 23 Subsequent Disney films from 1995 to 2000 including Pocahontas The Hunchback of Notre Dame Hercules Mulan Tarzan and Fantasia 2000 were box office and or critical successes as well albeit modestly so when compared to Disney s early 1990s releases In 1994 the death of Disney President and Chief Operating Officer Frank Wells and the departure of studio chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg to co found DreamWorks left Michael Eisner in full control of the company At the turn of the century films such as Dinosaur Disney s first CG animated feature Atlantis The Lost Empire Treasure Planet and Home on the Range failed to meet the critical and commercial expectations set by the 1990s phenomena in spite of exceptions such as The Emperor s New Groove and Lilo amp Stitch At the same time the high level of popular acclaim bestowed upon Toy Story the first film animated entirely using computer generated imagery CGI sparked an industry trend Based on the commercial success of Pixar s computer generated animated films and another CGI fare especially DreamWorks Shrek which contained numerous jabs at Katzenberg s former workplace and boss Disney came to believe that CGI was what the public wanted so it ceased producing traditional two dimensional animation after Home on the Range and switched exclusively to CGI starting with 2005 s Chicken Little Public rifts grew between the animation staff and management as well as between Michael Eisner and Roy E Disney Roy resigned from the board of directors in 2003 with a scathing letter that called the company rapacious and soulless adding that he considered it to be always looking for the quick buck 24 He then launched the internet site SaveDisney com 25 in an attempt to preserve the integrity of the company and to oust Eisner who resigned in 2005 after public opinion turned against him citation needed Robert Iger succeeded Eisner one of his first acts as CEO was to regain the rights to Walt Disney s first star Oswald the Lucky Rabbit from NBCUniversal Iger did so by offering NBC the services of Al Michaels a play by play host then under contract to Disney subsidiary ABC Sports as a trade After Disney s acquisition of Pixar in 2006 Pixar executive producer John Lasseter became Chief Creative Officer at both Pixar and Disney with a plan to reintroduce two dimensional animation starting with The Princess and the Frog in 2009 but was abruptly halted after Winnie the Pooh was commercially unsuccessful in 2011 Television animation Edit See also Disney Television Animation After 30 years of resisting offers to produce television animation Disney finally relented once Michael Eisner who had a background in TV took over The first TV cartoons to carry the Disney name CBS The Wuzzles and NBC s Disney s Adventures of the Gummi Bears both premiered in the fall of 1985 Breaking from standard practice in the medium the productions enjoyed substantially larger production budgets than average allowing for higher quality writing and animation in anticipation of recouping profitably in rerun syndication While The Wuzzles only lasted a season The Gummi Bears was a sustained success with a six season run In 1987 the TV animation division adapted Carl Barks Scrooge McDuck comic books for the small screen with the syndicated hit DuckTales Its success spawned a 1990 theatrical film entitled DuckTales the Movie Treasure of the Lost Lamp and an increased investment in syndicated cartoons The result of this investment was The Disney Afternoon in 1990 a two hour syndicated television programming block of such animated cartoon shows as The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh 1988 1991 Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers 1989 1991 TaleSpin 1990 1991 Darkwing Duck 1991 1993 also airing on ABC Goof Troop 1992 1994 also airing on ABC Bonkers 1993 1994 Marsupilami 1993 1995 the critically acclaimed and still popular Gargoyles 1994 1997 and Pepper Ann 1997 2000 TV animation also brought some animated feature film characters to Saturday morning including The Little Mermaid 1992 1994 Aladdin 1994 1995 Timon amp Pumbaa 1995 1999 Hercules 1998 1999 the first three on CBS and later The Legend of Tarzan 2001 2003 and House of Mouse 2001 2003 Direct to video sequels Edit DisneyToon Studios was founded in Paris in the late 1980s to produce DuckTales the Movie Treasure of the Lost Lamp which is not considered by the studio to be part of the Disney animated canon 26 The practice of making non canon direct to video sequels to canon films began in 1994 with The Return of Jafar a sequel to Aladdin This was a reversal of the long standing studio policy against sequels to animated films which did not apply to live action films Walt Disney has often been quoted on the subject as saying you can t top pigs with pigs a reference to how the Three Little Pigs short managed to get more than three sequels 27 Because of strong video sales the studio continued to make these films in spite of negative critical reaction 2002 s Cinderella II Dreams Come True received a rare 11 rating from the review aggregating website Rotten Tomatoes 28 Under John Lasseter the studio has brought this practice to an end 29 30 DisneyToon also produced several non canon entries that did receive theatrical releases such as A Goofy Movie and The Tigger Movie The latter brought the Sherman Brothers back to the studio for their first Disney feature film score since Bedknobs and Broomsticks in 1971 Don Bluth Edit See also Sullivan Bluth Studios Don Bluth s company had been driven to bankruptcy twice once as Don Bluth Productions after the disappointing box office take of The Secret of NIMH coincided with an animator s strike and again as the Bluth Group after the Video game crash of 1983 when Cinematronics in an attempt to cut its losses charged fees and royalties of over 3 million 8 45 million adjusted for inflation to Bluth s company while it was working on a sequel to the laserdisc based animated arcade videogame Dragon s Lair Bluth formed Sullivan Bluth Studios with backing from businessman Morris Sullivan while film director Steven Spielberg a long time animation fan who was interested in producing theatrical animation helped Bluth to produce 1986 s An American Tail The film was a hit grossing 47 483 002 127 million in today s dollars 31 During its production the studio relocated to Ireland taking advantage of government tax breaks for film production Bluth s 1988 follow up The Land Before Time was a slightly bigger hit grossing 48 092 846 119 million in today s dollars 32 and spawning 12 sequels and a TV series Neither Bluth nor Spielberg were involved with any of the Land Before Time sequels Spielberg produced the 1991 sequel An American Tail Fievel Goes West without Bluth To gain more creative control Bluth parted company with Spielberg on his