DreamWorks Animation Announces 2009-2012 Releases

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DreamWorks Animation has announced plans to release five feature films every two years, up from their previous two films a year schedule. The company cites their “three very successful franchises” as one of the reasons to produce an extra film every other year. Apparently the plan is to release one or two sequels a year, as well as an original project, all of which will be produced in digital 3D. Check out the full schedule after the jump.

How To Train Your Dragon big

March 26th 2010: How To Train Your Dragon - “an adventure comedy set in the mythical world of burly Vikings and wild dragons, based on the book by Cressida Cowell.  The story centers around a Viking teenager, who lives on the island of Berk, where fighting dragons is a way of life.  Initiation is coming, and this is his one chance to prove his worthiness to his tribe and father.  But when he encounters, and ultimately befriends, an injured dragon, his world is turned upside down. ” Based on the book by Cressida Cowell. Directed by Chris Sanders, and featuring the voices of Jay Baruchel, Gerard Butler, America Ferrera, Jonah Hill, Craig Ferguson, Kristen Wiig, TJ Miller and Christopher Mintz-Plasse.

shrek

May 21st 2010: Shrek Forever After (retitled from Shrek Goes Fourth) — Directed by Mike Mitchell (Duce Bigelow, Surviving Christmas, Sky High). The original all-star cast is set to return, including Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz and Antonio Banderas.

November 5th 2010: Oobermind (formerly titled Master Mind) - Written by Alan J. Schoolcraft and Brent Simons, Oobermind is a satirical take on superhero movies (think The Incredibles). When super villain Oobermind (Robert Downey Jr) defeats his archrival Metro Man, the world should be his oyster. But instead, Oobermind falls into total despair. It turns out that life without a rival is life without a point for him. So he creates a new superhero rival. Unfortunately, the new hero wants to be a super villain too. Who can we turn to? Who has what it takes to stand up to this menace? Who will defend the innocent? Oobermind! That’s who.  Ben Stiller and Tina Fey are also provide voices. Dreamworks informs me that Stiller will be executive producing, but not providing a voice.

Kung Fu Panda

June 3rd 2011: Kung Fu Panda: The Kaboom of Doom (formerly titled Kung Fu Panda 2) — Longtime story exec Jennifer Yuh Nelson makes her feature directorial debut, in a story following continuing adventures of Po, the Kung Fu panda. The original all-star cast is set to return, including Jack Black, Angelina Jolie, Dustin Hoffman, Jackie Chan, Seth Rogen, Lucy Liu and David Cross. A new villain has emerged with a mysterious weapon so powerful it threatens the very existence of kung fu. It is up to Po and the Furious Five to protect all that they know. But first, Po must confront his long lost past.

The Guardians of Childhood

November 4th 2011: The Guardians — Based on an upcoming book series by William Joyce, whose work inspired Disney’s Meet The Robinsons. Described as “a contemporary fairytale based on existing fairytale characters,” The world’s five unlikeliest heroes - Jack Frost, North (aka Santa), Bunnymund (the Easter Bunny), Tooth (the Tooth Fairy), and Sandy (the Sandman) - must band together to stop an ancient spirit called Pitch (the Boogeyman) from plunging the world into eternal darkness. Of course, the characters have been “somewhat renamed and massively reimagined”.  The first book has a tentative release of Christmas 2010. Visual effects artist and animator Jeff Lynch makes his feature directorial debut.

Puss in Boots

March 30th 2012: Puss in BootsShrek the Third director Chris Smith directs this prequel spin-off to Shrek 2, telling the story of Puss in Boots (Antonio Banderas). Salma Hayek will voice the female love interest named Kitty. “Swords will cross and hearts will be broken in this adventure starring one of the most beloved characters of the Shrek universe - Puss In Boots. It’s a swashbuckling ride through Puss’s early years as he teams with mastermind Humpty Dumpty and the street-savvy Kitty to steal the famed Goose that lays the Golden Eggs.”

Madagascar

May 27th 2012: Madagascar 3 — Directed by Eric Darnell (Madagascar, Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa), the new story will follow the animals as they travel to Europe as part of a traveling circus. “Alex the Lion, Marty the Zebra, Gloria the Hippo, and Melman the Giraffe are still fighting to get home to their beloved Big Apple; King Julien, Maurice and the Penguins are along for the adventure. This time the road takes them through Europe where they find the perfect cover: a traveling circus, which they reinvent Madagascar style!” Tom McGrath previously said that the would like to see the characters return to their home, the Central Park Zoo, but it doesn’t look like that’s going to happen any time soon..

