Showing posts with label animation movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animation movies. Show all posts

Seven Animated Movies More Sequel-Worthy Than Kung-Fu Panda

Kung-Fu Panda wasn't a bad movie. Not in the slightest. There were some great vocal performances, fun action, and cool animation, but, we'll admit, it wasn't the animated sequel news we've been waiting for. In our world where the next 10 chapters of Shrek have already called dibs on their release dates and Disney will have a half-assed, direct-to-DVD sequel for almost ANYTHING, it's been hard to really get excited about sequels to animated films lately. Even the in-progress Cars 2 (which we're sure will be well done) doesn't really get us excited in the way that good sequels should. You know the feeling - when a movie ends and your mind is in on fire with the potential of stories yet to come.

Meaning no offense to Jack Black or the fine folks at Dreamworks (who we're sure know enough motion-capture kung-fu experts to kick our asses all the way to animated China), here are seven animated classics that we think are much, much more sequel-worthy than Kung-Fu Panda or Cars.

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1. Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

To be honest, we can't believe this hasn't happened already. Tim Burton and Henry Selick's ode to Halloweentown has had longer legs than Jack Skellington, debuting with a respectable box-office take that has only ballooned over the 15 years since its original release, thanks to a rabid fan following, prodigious merchandising, and multiple re-releases - most notably, the 2006 Digital 3D release, which will be hitting IMAX theatres again this Halloween. As such, greenlighting a modest Nightmare sequel seems like guaranteed money in the bank for Disney. Have Jack take over Hanukah or something or gather the Mayor and Lock, Shock, and Barrel to defend Halloweentown against an attack from forces looking to make Halloween a little more PC and family-friendly. It'd be a visual treat, a merchandising boon for Hot Topic, and we'd get another stop-motion holiday classic. It's win-win for everyone.

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2. Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (1988)

Have you watched Roger Rabbit lately? The film is, in a word, gorgeous, and it stands as one of the coolest testaments to the power of film animation of the last twenty years. This is a movie made for cartoon-lovers and the very fact that it stars Mickey Mouse, Bugs Bunny, and about every other historic cartoon character in an unprecedented cross-company crossover is, frankly, amazing. Now, granted, corporate politics may have worsened considerably since 1988 to the point where having Bugs and Mickey crack-wise together might be an impossibility, but digital technology has advanced to the point where marrying classic 2D animation and live-action should be about a million times easier than it was back in '88. Perhaps that ease might make the idea of another Roger Rabbit movie more appealing to Robert Zemeckis - who has spent a lot of time working with animation lately - but we think a new Roger Rabbit flick would be the perfect vehicle to skewer Hollywood's recent obsession with CGI animation, showing Roger and his 2D pals fighting to live alongside their louder, cheaper, and more in-your-face 3D breathren.

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3. The Triplets of Belleville (2003)

We don't want a sequel to Triplets of Belleville because we think there were too many unanswered questions in Sylvain Chomet's original film. (We're not jonesing for an expose of the underground, fixed-bicycle-racing gambling racket.) We just want to return to that world one more time, that hand-made, quirky, wonderful animated world where Chomet so skillfully blended quiet character moments with expertly choreographed Tex Avery humor. Perhaps Champion and his bulging calves could go on a world bicycling tour, followed by Mme. Souza, Bruno, and the Triplets, bringing their skewed worldview, slapstick hilarity, and quintessential French-ness across the globe. The original film did such a fantastic job of jumbling time periods and geography in the city of Belleville that bringing that pastiche perspective to the whole world would be a riot. Might not appeal to the Shrek crowd, but there are a lot of moviegoers who'd love to return to the streets of Belleville.

