Were to start. I have always been a fan of animation, and like all US citizens I grew up watching Western Animation and reading US comics. As a child of the 70's I can say that animation has undergone amazing changes over the years, but there are a few key points that must be addressed. I think the key turning point in American Feature animation was when Don Bluth, John Pomeroy, and Gary Goldman left Disney because of TRON and started their own animation firm. This one act changed the face of Disney animation for the next decade, by pretty much giving Disney a major slap in the face and waking them up. If you don't know who Don Bluth is, you need to pull out all of the animated features you watched growing up. His first Feature film was
The Secret of N.I.M.H., and he and his crew pulled out all of the stops making it. They paid for it with the proceeds they got from a couple of video games they produced. You may have heard of them "
Dragons Lair" and "
Space Ace".
They also did a TV feature film entitled "Banjo the Woodpile Cat." Anyway, after Secret of N.I.M.H. came
An American Tail What was Disney doing?
The Black Cauldron and
The Great Mouse Detective. Hmm... No contest on which was the better set of shows. But now the competition begins in earnest!
Disney - 18 November 1988 - Oliver & Company
Bluth - 18 November 1988 - The Land Before Time
Disney - 17 November 1989 - The Little Mermaid
Bluth - 17 November 1989 - All Dogs Go to Heaven
Disney - 16 November 1990 - The Rescuers Down Under (First animated sequel)
Disney - 22 November 1991 - Beauty and the Beast
Bluth - 3 April 1992 - Rock-A-Doodle
Disney - 25 November 1992 - Aladdin
Bluth - 30 March 1994 - Thumbelina
Disney - 24 June 1994 - The Lion King
Bluth - 7 October 1994 - A Troll in Central Park
Bluth - 11 April 1995 - The Pebble and the Penguin
Disney - 23 June 1995 - Pocahontas
Disney - 21 June 1996 - The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Disney - 27 June 1997 - Hercules
Bluth - 21 November 1997 - Anastasia
Disney - 19 June 1998 - Mulan
Disney - 18 June 1999 - Tarzan
Disney - 31 December 1999 - Fantasia/2000
Bluth - 16 June 2000 - Titan A.E.Bluth hasn't released anything new since
Titan A.E. and
Disney has cut back on the speed of their releases They have also gone back to using CG in their animation, which was the original reason Bluth left them in the first place. Of course, Bluth himself started using CG in Anastasia. So who is going out to buy
Tangled today?
Another cult classic that was produced in Canada by
Nelvana is the post apocalyptic rock and roll musical
Rock & Rule. In my opinion it is better than
Heavy Metal, mainly because it has better story continuity. Both features are worth taking a look at.
Ralph Bakshi, is the other big name in Western Animation. He is best known for movies like,
Fritz the Cat, Wizards, Heavy Traffic, Fire & Ice, American Pop, Cool World, and the animated
Lord of the Rings. If Bakshi had a hand in it, you know it was for adult audiences, and looked like something out of a drug induced fantasy.
Other great animation studios that are no more.
Turner Feature Animation. They produced
The Pagemaster and
Cats Don't Dance. My wife still runs the CDD fansite. They got purchased by
WB and later produced
The Iron Giant, unfortunately, they also did
Quest for Camelot.
Dreamworks, has a few noteworthy films. Chief among them is
The Prince of Egypt, although
Antz, The Road to El Dorado, Chicken Run, Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, and of course,
Shrek, are also worth mentioning. They also produced
Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas which didn't do to well, but then it was going up against
Finding Nemo.
Speaking of
Nemo. I don't suppose I need to get into
Pixar. Needles to say, if
Pixar did it, it was a hit. Of course
Pixar's John Lasseter is also a major fan of
Studio Ghibli, so we know they have taste.
I am going to finish with a bit of comic info for you all. The comic strip
Dick Tracy just recently had a face-lift. Dick Locher just recently stopped drawing the strip after 32 years. The new team of Mike Curtis and Joe Staton have a inker/letterer I know very well, my wife Shelley. Take a look.
http://comics.com/dick_tracy/2011-03-29/