Too many 'toons? It's an animation frenzy



By DAVID GERMAIN
AP MOVIE WRITER
LOS ANGELES -- Prancing penguins. Rascally rodents. Sociable squirrels. Saber-toothed tigers. The Hollywood hills were alive with talking critters in 2006, possibly the biggest year ever for movie animation.
With the barrage of ads for flicks about cute, fuzzy wildlife and other cartoon creations, are audiences having trouble telling one from the other, and more importantly, are they getting overloaded by animation?
"There's definitely an overload, and I think everyone recognizes that," said George Miller, director of the latest animated adventure, the Warner Bros. penguin romp "Happy Feet," which opened Friday.
In the decade since Disney and Pixar's "Toy Story" revolutionized the industry with computer-generated images instead of hand-drawn cartoons, first DreamWorks with "Shrek" and then other major studios leaped into the animation business.
As with the initial novelty of talking pictures nearly 80 years ago, computer animation's early appeal resulted partly from its fresh look. Now, CGI films have become the standard, so commonplace that the story -- not the style -- is more crucial than ever in a movie's success or failure.
They'll have to be good
"What's happened is, no longer will people go see CG animation simply because it's CG-animated as they did when they first saw 'Toy Story.' Everything will have to work on its own merits," Miller said. "Sure, when 'The Jazz Singer' came out, people turned up to see sound pictures. In a handful of years, people no longer turned up to hear movies. They just turned up to see a movie they thought was good. The same thing is happening with animation."
Ten years ago, Hollywood released as few as three or four animated movies a year, with Disney the only steady player. This year, 16 films are expected to be eligible for the Academy Award for feature-length animation, only the second time in the six-year history of the animated Oscar that there were enough movies for a full field of five nominees, rather than the usual three.
"Happy Feet," the story of a penguin ostracized because he can't sing like his brethren but who can dance up a storm, features a voice cast led by Elijah Wood, Nicole Kidman, Hugh Jackman and Robin Williams. If the movie meets industry expectations and becomes a holiday hit, it should lift overall domestic revenues for this year's animated films well above 1.2 billion, according to box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.
That would beat Hollywood's previous best of 1.18 billion for 2004's animated movies, which included the blockbusters "Shrek 2" and "The Incredibles."
But no animated film in 2006 came close to the 300 million and 400 million returns of the all-time leaders, "Shrek 2," "Finding Nemo" and "The Lion King."
That's because none lived up to the quality of those beloved films, and with a new cartoon feature rolling in every few weeks, it becomes easier and easier for audiences to shrug off yet another so-so animated comedy.
"I don't know if it was the best year, but I think it was the biggest year for animation, with a lot of good work, but a lot of work that maybe fell short of expectations," said Carlos Saldanha, director of 20th Century Fox's hit sequel "Ice Age: The Meltdown."
Leading the lineup
Disney-Pixar's "Cars," from "Toy Story" director John Lasseter, leads the 2006 lineup with 244 million domestically, followed by "Ice Age: The Meltdown" with 195 million and DreamWorks' "Over the Hedge" with 155 million.
Movies such as "Monster House" and "Open Season," both from Sony, Paramount's "Barnyard: The Original Party Animals," Universal's "Curious George" and the Weinstein Co.'s "Hoodwinked" all did respectable though unremarkable business in 2006. DreamWorks' latest, the rodent tale "Flushed Away," also is off to a good but unexceptional start.
"There's been a wonderful selection of films and it's encouraging to see so many people getting into animation," said "Flushed Away" co-director David Bowers. "Not all the films made as much money as people hoped. I think in a couple of years we'll maybe see fewer animated films. Studios being more cautious."
The year's notable bomb was "The Ant Bully" from Warner Bros., which left audiences yawning despite a clever premise, a voice cast led by Nicolas Cage, Julia Roberts and Meryl Streep, and the luster of "Toy Story" voice star Tom Hanks among its producers.
"A lot of it just comes down to the content. Story and character," said Antran Manoogian, president of ASIFA-Hollywood, a branch of the International Animated Film Association that presents the annual Annie Awards for animation. "You can have all the flashy bells and whistles, but if nobody cares about the content, it's hard to get people to buy into it."
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