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List of animation studios owned by the Walt Disney Company

Production facilities owned by the company

List of animation studios owned by the Walt Disney Company

Production facilities owned by the company

FieldValue
nameThe Secret Lab
image3100thornton.jpg
image_captionThe Secret Lab's former location in Burbank, California
typeDivision
industryEntertainment
fateClosed
defunct2002
former_nameDream Quest Images (1979–1999)
foundation
founders{{Plainlist
location_citySanta Monica, CA
Burbank, California
location_countryUnited States
key_peopleAndrew Millstein (GM, VP)
productionVFX, Animation
ownerThe Walt Disney Company (1996–2002)
num_employees350 (2002)
parentWalt Disney Feature Animation (1996–2002)
divisionsDQ Films
homepage
Walt Disney Animation Studios logo
Walt Disney Animation Studios logo since 2007
The south side of the Roy E. Disney Animation Building, as seen from the public park that separates it from the Ventura Freeway.

The Walt Disney Company has owned and operated several animation studios since the company's founding on October 16, 1923, by Walt and Roy Disney as the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio; the current Walt Disney Animation Studios in Burbank, California is the company's flagship feature animation studio and claims heritage from this original studio. Adding to the growth of the company and its motion picture studio division the Walt Disney Studios, several other animation studios were added through acquisitions and through openings of satellite studios outside the United States. These expanded the company's animation output into television, direct-to-video, and digital releases, in addition to its primary feature animation releases.

Currently Walt Disney Animation Studios, Pixar, Lucasfilm Animation (through Lucasfilm) and 20th Century Studios's animation division are parts of the Walt Disney Studios unit. This article does not include other animation studios whose films were released by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (the company's distribution unit) and not acquired by the company, nor does it count the Laugh-O-Gram Studio (1921–23), Disney's first animation studio, which predated the founding of the Walt Disney Company. For example, certain Studio Ghibli films were distributed by Disney internationally but never owned by the company.

Full list

Current animation studios

StudioEstablishedParent unit
Animation: Theatrical feature films and short films in hand-drawn and CGI
Animation: Television series
Originally a part of the Disney animation group, Disney TV Animation was transferred into Disney Television and later to the Disney Channels
Animation: Computer generated animated theatrical feature films and short films
Acquired in 2006.
Animation: animated theatrical feature films
Acquired in 2019 in the 21st Century Fox acquisition.
Animation: animated TV series
Acquired in 2019 in the 21st Century Fox acquisition.

Divested or defunct animation studios

StudioEstablishedstatus
sold in 2000
Animation: Television series and Feature films
closed in 2009
Founded in France by Haim Saban and Jacqueline Tordjman in 1977 as Saban International Paris. Acquired alongside parent company Saban Entertainment in 2001 as part of the Fox Family Worldwide buyout. Eventually Split from parent company, leaving Fox Family Worldwide holding 49%, to become an independent studio in the same year with Disney purchasing Fox Family Worldwide and renamed to its current name in 2002. Closed in 2009.
Dormant
Formed in 1984 as Saban Entertainment by music and TV producers Haim Saban and Shuki Levy. Acquired as part of Fox Family Worldwide on October 24, 2001, and renamed to BVS Entertainment alongside other subsidiaries. One portion that worked on the English dub of Digimon was renamed to Sensation Animation and was closed when Disney lost the rights to dub the series. Currently dormant after Disney sold off the Power Rangers franchise and related shows back to Haim Saban and his company Saban Capital Group in 2010.
closed in 2021
Animation: animated CGI theatrical feature films
Acquired in 2019 in the 21st Century Fox acquisition. Closed in 2021 with its Intellectual Property absorbed into 20th Century Animation.
closed in 2000
Founded by Jim Jinkins and David Campbell and acquired by Disney in 1996.
closed in 1996
Live production unit of ABC that dabbled in TV and feature film animation.
discontinued animation
Founded in 1997 by stay-at-home mom and former teacher Julie Aigner-Clark, Acquired by Disney in 2000. Discontinued making videos in 2009. Now owned by Kids II, Inc.
merged in 1999
VFX & animated unit acquired in 1996 and merged into Secret Labs in 1999.
closed in 2006
Also known as: Circle 7 Animation
closed in 2011
Joint venture between Disney and ImageMovers, venture cancelled after two films.

