Disney At the start of the 1980s,
The Walt Disney Company had been struggling since
Walt Disney died in 1966, and the 1979 departure of
Don Bluth and eleven other associates from the animation department dealt Disney a major blow. Bluth formed a new studio in direct competition with Disney. Disney's "
Nine Old Men", the animators responsible for Disney's most famous earlier works, and their associates began to hand their traditions to a new generation of Disney animators. New faces such as
Glen Keane,
Ron Clements,
John Musker,
Andreas Deja, and others came to the studio in the late 1970s and early 1980s, a period that produced such features as
The Rescuers, ''
Pete's Dragon (a live-action/animation hybrid), and The Fox and the Hound, as well as the featurettes The Small One'' (Bluth's only Disney-directed credit) and ''
Mickey's Christmas Carol'' (the first screen appearance of
Mickey Mouse since 1953). At the same time, animator
Steven Lisberger brought to the studio a concept about a computer programmer who is launched into a computerized world. The film would combine live-action sequences with computer animation, which had not yet been used to such an extent. The studio was impressed with the idea; the result was an ambitious $17 million film ($ in today's dollars) entitled
Tron. While Disney's stock dropped four percent after a screening for unenthusiastic investment analysts, became a cult favorite and turned out—many years later—to have a greater influence on animation (at Disney and elsewhere) than expected. In 1984, Disney became the target of a
corporate raid by
Saul Steinberg, who intended to break up the company piece by piece. At the same time,
Roy E. Disney, who had already resigned as President in 1977, relinquished his spot on the Board of Directors to use his clout to change the status quo and improve the company's declining fortune. Disney escaped Steinberg's attempt by paying him
greenmail, but in its aftermath, CEO
Ron W. Miller resigned, to be replaced by
Michael Eisner. Roy Disney, now back on the Board as its Vice-Chairman, convinced Eisner to let him supervise the animation department, whose future was in serious doubt after the disappointing box office performance of its big-budget PG-rated feature,
The Black Cauldron. The studio's next release,
The Great Mouse Detective, fared better in relation to its significantly smaller budget, but it was overshadowed by
Don Bluth's
An American Tail, another film featuring mice characters that competed directly with
Mouse Detective in theaters. In
1988, the studio collaborated with
Steven Spielberg and
Robert Zemeckis to make
Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a comedic detective caper that mixed live-action and animation while paying homage to the Golden Age of Cartoons. Disney characters appeared with characters from
Warner Bros.,
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer,
Universal Pictures and other rival studios for the first time in animation history. The film was a huge box-office success, winning four
Academy Awards, reviving interest in animation made for theatres, and popularizing the in-depth study of the history and techniques of animation. Several ageing legends in the business, such as
Chuck Jones and
Friz Freleng, suddenly found themselves the center of attention, receiving acclaim and accolades after decades of being virtually ignored by audiences and industry professionals alike. Additionally, the release of many older Disney features and short cartoons on home video, and the company's creation of new
Saturday-morning cartoons for
CBS and
NBC respectively (such as
The Wuzzles and
Adventures of the Gummi Bears, renewed interest in the studio. Disney followed up
Who Framed Roger Rabbit with
Oliver & Company in 1988 and
The Little Mermaid, an adaptation of the
Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale, in 1989 with songs by
Broadway composers
Alan Menken and
Howard Ashman.
The Little Mermaid was a huge critical and commercial success. It won two
Academy Awards for its song and score and became the first of a series of highly successful new Disney animated features. ($ in today's dollars), not even equalling the take of the original 1977 film. However, the films that followed,
Beauty and the Beast and
Aladdin, won rave reviews, received multiple Oscars and topped the box office charts.