next film the 1989 release All Dogs Go to Heaven While the film had the misfortune of opening the same day as Disney s The Little Mermaid it fared much better on home video 33 The early 1990s were difficult for the studio it released several box office failures In 1992 Rock a Doodle was panned by critics and ignored by audiences its dismal box office performance of 11 657 385 24 3 million in today s dollars 34 contributed to Sullivan Bluth s bankruptcy Bluth s next feature 1994 s Thumbelina fared a little better critically but even worse commercially while A Troll in Central Park also released in 1994 barely got a theatrical release grossing 71 368 against a budget of 23 000 000 or 140 909 against 45 4 million in current terms 35 Sullivan Bluth Studios closed in 1995 Bluth and Goldman returned to the United States a year earlier to discuss the creation of a feature animation division at 20th Century Fox the studio s three previous animated films FernGully The Last Rainforest Once Upon a Forest and the live action animation combo The Pagemaster had all failed Anastasia a musical remake of the 1956 film with Ingrid Bergman did far better than any Bluth film since All Dogs Go To Heaven 36 but the 2000 release of Titan A E a film far different from the ones Bluth had been making up until then was a flop Fox Animation Studios closed soon afterwards nearly all Fox feature animation was produced by its Blue Sky Studios unit until the Fox Animation Studios imprint was revived without Bluth or Goldman in 2009 Warner Bros Animation Edit After parting ways with Bluth Spielberg turned to television animation working with the Warner Bros Entertainment Co to bring back its animation department which it had abandoned in the 1960s A team of former Hanna Barbera employees led by Tom Ruegger formed a new studio Warner Bros Animation to produce Tiny Toon Adventures an animated series that paid homage to the Warner Bros cartoons of Termite Terrace The popularity of Tiny Toon Adventures among young TV viewers made the studio a contender once again in the field of animated cartoons Tiny Toon Adventures was followed by Steven Spielberg Presents Animaniacs and its spinoff Pinky and the Brain Not only did these cartoons bring in new viewers to Warner Bros but they also captured the attention of older viewers Warner Bros minus Spielberg continued with work such as Batman The Animated Series Batman quickly received wide acclaim for its animation and mature writing and it also inspired a feature film Combined these four Warner Bros series won a total of 17 Daytime Emmy Awards When Disney s feature animation surged in the 1990s Warner Bros tried to capitalize on their rival s success with animated feature films of their own without the assistance of Spielberg Their films Cats Don t Dance Quest for Camelot and The Iron Giant failed to come close to Disney s success although Cats Don t Dance and The Iron Giant both received critical praise and developed cult followings The 2001 live action animation hybrid Osmosis Jones starring Bill Murray was a costly commercial failure 37 although its home video performance proved successful enough for the studio s TV animation department to produce a short lived spin off series called Ozzy and Drix The perennially popular Looney Tunes characters made a comeback While the older shorts continued to enjoy countless reruns and compilation specials and a few compilation films new Looney Tunes short features were made in the 1990s Inspired by the success of Disney s Who Framed Roger Rabbit and a series of Nike and McDonald s commercials teaming the characters with basketball superstar Michael Jordan the studio produced the live action animation combo Space Jam in 1996 The film received mixed reviews but was a major commercial success 38 However another 2003 feature Looney Tunes Back in Action was a box office flop grossing about three quarter of its 80 million budget worldwide 127 million in current terms 39 but received more positive critical reviews Other modern Looney Tunes projects were in a different vein Unlike the original shorts Taz Mania 1991 1995 and Baby Looney Tunes 2001 2006 were aimed primarily at young children while Loonatics Unleashed 2005 2007 was a controversial revamping of the characters in the distant future The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries 1995 2000 and Duck Dodgers 2003 2005 were very well received shows and were relatively more faithful to the original shorts The Looney Tunes Show 2011 2014 was a modern more adult oriented sitcom and Wabbit A Looney Tunes Production 2015 2020 was a modernized series of Bugs Bunny shorts in the Looney Tunes tradition but both shows still got a slightly better reception from audiences than Baby Looney Tunes or Loonatics Unleashed Ralph Bakshi Edit Ralph Bakshi director of ground breaking animated films like Fritz the Cat and the original Lord of the Rings film returned to animation after taking a short break in the mid 1980s In 1985 he teamed up with young Canadian born and raised animator John Kricfalusi to make a hybrid live action animated music video for The Rolling Stones The Harlem Shuffle which was released in early 1986 The music video put together a production team at Bakshi Animation whose next project was the short lived TV series Mighty Mouse The New Adventures Bakshi and company worked on several other projects in the late 1980s but his biggest project 1992 s Cool World was a critically panned commercial disappointment 40 In 2005 Bakshi announced that he would begin working on another feature film Last Days of Coney Island which he is financing himself and producing independently Bakshi suspended production on the film in 2008 41 but resumed in 2013 after a successful Kickstarter campaign 42 Outsourcing animation Edit The major reason for the increase in the quantity of American animation was the ability to outsource the actual physical animation work to cheaper animation houses in countries in South and Southeast Asia Writing character design and storyboarding would be done in American offices Storyboards model sheets and color guides would then be mailed overseas This would sometimes cause troubles as none of the final product would be seen until the completed cels were mailed back to the United States While budget became much less of an issue overseas production houses would be chosen on a per episode or even per scene basis depending on the amount of money that was available at the moment This resulted in obviously different levels of quality from episode to episode This was particularly noticeable in shows like Gargoyles and Batman The Animated Series where at times characters would appear wildly off model requiring scenes to be redone to the dismay of their directors First run syndicated animation EditMain article Broadcast syndication First run