Divested or defunct animation units

StudioEstablishedstatus
Closed in 1991
Established in 1986; worked on Who Framed Roger Rabbit and a few other Disney projects.
Closed in 2006
Also known as: DisneyToon Studios Australia
Closed in 2004
Also known as: Walt Disney Television International Japan
closed in 2004
Domestic division created to be an active attraction at Disney-MGM Studios and for additional output.
closed in 2018
Animation: theatrical, direct to video, short and television films and Wrap-around animation
Began as a sequel theatrical unit of Disney Television Animation and adding direct to video features before being transferred to Features Animation in 2003 and Disney Studios from 2006 to 2008
Closed in 2000
Established in 1996, mostly working on several Disney Video Premiere projects.
Closed in 2003
Former name: Brizzi Films, Disney Animation Paris
closed in 2001
Formed from the merger of Dream Quest Images and Disney Feature Animation's Computer Graphics division.
Closed in 2013
This was a wholly owned subsidiary of Pixar Animation Studios. It was located in Vancouver, British Columbia. The studio was tasked to produce short films based on Pixar's feature film characters.

Walt Disney Studios

Main article: the Walt Disney Studios (division)

Walt Disney Animation Studios

Main article: Walt Disney Animation Studios

Walt Disney Feature Animation Florida

Main article: Walt Disney Feature Animation Florida

Disneytoon Studios

Main article: Disneytoon Studios

Disneytoon Studios, formerly Disney Movietoons, was an American animation studio owned by the Walt Disney Company, responsible for producing direct-to-video and occasional theatrical films for Disney Animation Studios, a part of the Walt Disney Studios.

Disney Circle 7 Animation

Main article: Circle 7 Animation

Circle 7 Animation, or Disney Circle 7 Animation, was a short-lived division of Walt Disney Feature Animation specializing in CGI animation and was originally going to work on making sequels to the Disney-owned Pixar properties, leading rivals and animators to derisively nickname the division "Pixaren't". The company released no movies during its tenure.

Steve Jobs, Pixar CEO, announced in January 2004 that Pixar would not renew their agreement with Disney and would seek out other distributors for releases starting in 2006. In 2004, Disney Circle 7 Animation was formed as a CG animation studio to create sequels to the Disney-owned Pixar properties. which led to Disney closing Circle 7.

The Secret Lab

  • Hoyt Yeatman
  • Scott Squires
  • Rocco Gioffre
  • Fred Iguchi
  • Tom Hollister
  • Bob Hollister Burbank, California

The Secret Lab was an American special effects company that operated from 1979 to 2002, and was the result of a merger between Dream Quest Images and Walt Disney Feature Animation's Computer Graphics division.

Dream Quest was founded in a Santa Monica, California garage in 1979 Initially, they did piecemeal work on Escape from New York, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, and One From the Heart before moving to Culver City. DQ Films, the company's television commercial production division, remained in Santa Monica. In 1987, DQI model-making operations moved into a Simi Valley industrial park with most of the company following them later on.

The Walt Disney Company purchased the company in April 1996 and subsequently moved it to Burbank, California. Soon after 1997, Andrew Millstein was appointed general manager of the company.

In October 1999, Dream Quest Images merged with Walt Disney Feature Animation's computer graphics division to form The Secret Lab, with Millstein continuing as general manager and vice president. The DQI and WDFA units were moved into a new location at Disney's Northside facility on Thornton Avenue just east of the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport, Lockheed Corp.'s former Skunk Works Building 90 until it was renovated for WDFA's headquarters in 1995. DQI's physical production facilities remained in Simi Valley.

The Secret Lab produced one CG animated motion picture, Dinosaur, in 2000.

The Lab being passed over for Disney work (and general industry decline) led to the unit being closed in 2002. The Secret Lab's last work with Disney was for the Touchstone Pictures/Spyglass Entertainment film Reign of Fire and the Castle Rock Entertainment/Warner Bros. comedy Kangaroo Jack.

VFXography

  • Con Air
  • The Rock
  • Armageddon
  • Mighty Joe Young
  • Inspector Gadget
  • Bicentennial Man
  • Gone in 60 Seconds
  • Mission to Mars
  • 102 Dalmatians
  • Shanghai Noon
  • Tennessee
  • Dinosaur
  • Disney's The Kid
  • Unbreakable
  • Bubble Boy
  • The Princess Diaries
  • Golden Dreams
  • Snow Dogs
  • Big Trouble
  • Reign of Fire
  • Kangaroo Jack