Beauty and the Beast would eventually become the first animated feature to win the
Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy and to be nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Picture, followed by 2009's
Up and 2010's
Toy Story 3. In 1993, Disney released
The Nightmare Before Christmas, the first feature-length
stop-motion animated film. Disney's success peaked in
1994, when
The Lion King grossed $328,541,776 ($ in today's dollars) and became the highest-grossing movie of that year. As of 2024,
The Lion King ranks as the 22nd highest-grossing motion picture of all time in the United States and the highest-grossing hand-drawn movie of all time. Subsequent Disney films from 1995 to 2000, including
Pocahontas,
The Hunchback of Notre Dame,
Hercules,
Mulan,
Tarzan, and
Fantasia 2000 were box office and/or critical successes as well, albeit modestly so when compared to Disney's early-1990s releases. In 1994, the death of Disney President and Chief Operating Officer
Frank Wells, and the departure of studio chairman
Jeffrey Katzenberg to co-found
DreamWorks, left Michael Eisner in full control of the company. At the turn of the century, films such as
Dinosaur (Disney's first CG animated feature),
Atlantis: The Lost Empire,
Treasure Planet and
Home on the Range failed to meet the critical and commercial expectations set by the 1990s phenomena, despite exceptions such as ''
The Emperor's New Groove and Lilo & Stitch. At the same time, the high level of popular acclaim bestowed upon Toy Story'', the first
CGI animated film, sparked an industry trend. Based on the commercial success of
Pixar's animated movies and other CGI fare (especially DreamWorks'
Shrek, which contained numerous jabs at Katzenberg's former workplace and boss), Disney came to believe that CGI was what the public wanted, so it ceased producing traditional animation after
Home on the Range, and switched exclusively to CGI starting with 2005's
Chicken Little. Public rifts grew between the animation staff and management, as well as between Michael Eisner and Roy E. Disney. Roy resigned from the board of directors in 2003 with a scathing letter calling the company "rapacious and soulless", adding that he considered it "always looking for the quick buck." He then launched the internet site SaveDisney.com in an attempt to preserve the integrity of the company and to oust Eisner, who resigned in 2005 after public opinion turned against him.
Robert Iger succeeded Eisner; one of his first acts as CEO was to regain the rights to Walt Disney's first star
Oswald the Lucky Rabbit from
NBCUniversal (Iger did so by offering NBC the services of
Al Michaels, a play-by-play host then under contract to Disney subsidiary
ABC Sports, as a trade). After Disney acquired Pixar in 2006, Pixar executive producer
John Lasseter became Chief Creative Officer at both Pixar and Disney, with a plan to reintroduce two-dimensional animation, starting with
The Princess and the Frog in 2009, but was abruptly halted after
Winnie the Pooh was commercially unsuccessful in 2011.
Television animation After 30 years of resisting offers to produce television animation, Disney finally relented once Michael Eisner, who had a background in TV, took over. The first TV cartoons to carry the Disney name, CBS'
The Wuzzles and NBC's
Adventures of the Gummi Bears, both premiered in the fall of 1985. Breaking from standard practice in the medium, the productions enjoyed substantially larger production budgets than average, allowing for higher-quality writing and animation, in anticipation of recouping profitably in rerun syndication. While
The Wuzzles only lasted a season,
Adventures of the Gummi Bears was a sustained success with a six-season run. In 1987, the TV animation division adapted
Carl Barks'
Scrooge McDuck comic books for the small screen with the syndicated hit
DuckTales. Its success spawned a 1990 theatrical film entitled
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp and an increased investment in syndicated cartoons. The result of this investment was
The Disney Afternoon in 1990, a two-hour syndicated television programming block of such animated cartoon shows as:
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1988-1991), ''
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers (1989–1991), TaleSpin (1990–1991), Darkwing Duck (1991–1993, also airing on ABC), Goof Troop (1992–1994, also airing on ABC), Bonkers (1993–1994), Marsupilami (1993–1995), the critically acclaimed and still-popular Gargoyles (1994–1997), and Pepper Ann (1997–2000). TV animation also brought some animated feature film characters to Saturday morning, including The Little Mermaid (1992–1994), Aladdin (1994–1995), Timon & Pumbaa (1995–1999), Hercules (1998–1999) (the first three on CBS), and later The Legend of Tarzan (2001–2003) and House of Mouse'' (2001–2003). The perennially popular Disney's
Mickey Mouse made his comeback and a revival on television with the animated series
Mickey Mouse Works (1999-2000), an animated series paying homage to all the classic Mickey Mouse and Walt Disney cartoons.
Mickey Mouse Works was later followed by the Mickey Mouse/Disney character crossover series
House of Mouse (2001-2003), the educational series
Mickey Mouse Clubhouse (2006-2016, which aired on Playhouse Disney and then
Disney Junior), and
Mickey Mouse/The Wonderful World of Mickey Mouse (2013-2020, 2020-2023). Additionally, the studio produced animated series for
Disney Channel such as
Kim Possible (2002-2007),
The Proud Family (2001-2005),
American Dragon: Jake Long (2005-2007),
Phineas and Ferb (2007-2015; 2025-),
Gravity Falls (2012-2016),
Star vs. the Forces of Evil (2015-2019),
Amphibia (2019-2022),
The Owl House (2020-2023) and more recently,
Kiff (2023–present), the studio is now a parent company of Disney Branded Television (then Disney Channels Worldwide).
Direct-to-video sequels DisneyToon Studios was founded in Paris in the late 1980s to produce
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp, which is not considered by the studio to be part of the Disney animated "canon". The practice of making non-canon
direct-to-video sequels to canon films began in 1994 with
The Return of Jafar, a sequel to
Aladdin. This was a reversal of the long-standing studio policy against sequels to animated films (which did not apply to live-action films); Walt Disney has often been quoted on the subject as saying "you can't top pigs with pigs", a reference to how the
Three Little Pigs short managed to get more than three sequels. Because of strong video sales, the studio continued to make these films despite negative critical reaction; 2002's
Cinderella II: Dreams Come True received a rare 11% rating from the review-aggregating website Rotten Tomatoes. Under John Lasseter, the studio brought this practice to an end. DisneyToon also produced several non-canon entries that
did receive theatrical releases, such as
A Goofy Movie and
The Tigger Movie. The latter brought the
Sherman Brothers back to the studio for their first Disney feature film score since
Bedknobs and Broomsticks in 1971.
Don Bluth Don Bluth's company had been driven to bankruptcy twice: once, as
Don Bluth Productions, after the disappointing box office take of
The Secret of NIMH coincided with an animator's strike; and again, as the Bluth Group, after the
Video game crash of 1983—when
Cinematronics, in an attempt to cut its losses, charged fees and royalties of over $3 million ($ adjusted for inflation) to Bluth's company while it was working on a sequel to the laserdisc-based animated arcade videogame ''
Dragon's Lair''. Bluth formed
Sullivan Bluth Studios with backing from businessman
Morris Sullivan. Film director
Steven Spielberg—a long-time animation fan who was interested in producing theatrical animation helped Bluth to produce 1986's
An American Tail. The film was a hit, grossing $47,483,002 ($ in today's dollars). During its production, the studio relocated to Ireland, taking advantage of government tax breaks for film production. Bluth's 1988 follow-up
The Land Before Time was a slightly bigger hit, grossing $48,092,846 ($ in today's dollars) and spawning
12 sequels and a
TV series. Neither Bluth nor Spielberg was involved with any of the
Land Before Time sequels; Spielberg produced the 1991 sequel
An American Tail: Fievel Goes West without Bluth. To gain further creative control, Bluth parted ways with Spielberg on his next film, the 1989 release
All Dogs Go to Heaven. While the film had the misfortune of opening the same day as Disney's
The Little Mermaid, it fared much better on home video. The early 1990s proved difficult for the studio, as it released several box office failures. In 1992,
Rock-a-Doodle was panned by critics and ignored by audiences; its dismal box-office performance of $11,657,385 ($ in today's dollars) contributed to Sullivan Bluth's bankruptcy. Bluth's next feature, 1994's
Thumbelina fared a little better critically but even worse commercially, while
A Troll in Central Park, also released in 1994, barely got a theatrical release, grossing $71,368 against a budget of $23,000,000 (or $ against $ in current terms). Sullivan Bluth Studios closed in 1995. Bluth and Goldman returned to the United States a year earlier to discuss the creation of a feature-animation division at
20th Century Fox; the studio's three previous animated films (
FernGully: The Last Rainforest,
Once Upon a Forest, and the live-action/animation hybrid
The Pagemaster) had all failed.
Anastasia, a musical remake of the
1956 film with
Ingrid Bergman, did far better than any Bluth film since
All Dogs Go To Heaven, but the 2000 release of
Titan A.E., a film far different from the ones Bluth had been making, was a flop.
Fox Animation Studios closed soon afterwards; nearly all
Fox feature animation was produced by its
Blue Sky Studios unit until the Fox Animation Studios imprint was revived, without Bluth or Goldman, in 2009.
Warner Bros. Animation After parting ways with Bluth, Spielberg turned to television animation, working with the
Warner Bros. Entertainment Co. to bring back its animation department, which it had abandoned in the 1960s. A team of
Tom Ruegger-led animators departed from
Hanna-Barbera(which ironically would later be purchased by Warner Bros. when it purchased Turner Broadcasting in 1996) fled to
Warner Bros. Animation to produce a new series
Tiny Toon Adventures, an animated series that paid homage to the Warner Bros. cartoons of
Termite Terrace. The popularity of
Tiny Toon Adventures among young TV viewers made the studio a contender once again in the field of animated cartoons.
