Archive for Wednesday, November 15, 2006
STORIES STILL RULE THE DAY
The marketplace – and the animation Oscar race – is drowning in knockoffs. The field has been flooded in recent years with talking insect flicks (“Antz,” “A Bug’s Life” and “The Ant Bully”), fish (“Finding Nemo” and “Shark Tale”), monkeys (“Curious George” and the planned 2008 release “Space Chimp”), penguins (“Happy Feet” and the upcoming “Surf’s Up”) and the latest chatty critter craze: rodents. (“Flushed Away” and “Ratatouille,” Pixar’s latest ‘toon, opening in the summer.)
Of the 16 films that qualify for Oscar consideration in that category this year, half are computer animated and star talking animals. The eight Oscar contenders that feature verbalizing beasts include 20th Century Fox’s “Ice Age: The Meltdown”; Disney’s “The Wild”; DreamWorks Animation’s “Flushed Away” and “Over the Hedge”; Paramount Pictures’ “Barnyard”; Sony Pictures’ “Open Season”; and Warner Bros. Pictures’ “The Ant Bully” and “Happy Feet.”
“Ant Bully” may be the poster child for the current problem. While “beautifully art-directed,” said Bill Kroyer, an animation branch executive board member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the movie’s overly familiar premise of a bully learning his lesson among the victimized hardly drove moviegoers into theaters. “Producers have to come up with something to get audiences interested in the story now,” he says. “The novelty of CG animation alone isn’t going to carry the field anymore.”
When the academy’s short film and feature animation branch’s 324 voting members (overseen by three governors, one of whom is Pixar’s John Lasseter) cast their ballots for five nominees, they are likely to snub animated features that stink of idle opportunism and instead vote for films that explore the boundaries of the medium.
Of no small significance to the branch is Lasseter’s recent shift in focus.
Not only did he sell his Bay Area studio to Disney and step in to guide a new creative era at Walt Disney Feature Animation, he also directed “Cars,” the highest-grossing animated feature this year. Animation pros cite the filmmaker’s deft ability to infuse metal objects with warmth while raising the bar in terms of digital visuals, seen particularly in the film’s diverse landscapes and vistas.
Which is to say it’s not impossible that “Cars” will make roadkill of rest of the herd.
- Unpaving paradise
- Convicted and incarcerated, yet he doesn't remember a thing
- Suspect in 1998 Baja massacre is arrested in East Los Angeles
- Remember 'go outside and play?'
- Does Juvenon work as an anti-aging supplement?
- Cows have magnetic sense, Google Earth images indicate
- China's gold medals came at a high price
- San Diego-bound Amtrak train runs out of fuel
- Dave Freeman, 47; ad executive co-wrote '100 Things to Do Before You Die'
- Foreclosed and for sale
- The gag's on Dodgers if they don't make playoffs
- Major studio film shoots in Los Angeles grind almost to a halt
- Hillary Clinton sends New York delegates a clear message on Barack Obama
- Edward Kennedy's speech thrills Democrats
- Parliament wants Russia to recognize independence of South Ossetia, Abkhazia
- Obama flubs the 'presidential' test
- The price of China's Olympic Games
- Suspect found hanged in apparent suicide in Hollywood jail
- West Los Angeles residents on alert over what they call a mini-crime wave
- Foreclosures ensnare low-income renters