Pixar

Main article: Pixar

Pixar () is an American computer animation film studio based in Emeryville, California. The studio is best known for its CGI-animated feature films created with PhotoRealistic RenderMan, its own implementation of the industry-standard RenderMan image-rendering application programming interface used to generate high-quality images. Pixar began in 1979 as the Graphics Group, part of the computer division of Lucasfilm before its spin-out as a corporation in 1986 with funding by Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs, who became its majority shareholder. Pixar and Disney had a seven feature agreement that allowed Disney to distribute the films with Disney owing the character rights. With the success of Toy Story 2 in 1999, then-Disney CEO Michael Eisner and Pixar CEO Steve Jobs began to disagree on how Pixar should be run and the terms of their continued relationship. Eisner claimed that Toy Story 2 would not count towards the "original" film count of the agreement. Jobs announced in January 2004 that Pixar would not renew their agreement with Disney and would seek out other distributors for releases starting in 2006. In 2004, Disney Circle 7 Animation was formed as a CG animation studio to create sequels to the Disney-owned Pixar properties. In late January 2006, new Disney CEO Bob Iger and Jobs agreed to have Disney purchase Pixar which led to Disney closing Circle 7.

Pixar Canada

Main article: Pixar Canada

Marvel Studios

Marvel Animation

With Disney's 2009 purchase of Marvel Entertainment, Disney acquired Marvel Animation, a component of Marvel Entertainment. which now has a studio in Glendale, California. The studio became a Marvel Studios subisdiary after Kevin Feige was named chief creative officer of Marvel Entertainment.

Marvel Studios Animation

In July 2021, Marvel Studios opened an in-house animation division named Marvel Studios Animation, though which they would develop mainly animated projects set within the Marvel Cinematic Universe, in addition to stand-alone projects. Brad Winderbaum as Head of Television, Streaming, and Animation, and Dana Vasquez-Eberhardt as VP of Animation.

Lucasfilm Animation

Lucasfilm Animation was added as an animation unit as part of the acquisition of Lucasfilm in 2012.

20th Century Animation

Main article: 20th Century Animation

Blue Sky Studios

Main article: Blue Sky Studios

Distribution deals

Main article: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures

In August 1996, Disney and Tokuma Shoten Publishing agreed that Disney would internationally distribute Tokuma's Studio Ghibli animated films. In 2002, Disney signed a four-picture deal with Vanguard Animation, although, only one film was released under that negotiation.

Walt Disney Television

Main article: Disney General Entertainment Content

Disney Television Animation

Main article: Disney Television Animation

Following the arrival of Michael Eisner,Walt Disney Pictures Television Animation Group was established on December 5, 1984. Following re-incorporation of The Walt Disney Company in 1986. The name of the TV animation unit was shortened to Walt Disney Television Animation. the following year in 1987. This name was used to 2011 when it was shortened to Disney Television Animation.

In January 2003, Disney initiated a reorganization of its theatrical and animation units to improve resource usage and continued focus on new characters and franchise development. TV Animation was transferred to Disney Channel Worldwide. Disney MovieToons/Disney Video Premieres unit was transferred from Disney Television Animation to Disney Feature Animation.

20th Television Animation

Main article: 20th Television Animation

Animation unit which was acquired as part of Acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney

DIC Entertainment L.P.

With Disney's acquisition of Capital Cities/ABC in 1995 came another animated unit, DIC Entertainment L.P., a Limited Partnership with CC/ABC and Andy Heyward. Eventually, DIC management arranged for the studio to become independent from Disney in 2001.

Greengrass Productions

Greengrass Productions is a unit of ABC at the time CC/ABC was acquired by Disney and produced some animation.

Disney purchased the Fox Family/Fox Kids Worldwide franchise on October 24, 2001, for the Fox Family Channel and also received ownership of several units and assets, including Saban Entertainment and Saban International. Afterwards, Saban International Paris split from Saban and became independent, with the Walt Disney Company taking in a 49% minority stake of the company and a name change to SIP Animation on October 1, 2002. Jetix Animation Concepts was a joint-venture between Walt Disney Television Animation and Jetix Europe N.V. for shows that broadcast for the Jetix channels.

  • Jetix Animation Concepts - joint-venture between Jetix Europe N.V. and Walt Disney Television Animation
  • BVS Entertainment
    • BVS International, N.V.
    • BVS International Services, Inc.
  • Sensation Animation – dubbing for the second half of Digimon Tamers and Digimon Frontier. Although, it was ceased and dissolved in 2003, Disney co-distributed the previously undubbed four Digimon movies in 2005 and the fifth TV season in 2007.
  • SIP Animation - 49% minority stake owned by Disney
  • Jetix Europe (formerly Fox Kids Europe N.V.) - 75.7% owned by Disney until 2008, full ownership afterwards. Currently dormant.