Tiny Toon Adventures was followed by
Steven Spielberg Presents Animaniacs and its spinoff
Pinky and the Brain. Not only did these cartoons bring in new viewers to Warner Bros., but they also captured the attention of older viewers. Warner Bros., minus Spielberg, continued with work such as
Batman: The Animated Series.
Batman quickly received wide acclaim for its animation and mature writing, and it also inspired
a feature film. Combined, these four Warner Bros. series won a total of 17
Daytime Emmy Awards. When Disney's feature animation surged in the 1990s, Warner Bros. attempted to capitalize on its rival's success with animated feature films of its own, without the assistance of Spielberg. Their films—''
Cats Don't Dance, Quest for Camelot and The Iron Giant''—failed to come close to Disney's success, although ''Cats Don't Dance
and The Iron Giant
both received critical praise and developed cult followings. The 2001 live-action/animation hybrid Osmosis Jones'', starring
Bill Murray, was a costly commercial failure, although its home video performance proved successful enough for the studio's TV animation department to produce a short-lived spin-off series called
Ozzy and Drix. The perennially popular
Looney Tunes characters made a comeback. The older shorts continued to enjoy constant reruns and compilation specials (and a few compilation films), and new
Looney Tunes short features were made in the 1990s. Inspired by the success of Disney's
Who Framed Roger Rabbit and a series of
Nike and
McDonald's commercials teaming the characters with basketball superstar
Michael Jordan, the studio produced the live-action/animation combo
Space Jam in 1996. The film received mixed reviews but was a major commercial success. However, another 2003 feature,
Looney Tunes: Back in Action, was a box-office flop, grossing about three-quarter of its $80 million budget worldwide ($ in current terms), but received more positive critical reviews. Other modern
Looney Tunes projects were in a different vein. Unlike the original shorts,
Taz-Mania (1991-1995) and
Baby Looney Tunes (2001-2006) were aimed primarily at young children, while
Loonatics Unleashed (2005-2007) was a controversial revamping of the characters in the distant future.
The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries (1995-2000) and
Duck Dodgers (2003-2005) were very well-received shows and were relatively more faithful to the original shorts.
The Looney Tunes Show (2011-2014) was a modern, more adult-oriented sitcom, and
Wabbit: A Looney Tunes Production (2015-2020) was a modernized series of Bugs Bunny shorts in the
Looney Tunes tradition. However, both shows still received a slightly better reception from audiences than
Baby Looney Tunes or
Loonatics Unleashed.
Ralph Bakshi Ralph Bakshi, director of ground-breaking animated films like
Fritz the Cat and the original
Lord of the Rings film, returned to animation after taking a short break in the mid-1980s. In 1985, he teamed up with young
Canadian animator
John Kricfalusi to make a hybrid live-action/animated music video for
The Rolling Stones' "
Harlem Shuffle", which was released in early 1986. The music video assembled a production team at Bakshi Animation whose next project was the short-lived TV series
Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures. Bakshi and company worked on several other projects in the late 1980s, but his biggest project, 1992's
Cool World, was a critically panned commercial disappointment. In 2005, Bakshi announced that he would begin working on another feature film,
Last Days of Coney Island, which he is financing himself and producing independently. Bakshi suspended production on the film in 2008, but resumed in 2013 after a successful
Kickstarter campaign. The film was released in 2015.
Outsourcing animation The major reason for the increase in the quantity of American animation was the ability to
outsource the actual physical animation work to cheaper animation houses in foreign countries. Writing, character design, and storyboarding would be done in American offices. Storyboards, model sheets, and color guides would then be mailed overseas. This would sometimes cause problems; the final product wouldn't be seen until the completed cels were mailed back to the United States. While budget became much less of an issue, overseas production houses would be chosen on a per-episode, or even per-scene, basis, depending on the amount of money available at that particular moment. This resulted in obviously different levels of quality from episode to episode. This was particularly noticeable in shows like
Gargoyles and
Batman: The Animated Series, where at times characters would appear wildly off-model, requiring scenes to be redone to the dismay of their directors. ==First-run syndicated animation==