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4. Chicken Run (2000)

Boy, Wallace & Gromit get all the attention, but, for our money, Chicken Run is the most underrated project that ever emerged from the geniuses at Aardman Animation. OK, it was both a critical and financial success at the time, but do you ever hear of anyone singing the praises of Chicken Run lately? It's like it's completely fallen off everyone's radar. It was a glorious comedy, part Great Escape parody, part female empowerment tale, and we'd much rather have our daughters wanting to grow up to be like Ginger the Chicken than the Bratz-esque Disney Princesses. Maybe no one ever thought that Chicken Run could get a sequel because it copied so much of its format from The Great Escape, which isn't really a sequel-friendly flick (if you ever see The Great Escape sequel that was made, you'll know what we're talking about). But Aardman's chickens would work in any of the great British film genres - perhaps a chicken version of Get Carter, The Good Long Friday, or The Italian Job (the original, not the Mark Wahlberg remake)? Keep Wallace & Gromit in their shorts, and give us more cinematic chicken adventures.

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5. South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut (1999)

We want this sequel to happen just so we can own the soundtrack album. Even though we loved The Simpsons Movie, it was nowhere near as biting, balls-out, and beautifully done as South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut, a rare example of a movie based on a TV show that actually expanded the program's scope and concept into something that was truly big-screen worthy. And while we wouldn't want a movie to prevent the creation of new South Park episodes, with episodes like last season's three-part "Imaginationland," you can tell that Trey Parker and Matt Stone are itching to indulge in big-canvas movie-house storytelling again. Hopefully, the MPAA will go on vacation for a few months or declare bankruptcy along with everyone else and give Parker and Stone the chance to bring South Park back to the multiplex with something even bigger, longer, and more uncut soon. The idea of IMAX Cartman is just too awesome to be ignored.

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6. The Incredibles (2004)

We're really excited to see another Toy Story movie and resigned that we're getting Cars 2 in 2011 (the original really wasn't Pixar's finest hour), but we honestly can't believe that there's no Incredibles sequel anywhere on the horizon. Now that every other movie in Hollywood has some kind of superhero angle, why would Pixar deny us a sequel to (get ready for it), hands down, the greatest superhero movie ever made? (Sorry Dark Knight.) We can respect director Brad Bird for not wanting to go forward without a killer concept, but we're dying to see The Incredibles back in action, bringing us the widescreen, budget-be-damned superhero action that live-action films simply cannot deliver. (Check out the Fantastic Four movies to see what we're talking about.) We'll take anything - the Incredibles vs. The Evil League of Evil, the Incredibles trapped in time, the Incredibles stuck in a mirror universe. Take ANY of the classic comic-book plots, add the most well-conceived, best-realized superhero family ever, and you've got instant cinematic gold.

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7. Akira (1988)

OK, this is a weird request, but stay with us. The original Akira is one of the coolest animated films of all time and it essentially introduced the concept of anime to a vast Western audience. A large portion of the MovieRetriever editorial staff spent their formative years wishing they could take a ride through Tokyo on Kaneda's motorcycle, only stopping to pop a few Red Bennies or get into a fight with a clown gang or two. There's not much we'd change about the original Akira - except that we'd love to have more of it. The manga series that Akira was based on is over 2,000 pages long and some of the more confusing storybeats in the film - admit it, they're there - are due to the fact that director Katsuhiro Otomo simply HAD to cut the material down to fit into a 2-hour film. Since this is the 20th anniversary of Akira's first release, we'd love it if Otomo returned to the world of Akira, creating a series of prequels/sequels to fit in the gaps of the Akira saga and perhaps one day edit the whole thing together to make a semi-linear 5 hour Akira EPIC that would make The Godfather Saga look like a Lifetime mini-series.

The Top 10 Animated Movies of All-Time

10. Beauty and the Beast
"Tale as old as time…" So begins the title song of Disney's greatest romance, an animated retelling of the classic tale. With a taut, engaging story, well-imagined characters, and some of the mist breathtaking art Disney has ever managed (and that's saying a lot), Beauty and the Beast stands as a shining example of 2D animation. Nominated as a Best Picture in 1991, it is the only animated film to ever earn such an honor. -CC

Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.