syndication in the U S The 1970s and 1980s Animated series The older Bugs Bunny and Popeye cartoons made way for first run syndicated cartoons such as He Man and the Masters of the Universe Rambo The Force of Freedom ThunderCats Dennis the Menace My Little Pony The Transformers G I Joe Voltron and reruns of Scooby Doo Garfield and Friends and The Pink Panther among many others In 1987 The Walt Disney Company tried its luck at syndication DuckTales went on the air that September and lasted 100 episodes The success of DuckTales paved the way for a second series two years later Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers The following year the two shows aired together under the umbrella title The Disney Afternoon In 1991 Disney added another hour the block aired in syndication until 1999 These cartoons initially competed with the nationally broadcast ones In the 1980s national TV only aired Saturday mornings not competing with the weekday and Sunday blocks of syndication aired by local independent stations but however by the 1990s Fox and then WB started airing weekday afternoon blocks By the end of the 1990s both syndicated and national TV ended up losing most of its children s market to the rise of cable TV channels like Nickelodeon Disney Channel and Cartoon Network which provided appealing children s entertainment throughout the week at nearly all hours The fall of Saturday morning EditFrom Hanna Barbera to Cartoon Network Edit See also Hanna Barbera and Cartoon Network The late 1980s and 1990s saw huge changes in the Saturday morning landscape By now the once prosperous Hanna Barbera Productions was beleaguered by several factors First of all its dominance over the networks schedules was broken by other studios shows Second when The Smurfs was cancelled by NBC in 1990 Hanna Barbera had no other hits on the air Finally its ability to successfully exploit older characters like The Flintstones and Scooby Doo with new shows was coming to an end Scooby Doo would end a near continuous 22 year first run after its most recent juniorized version A Pup Named Scooby Doo ended its run in 1991 The 1990 theatrical release of Jetsons The Movie was a success for the fading studio and earned 20 million 44 8 million in today s dollars 43 In 1987 Great American Insurance Company owner Carl Lindner Jr became the majority shareholder of Hanna Barbera s parent company Taft Broadcasting renaming it Great American Communications Great American wanted out of the entertainment business and Hanna Barbera was sold to the Turner Broadcasting System in 1991 Ted Turner had expressed that he mainly wanted ownership of the studio s back catalog its launch of Cartoon Network on October 1 1992 provided a new audience for Hanna Barbera and Warner Brothers cartoons both old and new In 1989 producer Tom Ruegger had led an exodus of Hanna Barbera staffers to restart Warner Bros Animation At first the studio was constantly under threat of closure 44 However under Fred Seibert s guidance Hanna Barbera s new staff whose ranks included Seth MacFarlane Butch Hartman and Genndy Tartakovsky created a new generation of Hanna Barbera cartoons in the 1990s such as 2 Stupid Dogs Dexter s Laboratory Johnny Bravo Cow and Chicken I Am Weasel and The Powerpuff Girls Alongside these Hanna Barbera cartoons shows from other companies also premiered on the channel such as Space Ghost Coast to Coast Ed Edd n Eddy and Courage the Cowardly Dog These shows were designed to appeal to adults as well as children and thus incorporated plenty of adult humor such as pop culture references and veiled sexual innuendos Cartoon Network continued to make a string of award winning popular acclaimed iconic shows in the 2000s such as Samurai Jack The Grim Adventures of Billy amp Mandy Codename Kids Next Door Foster s Home for Imaginary Friends Camp Lazlo Ben 10 Chowder and many others In the 2010s Cartoon Network started to make groundbreaking iconic beloved cartoons that changed the industry such as Adventure Time Regular Show The Amazing World of Gumball Steven Universe We Bare Bears Craig of the Creek Infinity Train and many others such However their schedules in the later half of the 2010s were and still are dominated the popular Teen Titans Go causing many fan favorite shows such as OK K O Let s Be Heroes and Mao Mao Heroes of Pure Heart to be overshadowed during their prime run on the channel Time Warner acquired Turner in 1996 and thus inherited the rights to all of Hanna Barbera s creative properties This allowed Cartoon Network to begin airing all of the classic Looney Tunes shorts as well previously Turner had owned only the Looney Tunes shorts produced before August 1948 which had become part of the MGM UA library 45 Cartoon Network s success with original programming lead them to move the reruns of old Hanna Barbera and Looney Tunes cartoons to their spin off channel Boomerang In 1997 Fred Seibert left Hanna Barbera to found his studio 46 In 1998 Hanna Barbera moved to the same building as Warner Bros Animation the use of the Hanna Barbera name for new productions ended with William Hanna s death in 2001 Hanna and Barbera continued to work as Time Warner employees and consultants until their respective deaths in 2001 and 2006 the name is still used for productions based on properties created during the Hanna Barbera era Cartoon Network Studios now handles most original animation for the network Nickelodeon Edit In 1991 Nickelodeon introduced The Ren amp Stimpy Show Ren amp Stimpy was a wild and off beat series that violated all the restrictions of Saturday morning cartoons instead favoring the outrageous style of the shorts from the Golden Age period The series creator John Kricfalusi a Ralph Bakshi protege was largely influenced by the classic works of Bob Clampett Despite the show s popularity the show was beset with production delays and censorship battles with Nickelodeon which fired Kricfalusi in 1992 The show continued under the production of the network owned Games Animation company until 1996 though many animators departed with Kricfalusi TNN revived the show in a more risque form in 2003 with Kricfalusi receiving more creative freedom but it only lasted ten episodes Nickelodeon also gave birth to hit shows such as Doug Rugrats Rocko s Modern Life Hey Arnold The Wild Thornberrys SpongeBob SquarePants Avatar The Last Airbender and The Loud House Many of these shows spawned successful theatrical films as well most notably Rugrats which garnered 3 films SpongeBob SquarePants which has garnered 3 theatrical films and several TV movies and Avatar The Last Airbender which garnered both a sequel series and a live action film Other cable networks Edit The Disney Channel switched from pay cable to basic cable in the late 1990s previously having hit cartoons in the late 80s and early 90s such as Adventures of