Editor's Notebook
There were also some grey areas this summer as well...Rumors say
Dinosaur's box office draw wasn't as big as expected, and
Pokemon's popularity appears to be fading fast...this, I
am sure some will argue is a good thing! While adults may be puzzled
at Pokemon's hold over children one thing is sure: subconsciously
it is expanding their horizons about the styles of animation they
will accept on the big screen and that can only be good. Fantasia/2000
opened the IMAX arena to animation in a stunning debut that has
already seen the signing of DreamWorks' much-anticipated Shrek
for similar treatment. That's one I will be in line to see on the
first day! While this is a positive, Fantasia/2000's performance
on regular theatrical screens was quite lackluster. It seems that
the large screen format is indeed carving a unique niche for itself
and will become a bigger player in time. With unemployment in Los Angeles running high, it can at times
feel like the sky is falling in, but over all I'd say this summer
was more positive than negative. It was the mixed bag of an evolving
industry. We still have barriers to overcome. As Amid Amidi points
out in his article, "Indie Animated
Features: Are They Possible?" distribution remains a huge
problem for feature films not being produced by the majors, and
we still face people believing that this summer shows an animation
saturation of the market. (A favorite pet peeve of mine, I wonder,
why they never say this of live-action?) Is the public telling us
that there are too many animated features saturating the market?
No, we are just learning that because animation is no longer a special
event with only one or two releases a year, we must now play with
the big live-action boys on their own terms. (Television primetime
animation is also learning this tough lesson.) When the studios
set up their animation entities they asked for this, and now, to
properly compete and succeed, animation films, and their backing
studios, are going to have to make sure they have all their ducks
in a row from story, through marketing and distribution.
We have to inspire the average movie-goer to plunk down their money
on a movie going experience that happens to be animated vs., the
latest live-action fare and that my friends, is proving to be a
heck of a challenge. Until Next Time,
Heather























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