While in-house animators at Disney have been doing little more than assembly- lining prosaic sequels (
Cinderella 2) and reimagined misfires (
Treasure Planet), the ceaselessly, unflaggingly more clever and imaginative computer-'toon platoon at Pixar's Emeryville studios has supplied the Mouse House with its biggest hits of the last ten years -- and become a household name in the process. Through its wildly entertaining and visually astonishing movies, the CGI animation studio cofounded in 1986 by Apple's Steve Jobs has single-handedly changed the face of feature animation -- and by extension, Hollywood's ideas about cartoons -- while raising the bar for "children's" movies. The success of Pixar has influenced the decline of hand-drawn animation, influenced pop culture worldwide (
The Incredibles was dubbed into more than fifteen languages), and helped to fuel internal turmoil at Disney (including the departure of longtime chairman Michael Eisner), the most recognizable brand-name company in the entire world after Cola-Cola. Locally, Pixar has influenced zoning laws and become a symbol of Emeryville's makeover from industrial wasteland to home of cutting-edge new-media companies. To infinity and beyond, indeed.
Readers' Pick:
Pixar