the Gummi Bears DuckTales 1987 Darkwing Duck and Recess of the Disney Afternoon cartoons and launched several successful animated shows in 2000s such as The Proud Family and Kim Possible Around the same time it launched Toon Disney a channel specifically intended for animation which has since been replaced by Disney XD before the cartoons went back to airing on Disney Channel or premiering instead on Disney s streaming platform Disney Disney s current most successful cartoon series are Phineas and Ferb Gravity Falls Star vs the Forces of Evil DuckTales 2017 which was their first reboot Big City Greens Amphibia The Owl House and The Ghost and Molly McGee On cable TV Cartoon Network Nickelodeon and Disney Channel all grew to a point where they were and are still competitive with the broadcast networks around the world Premium cable also experimented with original animated series such as Spawn Broadcast networks Edit As the 1990s began the Big Three networks ABC NBC and CBS were no longer a three way oligopoly The fledgling Fox network launched their Fox Kids programming block on weekdays and Saturdays in 1990 while The WB joined the competition with a kid s programming block shortly after the network s 1995 launch When NBC compared the success of the live action youth sitcom Saved by the Bell to the paucity of their animated hits they gave up on cartoons in 1992 instead concentrating on live action teenage shows with their Saturday morning TNBC block ABC was purchased by Disney in 1996 and Disney transformed ABC s Saturday schedule into a series of Disney produced animated cartoons collectively named One Saturday Morning CBS was simply never able to come up with any new hits once the shows that anchored its late 1980s early 1990s Saturday morning lineup Muppet Babies Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Garfield and Friends etc ran their respective courses When CBS was purchased by Viacom which also owned Nickelodeon Viacom simply repurposed much of the Nick Jr lineup in addition to adding a Saturday edition of the CBS morning news program The Early Show As a result of years of activism by Action for Children s Television and others against shows they believed blurred the line between entertainment and advertising the Children s Television Act was passed in 1990 It began to be strictly enforced in 1996 The Federal Communications Commission began requiring three hours a week of educational and informational program intended explicitly for children at times when children were awake Since this required three hours to be off limits to programs aimed at the general public the networks naturally chose to air them on Saturday morning when children were already watching As a result almost every Saturday morning network show is required to contain some educational content Fox and The WB worked around this problem by airing short one hour weekday children s blocks instead of morning news shows but those weekday blocks no longer exist with the notable exception of PBS which continues to have large weekday children s programming blocks as of 2010 Nonetheless there were still a few toy based children s programs in the 1990s particularly Power Rangers and Pokemon Cable networks were not subject to these or most other FCC requirements which allowed their series to have more leeway with content than network shows The impact of the new regulations was almost instantaneous by 1997 Nickelodeon had rocketed past its broadcast competitors to become the most watched network on Saturday mornings 47 Animation for adults EditMain article Adult animation The 1990s saw the beginnings of a new wave of animated cartoon series targeted primarily to adults and sometime teens after a lack of such a focus for over a decade The Simpsons and Fox Edit In 1987 The Simpsons an animated short cartoon segment of The Tracey Ullman Show debuted Matt Groening s creation gained its own half hour series in 1989 the first prime time animated series since The Flintstones Although 70 percent of the first episode s animation had to be redone pushing the series premiere back three months it became one of the first major hit series for the fledgling Fox network The Simpsons caused a sensation entering popular culture and gaining wide acclaim for its satirical handling of American culture families society as a whole and the human condition The show has won dozens of awards including 24 Emmy Awards 26 Annie Awards and a Peabody Award Time magazine s December 31 1999 issue named it the 20th century s best television series A film version grossed over half a billion dollars worldwide 48 On February 26 2009 Fox renewed The Simpsons for an additional two years which will secure its place as TV s longest running prime time series 49 Its 21st season began on September 27 2009 breaking the 20 season record it once shared with Gunsmoke 49 The success of The Simpsons led Fox to develop other animated series aimed at adults including Bob s Burgers King of the Hill created by Mike Judge Futurama also by Groening Family Guy American Dad and The Cleveland Show all created by Seth MacFarlane King of the Hill was an instant success running 13 seasons Both Futurama and Family Guy were cancelled by the network after strong DVD sales and ratings in re runs both returned to the air Family Guy on Fox and Futurama on Comedy Central 50 Spike and Mike Edit In 1989 a festival of animation shorts organized by Craig Spike Decker and Mike Gribble known as Spike amp Mike and originally based in San Diego began showcasing a collection of short subject animated films Known as the Classic Festival of Animation it played in theatrical and non theatrical venues across the country The collections were largely made up of Oscar nominated shorts student work from the California Institute of the Arts and experimental work funded by the National Film Board of Canada Early festivals included work by John Lasseter Nick Park Mike Judge and Craig McCracken Judge s piece Frog Baseball marked the first appearance of his dimwitted trademark characters Beavis and Butt head while McCracken s short The Whoopass Girls in A Sticky Situation featured the introduction of the trio of little girl superheroes that would later gain popularity under their new moniker The Powerpuff Girls The festival gradually turned into a program of films called Spike and Mike s Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation an underground movement for adult humor and subject matter Cartoon Network and Adult Swim Edit Main article Adult Swim In 1994 the U S cable television network Cartoon Network approved a new series entitled Space Ghost Coast to Coast In a particularly postmodern twist this show featured live action celebrity interviews mixed with animation from the original Space Ghost cartoon It was the beginning of the now common practice of using old Hanna Barbera cartoon characters for new edgier productions such as the surrealistic Sealab 2021 based on the short lived early 1970s environmentally themed cartoon Sealab 2020 Harvey Birdman Attorney at Law was about a lackluster superhero Birdman originally the star of Birdman and the Galaxy Trio who has become a lawyer His clientele as well as most of the other characters on the show are made up entirely of old Hanna Barbera characters Adult Swim a scheduling block of adult oriented cartoons appearing on Cartoon Network beginning after primetime premiered in 2001 Originally limited to Sunday nights as of 2018 Adult Swim now remains on the air every night until 6 00 a m Eastern time Animated series produced exclusively for Adult Swim include The Brak Show Aqua Teen Hunger Force Sealab 2021 Harvey Birdman Attorney at Law Squidbillies The Venture Bros Perfect Hair Forever Stroker and Hoop Tom Goes to the Mayor Robot Chicken Rick and Morty Metalocalypse and Smiling Friends In addition to american animation Adult Swim also runs popular anime series such as Cowboy Bebop Ghost in the Shell Eureka Seven the Fullmetal Alchemist series Bleach InuYasha and My Hero Academia Other cartoons for adults Edit Other TV networks also experimented with adult oriented animation MTV produced several successful animated series especially for its adolescent and young adult audience including Liquid Television The Brothers Grunt AEon Flux Beavis and Butt head and its spin off Daria The Maxx and Celebrity Deathmatch They would continue experimenting with animated series into the early 2000s with shows such as Clone High Spy Groove and 3 South Their original animated programming slowed to a halt by the end of the decade USA Network s Duckman starring the voice of Jason Alexander found a cult following Another successful adult oriented animated series was Trey Parker and Matt Stone s South Park which saw its beginnings in 1995 with the short cartoon The Spirit of Christmas Like The Simpsons Beavis and Butt head and South Park were given the big screen treatment as Beavis and Butt head Do America and South Park Bigger Longer and Uncut both of which met with box office success Cartoonist Bill Plympton transitioned from print to animation in the late 1980s and has continued to make adult oriented shorts Don Hertzfeldt began in animation in the 1990s and won an Academy Award in 2001 for Rejected Feature length films like Cool World and Bebe s Kids helped establish a market for adult animation films The rise of computer animation EditThe 1990s saw major growth in the use of computer generated imagery to enhance both animated sequences and live action special effects allowing elaborate computer animated sequences to dominate both This new form of animation soon dominated Hollywood special effects the films Terminator 2 Judgment Day and Jurassic Park included Oscar winning special effects sequences which made extensive use of CGI After decades of existing as related but separate industries the barrier between animation and special effects was shattered by the popularization of computerized special effects to the point where computer enhancement of Hollywood feature films became second nature and often went unnoticed The Academy Award winning Forrest Gump 1994 depended heavily on computerized special effects to create the illusion of Tom Hanks shaking hands with Presidents John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson and to make Gary Sinise convincingly appear to be a double amputee winning a special effects Oscar The film Titanic used computer effects in nearly every scene of its three hour running time one of the film s 11 Oscars was for special effects While Disney had made the film Tron which extensively mixed live action traditional animation and CGI in 1982 and introduced the CAPS system to enhance traditional animation in 1990 s The Rescuers Down Under a completely computer animated feature film had yet to be made In 1995 Disney partnered with Pixar to produce Toy Story the first feature film made entirely using CGI The film s success was so great that other studios looked into producing their own CGI films Computer animated films turned out to be wildly popular and animated films returned the highest gross margins around 52 of all film genres in the 2004 2013 timeframe 51 Computer animation also made inroads into television The Saturday morning animated series ReBoot won a large cult following among adults it was the first of several CGI generated animated series including Beast Wars War Planets and Roughnecks The quality of the computer animation improved considerably with each successive series Many live action TV series especially science fiction TV series such as Babylon 5 invested heavily in CGI production creating a heretofore unavailable level of special effects for a relatively low price Pixar Edit The most popular and successful competitor in the CGI race turned out to be Pixar It originated in 1979 when George Lucas Lucasfilm was able to recruit Edwin Catmull from the New York Institute of Technology to start the Graphics Group of its special effects division In late 1983 Catmull was able to bring in as a freelance independent contractor a Disney animator John Lasseter not long after Lasseter then unbeknownst to Catmull had been fired by the Walt Disney Company for his vigorous advocacy of computer animation Lasseter was hired as a full time employee about a year later Lucas experienced cash flow issues after his 1983 divorce and in 1986 Pixar was spun off from Lucasfilm as a separate corporation with 10 million in capital from Apple Computer co founder Steve Jobs At that time Pixar primarily developed computer animation hardware but Lasseter helped the company make a name for itself by creating acclaimed CGI short films such as The Adventures of Andre and Wally B 1984 After the spin off he would go on to produce Tin Toy 1988 which won an Oscar The company transitioned into TV commercial production and projects such as the Computer Animation Production System for Disney After the success of Tin Toy Pixar made a deal with Disney to produce feature films The first of these films 1995 s Toy Story was a smash hit which in turn led to additional successful films such as A Bug s Life and Toy Story 2 By then Jobs had become the owner of Pixar by keeping it alive with additional investments over the years he had often considered selling it but changed his mind after Toy Story Pixar s string of critical and box office successes continued with Monsters Inc Finding Nemo The Incredibles Cars Ratatouille WALL E Up and Toy Story 3 all receiving rave reviews earning huge profits winning awards and overshadowing Disney s in house offerings until Cars 2 in 2011 ended the streak when it proved a critical disappointment albeit still a commercial success Disney produced a