9. Aladdin
The follow-up to the wildly successful Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin whisked us away to an ancient realm filled with magic, genies and Peabo Bryson. Its tale of the magic lamp is one of the oldest and most well-known Disney has animated, but they put a fresh spin on it, making Aladdin one of the most lucrative animated films of all time. Much of the credit can go to Robin Williams' spirited performance as the genie, but the film also boasts some of the most breathtaking action sequences and memorable songs in genre history. -CC

Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.





8. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
The tagline for the 60th Anniversary stated, "The one that started it all," which is no understatement. With Snow White, old Walt created the modern animated film as we know it. Before this, cartoons were only created for shorts and usually featured unrealistic-looking creatures singing, dancing and being funny. Snow White gave us realistic, human-based animation and combined comedy and drama for a piece of timeless filmmaking that holds up every bit as well today as it did in 1937. Not only a great animated movie, but one of the greatest film achievements of any genre. -JO

Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.





7. The Incredibles
A pitch perfect action-adventure, The Incredibles has something for all ages to enjoy. Written and directed by Brad Bird (The Iron Giant), Incredibles combines elements from spy, superhero, family dramas and action flicks, deftly displaying suspense, action, family drama and a mid-life crisis. There's plenty of humor and references for a sci-fi or comic book fan to geek out about, while younger kids get a kick out of super-kids Dash and Violet taking on the bad guys. -BZ

Read the review on IGN FilmForce.
Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.





6. Spirited Away
A delightful fantasy adventure, from animation master Hayao Miyazaki, Spirited Away (Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi), the story of 10-year-old Sen and her adventures in a haunted town, became an international sensation. Miyazaki says he made the film "for people who used to be 10-years-old and the people who are going to be 10-years-old," and we think he succeeded. Spirited Away, with its intriguing story and eerily beautiful animation, is truly a film for all ages. -BL

Read the review on IGN FilmForce.
Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.



5. The Nightmare Before Christmas

Tim Burton didn't direct this stop-motion odyssey, but his fingerprints are all over it: Jack Skellington, former avatar of the best holiday of the year (Halloween, of course), turns his attention to something decidedly more mainstream - Christmas - with disastrous effects. Chris Sarandon, best known as The Princess Bride's Prince Humperdinck, lends Jack the proper air of ingratiating self-importance, but Danny Elfman's rousing lyrics truly give the characters - including the burlap-clad Oogie Boogie (Ken
Page) - a real voice. It's also the only family-oriented flick I can imagine that's perfect viewing for not one but two different holidays. -TG

Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.





4. Finding Nemo
Pixar's amazing run of success continued with Finding Nemo, which earned an astounding $340 million domestically. Voiced by Albert Brooks and Ellen Degeneres, it is the tale of a father fish who loses his son in the great ocean, and the journey he must make to bring him back. Told with a blend of sentimentality, madcap energy and wit, Nemo made storytelling look easy. -CC

Read the review on IGN FilmForce.
Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.





3. South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut
Vulgar, trash-talking kids from a podunk town in a feature film? It's a musical you say? Naysayers expected little more than crass humor from the South Park movie, but Trey Parker and Matt Stone provided proof of their twisted genius with a film that was at once a great take on the TV show as well as a legitimately great musical. On top of that, the comic duo pulled one over on the MPAA, who didn't "get" the joke of the title until it was too late. -JO

Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.




2. Iron Giant
When writer-director Brad Bird's The Iron Giant was released in 1999, fans of animation everywhere were thirsting for something fresh and rejuvenating for the genre. With no formulaic storytelling, no cheesed-out ending and not a single song-and-dance sequence, the disarmingly charming science fiction tale of young Hogarth Hughes and his 50-foot-tall, steel-eating friend from outer space was just what we had all been waiting for. -BL

Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.




1. Toy Story 2
One of the few sequels that manages to surpass an already great original film, Toy Story 2 showed that animated sequels could exist without being inferior, cash-grabbing versions of their predecessors. With a tight storyline, superb animation and great character development (impressive in itself for a film about toys), TS2 helped cement Pixar's reputation as a studio Walt Disney himself would have been proud of. -BZ


Read the review on IGN DVD.
Check out the Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes.