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What Is The Longest Disney Animated Movie

Why do Disney's animated series only last 4 seasons?

The 100 episode milestone ( lowered to 88 episodes in recent years ) is the classic TV benchmark for syndication which usually happens after 4 seasons.‘In the U.S. television industry, 100 episodes is the traditional threshold for a television series to become viable for syndication. One hundred episodes are advantageous for stripped syndication because it allows for 20 weeks of weekday reruns (depending on the number of episodes produced once the program debuts in syndication) without repeating an episode, and such shows can be sold for higher per-episode pricing.’ - 100 Episodes (Wikipedia)

What was the last hand drawn animated Disney movie?

There are two ways of interpreting this question.What was the last 2D animation Disney createdWhat was the last 2D animation which was literally HAND DRAWN in a ‘traditional’ fashion. I.E. Cell AnimationThe answer to the first as many have said on this Winnie The Pooh (2011).If we are interpreting the question as number two I think the previous posters would be surprised to learn that we have been using computers to animate films since 1992. The CAPS system that Disney developed was used for every ‘hand-animated’ film from 1989 - 2004. So in the strictest sense these films were not hand-animated since CAPS was used for Ink and Paint and created some scenes entirely inside the computer.In the most traditional definition of the term the last completely ‘Hand Animated’ Disney movie is Oliver and Company (1988)Which used traditional ‘Cell’ animation for every frame AND has a pretty rockin’ single by Billy Joel!

How long does it take to make an animated movie?

Depends on the quality.If we’re talking high high quality like disney masterpiece, years, especially depending on what you want to include.The biggest things that burden an animation team is hair, water, and cloth: hair is what made Tangled cost more than all 3 of the lord of the ring movies. To do fur, an entirely new program was needed to accurately portray animal fur and such in Zootopia from what I recall.But if you’re going for like a short, 5 minute video… while not as long, still pretty long.Speaking from reference, I’m working on a 10 minutes episode with a team, and given we’re a small team, it’s taking us a year and a half about, maybe a little more, and we’re going through the entire pipeline ourselves, from scripting & storyboard, to rendering and post vfx. (Granted, we’re neophytes, but it takes time the point is).Additionally, rendering one frame could take well over hours (even days) depending on resolution and how much is going on in a screen in terms of fluids and hair that needs to be calculated, and think about what fps you want and how long you want the video to be.Tl;dr, the higher quality you want and the longer you want the video, the longer it tends to make an animated film/video. If you have peak industry standard programs, servers, and artists helping you, anywhere from 5 years to a 10 years is safe for a standard disney movie I’d say.Whether it’s 2D or 3D.

What is the longest Disney animated movie?

There's a competition at my school and I really need to know this. I feel like it would be Chicken Little or Lion King or something like that but I'm not sure.

Just need to know the longest one.

PLEASE HELP

What movie was the longest in the making of?

The Hollywood film Boyhood took 12 years to make.Director Richard Linklater wanted to capture the process of growing up in a way that was true to life, so he brought a group of actors together for a week every year for twelve years in order to chart Mason's (Ellar Coltrane) life from age 6 to 18.Was It Worth It? 100 percent. It might change the way we look at films altogether.10 Movies That Took Forever to Make The Bollywood film Pakeezah by Kamal Amrohi took 16 years to shoot. Meena Kumari, his wife and protagonist of the film, has visibly aged in the film. The Bollywood film Mughal-e-Azam (1960) took 8+ years to make because of financing and production delays.A2A

Why do Disney/Pixar take a long time to have a sequel to a movie?

Because the people at Pixar know what they're doing.

Not only does the animation process take an extensive amount of time (especially for Pixar, since its films are always stunningly and intricately animated), but they truly care about each film they produce.

They're not going to rush something just because the public is asking for it. Each of their films is a unique creation. Any movie that is made too quickly isn't as good as it could be. They take their time and think everything through.

Now I will make an exception for this list... the ONLY Pixar movie that doesn't measure up to the rest is Cars 2. Nearly everyone can agree on the fact that Cars 2 is not of the same grand caliber that every other Pixar film is and has been. And I think Pixar learned its lesson on that one, too. The public was expecting more from Cars 2 because Pixar has set an incredibly high standard for themselves, one that they must outdo if they produce a sequel for any of their films. And in the case of Toy Story, they did. Toy Story 2 and 3 both improved upon the first film without disconnecting themselves from it. They had the same charm as the original, but were still well-written, independent stories.

I have no doubt that Monsters University will be just as good as the first film. Pixar always comes through.

I'm even more excited about Finding Dory. And I know that the story will be strong. Why? Because Brad Bird himself said (in regards to the concept of an Incredibles sequel) that a sequel can't be made unless the story, characters, development, etc. is just as good (if not better) than the original. The reason we don't have an Incredibles 2 in the works right now is because Pixar apparently hasn't come up with a sequel idea that can top the original. And they won't put a sequel out if it's not going to measure up. That's good news.
This means, then, that Finding Dory is going to be just as strong as Finding Nemo.

"You can't rush art."

Does anyone know the name of an animated movie about a darkness monster?

I'm not sure when it was made, but all I can remember about it is there is a magical king with a staff I think, and this little boy goes into the king's dungeon and unleashes this evil black bubbly monster with some red in him, and it kidnaps the king and spreads and tries to take over the world. I think the boy's name is nemo, but that might be incorrect. I've looked through thousands of movies on movie lists and I can't find the name of that movie. If anyone knows, I'd really appreciate it =)

Who LOVES DISNEY?

My daughter likes Nick better but we do watch...
House of Mouse
Goof Troops
Winnie the Pooh (adventures)
Chip n Dale
Kim Possible...
I'm sure there are more....

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