CGI live action feature film of its own without Pixar Dinosaur but the film received a mixed reaction even though it was a financial success During the later years of Michael Eisner s management friction between Disney and Pixar grew to a point that Pixar considered finding another partner when they could not reach an agreement over profit sharing 52 When Eisner stepped down in 2005 his replacement Robert Iger arranged for Disney to buy Pixar in a 7 4 billion all stock deal 11 1 billion in today s dollars that turned Steve Jobs into Disney s largest individual shareholder 53 The deal was structured so that Disney Animation and Pixar Animation would continue to operate as completely separate studios under the Disney corporate umbrella Lasseter was placed in charge of greenlighting all new animated films for both studios in his new role as Chief Creative Officer DreamWorks Animation Edit When Jeffrey Katzenberg left Disney to become a co partner of Steven Spielberg and David Geffen in the new studio DreamWorks Pictures the studio naturally became interested in animation 11 Its first film Antz did not do as well as the Disney Pixar releases but was a critical success However DreamWorks succeeded in its partnership with the British stop motion animation studio Aardman Animations with Chicken Run in 2000 and later the Oscar winning Wallace and Gromit The Curse of the Were Rabbit in 2006 Furthermore DreamWorks finally had their own success in 2001 with the computer animated feature film Shrek a gigantic box office hit that overpowered Disney s summer release for that year Atlantis Shrek established DreamWorks as Disney s first major competitor in feature film animation DreamWorks commercial success continued with three Shrek sequels Shark Tale Madagascar Bee Movie Kung Fu Panda Monsters vs Aliens How to Train Your Dragon and The Croods DreamWorks Animation eventually became a separate company from its parent it is now owned by Universal Studios through its parent company NBCUniversal Comcast as of 2016 Walt Disney Animation Studios Edit In 2003 noting the growing success of studios that relied on computer animation Walt Disney Feature Animation announced it would be converted into a CGI studio citation needed Two years later Chicken Little the first computer animated film from the studio was released to moderate success in the box office and mixed critical reception On January 24 2006 Disney announced that it would be acquiring Pixar the deal successfully closed that May 54 and as part of the acquisition executives Edwin Catmull and John Lasseter assumed control of Walt Disney Feature Animation as President and Chief Creative Officer respectively 55 Lasseter later acknowledged that there had been discussions back in 2006 about closing Feature Animation as redundant since Disney now owned Pixar which he and Catmull flatly rejected Not on our watch We will never allow that to happen they resolved to try to save Walt Disney s creative legacy by bringing his animation studio back up to the creative level it had to be 56 57 To maintain the separateness of Disney and Pixar even though they share common ownership and senior management it was outlined that each studio is to remain solely responsible for its own projects and is not allowed to borrow personnel from or lend tasks out to the other 58 59 In 2007 the studio released Meet the Robinsons which experienced a poor response at the box office despite the lukewarm critical and audience reception The following film 2008 s Bolt had the best critical reception of any Disney animated feature since Lilo amp Stitch and became a moderate success An adaptation of the Brothers Grimm s Rapunzel tale entitled Tangled was released in 2010 earning 591 million in worldwide box office revenue and signified a return by the studio to fairytale based features common in the traditional animation era This trend was followed in 2013 s global blockbuster hit Frozen a film inspired by Hans Christian Andersen s The Snow Queen tale which released to widespread acclaim and was the first Disney animated film to earn over 1 billion in worldwide box office revenue 60 61 62 and is currently the highest grossing animated film of all time surpassing Pixar s Toy Story 3 Frozen also became the first film from Walt Disney Animation Studios to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature Film 63 They also had critical and commercial success with Oscar winner Big Hero 6 Zootopia and Moana alongside following in Pixar s footsteps their own animated shorts Feast and Paperman the latter shown before Wreck It Ralph Independents and others Edit Other studios attempted to get into the CGI game After ending its relationship with Don Bluth 20th Century Fox released a hugely successful CGI animated feature in early 2002 entitled Ice Age as the first full length feature film under Blue Sky Studios In 2001 Paramount offered Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius TWC offered Hoodwinked in 2005 and Columbia produced Open Season in 2006 Warner Brothers had a major success in 2006 with the Oscar winning feature film Happy Feet while Sony produced films under Sony Pictures Animation including Open Season in 2006 Surf s Up in 2007 and the successful film franchises Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and Hotel Transylvania which began in 2009 and 2012 respectively Universal Studios attempted several times to become a viable participant in the market finally achieving the goal in 2010 with Despicable Me the first feature film from Illumination which provided more hits for them within the following decade STX Entertainment offered UglyDolls in 2019 Despite all its success computer animation still relies on cartoon and stylized characters 2001 saw the first attempt to create a fully animated world using photorealistic human actors in Final Fantasy The Spirits Within which met with moderate critical success but did not do well at the box office In 2004 the live action film Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow was released It was notable for being filmed entirely in front of a bluescreen with the background being completely computer generated only the actors and some props were real Robert Zemeckis film The Polar Express starring Tom Hanks in five roles was completely CGI animation but used performance capture technology to animate the characters Zemeckis followed The Polar Express with two other motion capture films Beowulf and Disney s A Christmas Carol The use of CGI special effects in live action film increased to the point where George Lucas considered his 2002 film Star Wars Episode II Attack of the Clones to be primarily an animated film that used real life actors A growing number of family oriented films began to use entirely computer generated characters that interacted on the screen with live action