The #ScoobDance Campaign On Tiktok Has Generated 3 Billion Views In A Week
The Tiktok era of animated film promotion has arrived.
From fully-animated features to vfx-driven live-action films, animation is an integral part of the theatrical marketplace today.
The Tiktok era of animated film promotion has arrived.
“The Spongebob Movie: Sponge on the Run” is currently due to hit theaters on August 7 — among the earliest scheduled releases in the calendar.
“Trolls World Tour” did well on video-on-demand. Universal wants to repeat the formula. Theaters are furious.
Paramount and Hasbro’s Entertainment One will produce the film, with a script from the writers of Marvel’s “Ant-Man and the Wasp.”
Warner Bros. gave up on a previous partnership with the toy company after their movies yielded diminishing returns.
Until theaters reopen, films that are launching on streaming or VOD services will still qualify for the Oscars.
A mythological feature that’s also about the coronavirus. A game in which you do sit-ups underneath a dog. A short film about mescaline. These projects are pretty wild.
Another animated feature is choosing video on demand over theatrical exhibition.
The director and production designer of Netflix’s latest animated feature talk about their creative approach and influences, from “Citizen Kane” to bats in toilets.
“Masameer” director Malik Nejer tells Cartoon Brew how he transitioned from online shorts to bigscreen feature.
The new changes leave Paramount’s “Sponge on the Run” as the only theatrical animation release of summer 2020.
Hint: it helps to have yodeling.
An all-star team of former Disney talents decided to bring hand-drawn animation back in 2012. Their film was never made. For the first time, the project’s sizzle reel is being shared…
The coronavirus has pushed other releases back — and may still do the same with these two.
Netflix is getting on board for a “Dragon’s Lair” revival.
Japan’s favorite gentleman thief returns in his first cg outing.
The days of exclusive theatrical windows will eventually come to an end. Coronavirus is simply speeding up the process.
With nearly all U.S. theaters shut down for the foreseeable future, companies like Disney are adapting in real-time.
Amidst a nationwide lockdown in France, production has halted on “Minions: The Rise of Gru.”
The number of theaters that have gone dark runs well into the thousands.