November 12th 2012: A Yet-to-be-chosen Original Feature from the following three options –

  • Chris Sanders and Kirk DeMicco’s caveman comedy The Croods (formerly titled Crood Awakenings) which was once set up with Aardman Animation. “An old school caveman must lead his family across a volatile prehistoric landscape in search of a new home. The outsized flora and fauna are challenge enough, but the real complication arises when the family is joined by an alarmingly modern caveman whose search for “tomorrow” is at odds with our hero’s reliance on the traditions of yesterday.”  Sanders has described the project as: “The idea of having all the modern conveniences and social structures that we’re familiar with gone and being left with just a pure form of people was really fun to imagine working with.”
  • Truckers — based on the first of the thee books in Terry Pratchett’s best-selling The Bromeliad Trilogy.  “A society of tiny beings lives in a department store, right underfoot and unseen by the humans that shop there. To them, the store is the entire universe. And when they discover that the store is slated for demolition, they must embark on an epic journey to find a new home … ultimately learning that their true home is literally out of this world!” They find an artifact known as “The Thing” which teaches them about their secret history and make plans to return home. Screenplay is being written by Slumdog scribe Simon Beaufoy. The film has been in development at the studio since at least 2001, originally with Shrek director Andrew Adamson attached to write and direct, but went on to helm Shrek 2 instead before moving on to the Chronicles of Narnia films.
  • Super Secret Ghost Project (tentative working title) — A story which asks what ghosts think about humans. I imagine this will be DreamWorks’ attempt at copying Pixar’s Monsters, Inc.

source: Variety

  • Zinc
    All of these sound lame.
  • I'd say 75%. I don't think you can judge some of this new stuff coming out, yet.

    It always makes me feel like not watching Dreamworks animation films because they focus more on the actors providing the voices than the actual animation. I just finished watching both Toy Story and Shark Tale and Toy Story still looks better even though it's 9 years older than the latter. Sad really...
  • I like The Guardians idea but to be fair it's an idea from an author and not Dreamworks itself.
  • Kailyn
    Fuck you Zinc, they do not sound lame! Kung fu panda is the BEST THANG EVER!!! P.S folks if you see me on KFP world my name will be MasterKai with numbers or not
  • Sounds like maybe we'll get something good including some sweet sequel action!!! Looking forward to Truckers!
  • Dan
    How To Train Your Dragon sounds like a porno. Kung Fu Panda was decent, but I'll stick with Pixar.
  • Hiccup sound like a very unimaginative name. And yes, I agree, it sounds like a porno.
  • Fir3Wolf
    Dreamworks has a lot of hits and misses with there animated movies. I like some of them but others aren't all that good and at times it just seems they are trying real hard to compete with Pixar which hasn't made a bad movie yet.
  • Dreamworks is usually miss although I did enjoy Kung Fu Panda, but it's most likely due to my very very low expectations going into it.
  • vva
    I'm surprised they didn't go for the obvious Shrek FOURever After.
  • I think they were trying to be subtle with the homonyms.

    But, if they do change it to the in your face "FOURever", I guess we'll have you to thank, huh?
  • dagreenman18
    The only one that piques my interest is Truckers cause it's based on Terry Prachett, and if they fuck that up chances are fanboys will burn down the studio.
  • Joe
    "The Kaboom of Doom"?

    Are you fucking shitting me???
  • That's the sound of Dreamworks raping their only good franchise.
  • you mean to say 'only non-mediocre franchise'. I was underwhelmed with kung fu panda. it was okay, but to me it was a dreamworks movie sans the pop-culture references. So I guess it was a step forward, just not a very large step.
  • I thought the same thing.
  • Bob Funn
    Right, because its so out of place on a animated movie about martial arts animals... (Facepalm)
  • The
    Hey, come on guys... Kung Fu Panda had a lot of heart and charm. Kaboom of doom definately sounds way to retarded though.
  • Kailyn
    Kaboom of Doom isn't a bad title, it's getting everyone thinking though "Why Kaboom of Doom"? It doesn't make sence, but there's obviously a reason, in my opinion, when Po did the Wuxi finger hold on Tai Lung he went "Kaboom"! AKA Skadoosh so..I guess the "Doom" would be him coming back? He did in the game though but died, but ya know, cats have 9 lives..
  • Ooberland sounds kind of interesting...but I still think that making 3 movies a year r may be more profitable for Dreamworks, but it reduces the time for them to make work with more quality...I hope it goes well for them, they sure go it right with Kung Fu Panda.
  • Bob Funn
    Such derision, It's tiring. Anything by Chris Sanders (Lilo & Stitch) will always be worth going to see. Dragon should be a lot of fun, and while Dreamworks has quite a few stinkers they are really hitting their stride, Panda compares with anything by Pixar and betters most of them (Much more entertaining then wall-e).
    What about Oobermind? Guardians? are those really so uninteresting to all of you? How are these any worse then "Bear and the Bow"?

    Peter nice jab at a story (Ghosts) you know nothing about. It'd be nice if you would start reporting on animation a little more fairly rather then making a little war out of it. Leave that to cartoon brew where they have a personal agenda going on.