counterparts such as Jar Jar Binks in Star Wars Episode I The Phantom Menace Gollum in The Lord of the Rings The Two Towers and the title character of Hulk While computer generated characters have become acceptable to moviegoers there have yet to be any fully animated films featuring virtual human actors or synthespians Rise of Internet and Flash animation EditSee also Flash animation The late 1990s saw the rise of Flash animation animated films created using the Adobe Flash animation software produced in the U S and elsewhere and distributed through the Internet 64 Some popular Flash animated cartoons include Joe Cartoons Weebl and Bob Happy Tree Friends Homestar Runner the Brackenwood Series Making Fiends and Salad Fingers The decline of traditional animation EditAt the start of the 2000s traditionally animated feature films were starting to fall from favor from audiences as a result of the increasing successes of computer animated CG movies In 2000 Fox Animation Studios closed down due to the box office failure of Titan A E which cost between 75 and 90 million but only earned 38 8 million worldwide As a result Fox cut ties with Don Bluth and Gary Goldman and moved animation services to Blue Sky Studios where they worked on their first feature Ice Age in 2002 Around 2001 the notable successes of computer animated films from Pixar and DreamWorks such as Monsters Inc and Shrek respectively against Disney s lesser returns for The Emperor s New Groove and Atlantis The Lost Empire led to a growing perception that hand drawn animation was becoming outdated and falling out of fashion In 2002 even with the box office success of Disney s Lilo amp Stitch the failure of their much hyped Treasure Planet seemed to ensure that there would be major cutbacks at Disney s animation studio In March of that year Disney laid off most of the employees at the Feature Animation studio in Burbank closed down the Disney Animation France studio in 2003 and then the Walt Disney Feature Animation Florida in 2004 after the release of Brother Bear in the latter year downsizing it to one unit and beginning plans to move into fully computer animated films In 2004 Disney released what it announced to be its last traditionally animated film Home on the Range The film received mixed reviews and was not successful at the box office After the failure of the film Disney officially abandoned traditional animation altogether and moved to work on computer animated films starting with Chicken Little in 2005 In 2003 DreamWorks Animation also stopped working on traditionally animated features after the domestic failure of Sinbad Legend of the Seven Seas and the studio moved on to only work on CGI features since then Yet the later release of The Princess and the Frog and The Secret of Kells in 2009 both nominated for an Academy Award marked a renewed interest in traditional animation In the same year Coraline and Wes Anderson s Fantastic Mr Fox also Academy Award nominated renewed interest in stop motion animation However in 2011 Disney s Winnie the Pooh while critically acclaimed was a failure in the box office and since then there have been no more traditionally animated films planned for Walt Disney Animation Studios except for experimental and short film purposes However in 2019 it has been confirmed by animation executive Jennifer Lee that the studio is open for future hand drawn animated projects Today traditionally animated feature films are rare in America but is still widespread all around the world especially in Japan In recent years there are some traditionally animated features released later in the 2010s with The SpongeBob Movie Sponge Out of Water although hybrid with live action and CGI in 2015 the first production by the newly founded Paramount Animation following the success of Rango in 2011 My Little Pony The Movie followed in 2017 and Teen Titans Go To the Movies followed in 2018 Coincidentally all are based on animated TV shows Animation accolades EditRecognition by the Oscars Edit Historically despite the continuation of the Best Animated Short Subject category animated feature films seldom received much recognition from the Academy Awards for anything other than musical scores The unprecedented nomination of Disney s Beauty and the Beast for Best Picture and five other awards changed things even though it only won two Oscars for its song score Animation had become so widely accepted by the beginning of the 21st century that in 2001 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences introduced a new Academy Award for Best Animated Feature The three contenders for first honoree in this award were all CGI feature films Shrek by DreamWorks Monsters Inc by Disney and Pixar and Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius by Nickelodeon and Paramount The award that year went to Shrek Films that year which were passed up included the acclaimed adult oriented film Waking Life and the photorealistic CGI film Final Fantasy The Spirits Within Hayao Miyazaki s critically acclaimed Spirited Away won the Oscar in 2002 Disney Pixar s Finding Nemo received the 2003 award defeating nominees The Triplets of Belleville and Brother Bear Since then Pixar has won the most awards in this category with the current exceptions being Wallace amp Gromit The Curse of the Were Rabbit in 2005 Happy Feet in 2006 Rango in 2011 Frozen in 2013 Big Hero 6 in 2014 Zootopia in 2016 Spider Man Into the Spider Verse in 2018 Encanto in 2021 and Guillermo del Toro s Pinocchio in 2022 In 2013 the March 7 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine published the ballots of eight different Oscar voters in the Academy 65 Of those eight four voters abstained in the Best Animated Feature category due to inadequate knowledge of the subject They admitted to not having seen all of the nominations one person stating that ended when I was 6 Such disregard for animated films by the voters themselves is often criticized by American animators who claim that Hollywood doesn t care or know the first thing about animated films 66 Annie Awards Edit See also Annie Award The Annie Awards are presented each February by the Hollywood branch of the International Animated Film Association for achievements in the fields of film and television animation in the United States Formed in 1972 to celebrate lifetime contributions to the various fields within animation the awards started to honor animation as a whole including current offerings Legacy EditSix animated features The Little Mermaid 1989 Beauty and the Beast 1991 The Lion King 1994 Toy Story 1995 Shrek 2001 and Wall E 2008 plus two animated shorts from Pixar Luxo Jr 1986 and Tin Toy 1988 were each inducted into the National Film Registry 67 Studio Ghibli s Spirited Away 2001 and four Pixar films 2003 s Finding Nemo 2007 s Ratatouille 2008 s Wall E and 2015 s Inside Out were included on BBC s 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century poll 68 See also Edit nbsp Animation portal nbsp United States portal nbsp 1980s portal nbsp 1990s portal nbsp 2000s portal nbsp 2010s portal nbsp 2020s portalHistory of animation History of computer animation Lists of animated feature films List of computer animated films List of American animated television series Animated cartoonReferences Edit Animation Is Eating the World Maltin Leonard 1987 1980 Of Mice and Magic New York Plume ISBN 978 0 45 225993 5 a b Pallant Chris 2011 Demystifying Disney A History of Disney Feature Animation New York Continuum Publishing p 89 ISBN 9781441150462 Disney Notes on the end of the Disney Renaissance decentfilms com Erickson Hal 2005 Television Cartoon Shows An Illustrated Encyclopedia 1949 Through 2003 2nd ed McFarland amp Co ISBN 978 1476665993 Trusdell Brian May 28 1995 Focus Warner s Toon Factory for the 1990s The Los Angeles Times El Segundo California Los Angeles Times Communications LLC ISSN 2165 1736 Carter Bill February 19 1992 COMPANY NEWS A New Life For Cartoons The New York Times Top 25 Animated Movies of All Time Movies Feature at IGN Movies ign com June 18 2011 Archived from the original on July 11 2018 Best Animated Films Toy Story Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on October 17 2011 10 Top 10 AFI Archived from the original on May 18 2010 a b Sito Tom March 16 2006 The Late Great 2D Animation Renaissance Part 2 Animation World Network Archived from the original on June 25 2020 Jones Angie 2007 Thinking animation bridging the gap between 2D and CG Boston MA Thomson Course Technology ISBN 978 1 59863 260 6 OCLC 228168598 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 Potts Mark July 8 1982 Tron Fails to Dazzle Wall Street Washington Post pp C1 Tron 1982 Box Office Mojo Retrieved June 22 2009 Ebert Roger January 1 1982 Tron Chicago Sun Times Retrieved July 9 2008 Tron 1982 Turner Classic Movies The Black Cauldron 1985 Box Office Mojo Retrieved June 22 2009 1986 Yearly Box Office Results Box Office Mojo Retrieved June 22 2009 Oliver amp Company 1988 Box Office Mojo 1990 Yearly Box Office Results Box Office Mojo The Rescuers 1977 Box Office Mojo All Time Domestic Box Office Results Box Office Mojo Retrieved September 15 2010 Fonda Daren Sean Gregory Julie Rawe Jeffrey Ressner Chris Taylor December 15 2003 Eisner s Wild Wild Ride Time Magazine Archived from the original on November 3 2012 Save Disney Archived from the original on January 31 2004 Walt Disney Animation Studios History Walt Disney Animation Studios Archived from the original on December 3 2008 Von Busack Richard May 24 2006 In Walt s Vaults Metroactive Cinderella II Dreams Come True Rotten Tomatoes Disney To Halt DVD Sequels The Internet Movie Database June 21 2007 Fritz Ben Dade Hayes April 8 2008 Disney unveils animation slate Variety An American Tail 1986 Box Office Mojo The Land Before Time 1988 Box Office Mojo Lenburg 2006 p 32 Rock a Doodle 1992 Box Office Mojo A Troll in Central Park 1994 Box Office Mojo Anastasia 1997 Box Office Mojo Osmosis Jones 2001 Box Office Mojo Space Jam 1996 Box Office Mojo Looney Tunes Back In Action 2003 Box Office Mojo Cool World 1992 Box Office Mojo Bakshi Ralph May 21 2008 Ralph Bakshi BSS 214 Audio The Bat Segundo Show MP3 Interviewed by Mister Maybelline Retrieved September 15 2010 Last Days of Coney Island Kickstarter Jetsons The Movie 1990 Box Office Mojo Strike Joe July 15 2003 The Fred Seibert Interview Part 1 Animation World Magazine p 3 Archived from the original on May 10 2009 Retrieved June 22 2009 Balio Tino April 8 2009 United Artists Volume 2 1951 1978 The Company That Changed the Film Industry Volume 2 Univ of Wisconsin Press p 106 ISBN 978 0299230135 Strike Joe August 4 2003 The Fred Seibert Interview Part 2 Animation World Magazine p 1 Archived from the original on September 11 2005 Retrieved June 22 2009 NICK RETAINS SATURDAY CROWN Broadcasting amp Cable June 18 2001 Archived from the original on November 6 2013 Retrieved October 30 2013 via HighBeam subscription required The Simpsons Movie 2007 Box Office Mojo Retrieved June 22 2009 a b Fox renews The Simpsons USA Today February 26 2009 Groening s Bargain to Yield Four Futurama Movies Reuters January 28 2007 Retrieved September 15 2010 McDuling John July 3 2014 Hollywood Is Giving Up on Comedy The Atlantic The Atlantic Monthly Group Retrieved July 20 2014 Pixar Dumps Disney Money money cnn com January 29 2004 Holson Laura M January 25 2006 Disney Agrees to Acquire Pixar in a 7 4 Billion Deal The New York Times Eller Claudia January 26 2006 Deal Ends Quarrel Over Pixar Sequels Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 21 2013 Disney buying Pixar for 7 4 billion NBC News AP January 1 2006 Retrieved February 28 2013 Barnes Brooks March 4 2014 At Disney a Celebration That Was a Long Time Coming New York Times Retrieved April 5 2014 Wloszczyna Susan October 31 2012 Wreck It Ralph is a Disney animation game changer USA Today Retrieved April 5 2014 Bell Chris April 5 2014 Pixar s Ed Catmull interview The Daily Telegraph Retrieved April 5 2014 Zahed Ramin April 2 2012 An Interview with Disney Pixar President Dr Ed Catmull Animation Magazine Retrieved April 5 2014 Barnes Brooks March 4 2014 At Disney a Celebration That Was a Long Time Coming The New York Times Retrieved March 5 2014 Zuckerman Esther November 4 2013 Is Frozen a New Bona Fide Disney Classic The Atlantic Wire Retrieved December 20 2013 Box Office Milestone Frozen Crosses 1 Billion Worldwide The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved March 2 2014 Richwine Lisa Disney s Frozen wins animated feature Oscar Reuters Retrieved March 3 2014 Waldron Rick November 20 2000 The Flash History Flash Magazine Archived from the original on August 2 2018 Retrieved April 1 2008 Feinberg Scott Oscar Voter Reveals Brutally Honest Ballot The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved January 22 2015 Amidi Amid Definitive Proof That Academy Voters Are Ignorant About Animation Cartoon Brew Cartoon Brew LLC Retrieved January 22 2015 Brief Descriptions and Expanded Essays Film Registry Library of Congress 100 Greatest Films of the 21st Century BBC Surveys Global Critics IndieWire Bibliography Edit Lenburg Jeff June 2006 Who s Who in Animated Cartoons An International Guide to Film and Television s Award Winning and Legendary Animators Applause Books ISBN 1 55783 671 X Solomon Charles 1989 Enchanted Drawings The History of Animation New York Random House Inc ISBN 978 0 394 54684 1 External links EditThe official site of the Annie Awards Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Modern animation in the United States amp oldid 1180407260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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