Mega-Deal: Phil Lord and Chris Miller Sign Nine-Figure Pact With Sony Pictures TV
Sony is committing to the creative team of Phil Lord and Chris Miller in a big way.
Sony is committing to the creative team of Phil Lord and Chris Miller in a big way.
The writers of "The Meg" are writing a script for a project that has been in development off-and-on for the last 25 years.
A 5-year, 30-plus country tour is planned.
The show, titled "Monsters at Work," will also introduce new characters in a story that takes place six months after the original Pixar film.
Warner Bros. has been on a decade-long odyssey to make this film. It's finally happening.
The Berkeley-based studio founded by Robert Kondo and Dice Tsutsumi reveals big plans for 2019.
The project is set in a futuristic reality where robots rule and humans are believed to be extinct.
"Spider-Verse" won every award for which it was nominated.
The $20 million film is the first feature co-production between New Zealand and China.
Paul King is the second director to pull out of Disney's "Pinocchio" remake.
PAY ATTENTION TO THESE FILMS!
Hanazuki started out as a personal idea before becoming an international character brand.
Hollywood has long held the belief that two animated films can't do well in theaters at the same time. "Ralph Breaks the Internet" and "The Grinch" are proving them wrong.
Titmouse's Chris Prynoski is the 2018 festival honoree.
Working with a limited budget, Nigerian artist Shofela Coker created a lush series of "breathing paintings" for the hybrid documentary "Liyana."
One of the best comic-to-cg animation translations, but will it get a U.S. release?
An experimental Chilean horror fairy tale based on a real-life child-abusing Nazi cult leader barely begins to describe "La Casa Lobo."
The young Danish studio Sønc offers a peek at their new project, "Fjer," a darkly poetic urban fantasy about emancipation and discovering one's own sexuality.
The "Get Animated Invasion" pop-up exhibit offers nine interactive spaces designed around select musical elements of Warner Bros. cartoons.
It's been 20 years since Chris Landreth's groundbreaking short "Bingo" showed the world what Maya 1.0 could do.