    Heres a little tidbit for you, some of the people now working at pixar were working for dreamworks back when they were making some of those 'stinkers' and vice versa...
  • Kung fu panda is ok but saying it is better than Wall-E is insane as Wall-E is the best 3D animated film ever made in North America.
  • I was almost going to agree.

    But then you knocked Wall-E which is a no-no in my book.
  • Bob Funn
    Thats my preference and I know not a popular one (Except for within animation itself) but everything else is truth.
  • Peter
    Dreamworks gets it rough. They make light, if forgettable entertainment directly specifically towards children (with the exception of maybe Shrek). Whereas Pixar treats animation maturely and while marketed for children, they have a broader demographic in mind.
  • Bob Funn
    Enjoy "Cars 2"
  • Jim
    And DWA has Puss in Boots, Madagascar 3, Shrek 5 and Kung Fu Panda 3.
  • Bob Funn
    And Toy Story 3, Monsters Inc. 2 Buzz Lightyear etc... point being sequels are a part of the business for all studios.
  • Dreamworks = greed

    if you disagree, three movies a year? the quality is going to be super low.
  • Palmer
    While I'm not a big DreamWorks Animation fan I think they should actually scale back on the amount of movies. They should start doing what Pixar does and put in some time and effort into research. They traveled to South America for Up and they went to France and had some local cuisine for Ratatouille. Why couldn't they do something like that for say Madagascar? Observe the animals in the wild. Or go talk to a folklore or mythology expert for things like Shrek.
  • Bob Funn
    Why do you think they didn't?
  • I am most excited for the Kung Fu Panda sequel. I was hoping they'd keep the initial director and they title is too silly. The first movie is spectacular, I only hope the cinematography and writing stays solid with the sequel. Judging from the cool 2D animated intro in the first movie, it looks like there is plenty of potential in exploring the outside world and meeting new villains.
  • I struggle to think Puss in Boots won't be effing hilarious. That cat cracks me up.
  • Ben
    Too bad it's not possible in this world for both Dreamworks and Pixar to make good movies. Oh wait...what's that...you mean Dreamworks can be good too? Woah.

    Shrek and Kung Fu Panda were both entertaining movies. I'll judge the movies based on their content and not what studio they come from. What an outrageous measuring stick I know...
  • Jim
    Because it shows.

    The more the merrier, but also less time to develop things properly, it's like a checklist at DW. Katzenberg even said sometimes they surrender story to deadline.

    And it shows.
  • Bob Funn
    Except they did do those things. Just watch the extras on any DVD.

    Do you really believe other studios aren't on a deadline? Do you have a source for someone saying "sometimes they surrender story to deadline. "? No?
  • Jim
    Stop with that within animation itself BS. Yeah, KFP is superior, get it.

    Why else it gets a franchise and WALL-E gets none?
  • It gets a franchise because Dreamworks pimps anything remotely successful. That's why theres all these shows being done on Nickelodeon. Dumbshit.
  • Jim
    I'm looking forward to How to Train Your Dragon, The Guardians and The Croods.

    Sequels and spinoffs, not so much, but KFP2 sure will be huge. But the subtitle puts me off.
  • LuMendz
    Ooberman sounds ok, and The Croods, Truckers, and The Guardians seem interesting enough. But KFP: The Kaboom of Doom is just a terrible, terrible title. Same goes for Shrek Forever After.o.0
  • Jeff W.
    Ugh, those all sound dreadful. Does anyone really want to see any of those? Most are sequels to films that kind of sucked to begin with.
  • lookwhathappenedwhendisneytrie
    Five animated films a year? Even two-a-year proved to be too much for Disney once upon a time. That sound you hear is an animated goose-that-lays-a-golden-egg dying. Familiarity will breed contempt from audiences. MOREBETTERFASTERCHEAPER indeed.
  • MoBetter
    Too many films in too short a time leads to weak attendance and a crash, just like it did at disney a decade ago. The managment wants it all NOW. They'll get it--and audiences will go elsewhere.
  • Bob Funn
    3 a year is too much? I think there are a lot of families that would disagree.
  • definitely The Kaboom of Doom is tops on my list of movies to watch for :)
  • Kailyn
    Yeah MINE TOO! (I liked it)
  • Mel
    The overanalysis in the comments is ridiculous. These movies are NOT geared to you anyway, you are not their target audience. They're for children. And as a parent, I look forward to taking my kids to see some fun animation movies.
  • Wow, it's like rifling through the dumpster behind a Chinese Buffet!

    "Hey, get over here...this General's Chicken doesn't look completely bad!"
  • Vik
    Ewww, at this rate, DreamWorks is gonna become the FOX of animation. I wonder if there's a doppelganger Rothman...
  • ivanTc
    Kung fu Panda was way better than wall-e,
    Pixar "steals" ideas from Disney and other older movies (. story of walle sucks its a mere compilation of remakes of other older movies
    and Dreamworks has great concept artists
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