Overseas studios

Three overseas animation studios (Australia, Japan and Canada) were set up to produce the company's animated television series. As direct-to-video increased in importance, the overseas studios moved to making feature films.

Walt Disney Animation Australia

DisneyToon Studios Australia

Disney Animation Australia (DAA), also DisneyToon Studios Australia, was a Disney animation studio located in Sydney.

DAA was started in 1988 at the former Hanna-Barbera overseas studio in St Leonards, Sydney. Initially, Animation Australia worked on various television shows including Aladdin, Timon & Pumbaa, and Goof Troop. As staffing increased, the studio moved to Castlereagh Street.

Disney began producing direct-to-video sequels of its Feature Animation productions, the first of which was the Aladdin sequel The Return of Jafar. When Aladdin was selected as a possible candidate as an animated TV series (before the film's release), as with many animated series, the first three episodes were one multi-part story which Disney used as a potential 'family movie special' for the Friday night before the series' premiere. With work handed out to the Australia animation studio, the opening story was instead greenlit for a direct-to-video release. Thus with "Jafar" and its success, the direct-to-video unit, Disney Video Premieres, started. A second sequel, Aladdin and the King of Thieves, provided work to both the Sydney and Japanese animation units.

Australia was assigned additional film sequels: The Lion King II: Simba's Pride, An Extremely Goofy Movie and Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure. The company's first feature film was Return to Never Land in 2002 grossing over $100 million worldwide at the box office. In 2005, the studio produced three animated movies: Tarzan II, Lilo & Stitch 2 and Bambi II. Disney Animation Australia was closed in mid-2006 after finishing Brother Bear 2, The Fox and the Hound 2, Cinderella III, and The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning.

Projects

TitleRelease typeRelease dateFranchiseOther production company(ies)
The Return of JafarDirect-to-video20 May 1994AladdinDisney Video Premieres
Disney Animation Japan
A Goofy Movielast1=Beckfirst1=Jerrytitle=Animated Movie Guide 3url=https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/animated-movie-guide-3/access-date=August 5, 2016work=Cartoon Research.comdate=2013archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160807200219/http://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/animated-movie-guide-3/archive-date=August 7, 2016url-status=live}}April 7, 1995Goofy
Aladdin and the King of ThievesDirect-to-video13 August 1996AladdinDisney Video Premieres
Disney Animation Japan
Pocahontas II: Journey to a New WorldDirect-to-video25 August 1998Pocahontas
The Lion King II: Simba's PrideDirect-to-video27 October 1998The Lion KingDisney Video Premieres
Disney Animation Canada
An Extremely Goofy MovieDirect-to-video29 February 2000GoofyDisney Video Premieres
The Little Mermaid II: Return to the SeaDirect-to-videoThe Little MermaidDisney Video Premieres
Disney Video Premiere
Disney Animation Canada
Wang Film Productions
Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's AdventureDirect-to-video27 February 2001Lady and the TrampDisney Video Premieres
Return to Never LandTheatrical15 February 2002Peter Pan
The Jungle Book 2Theatrical14 February 2003The Jungle BookDisneyToon Studios
The Lion King 1½Direct-to-video10 February 2004The Lion King
Mickey, Donald, Goofy: The Three MusketeersDirect-to-video17 August 2004Mickey Mouse
Tarzan IIDirect-to-video14 June 2005Tarzan
Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a GlitchDirect-to-video30 August 2005Lilo & Stitch
Bambi IITheatrical/direct-to-video7 February 2006Bambi
Brother Bear 2Direct-to-video29 August 2006Brother Bear
The Fox and the Hound 2Direct-to-video11 December 2006The Fox and the Hound
Cinderella III: A Twist in TimeDirect-to-video6 February 2007Cinderella
The Little Mermaid: Ariel's BeginningDirect-to-video26 August 2008The Little Mermaid
The New Adventures of Winnie the PoohTV shows1988–1991Winnie the PoohDisney Television Animation
Darkwing Duck1991–1992DuckTales
Goof Troop1992–1993Goof
Bonkers1993–1994Raw Toonage
Aladdin1994–1995Aladdin
Timon & Pumbaa1995–1999Lion King
Quack Pack1996DuckTales
Jungle Cubs1996–1998Jungle Book

Disney Animation Canada

(Walt Disney Feature Animation)

Walt Disney Animation Canada, Inc. (WDAC) was a Canadian animation production company and subsidiary of Disney Television Animation.

Walt Disney Animation Canada was opened in January 1996 to tap Canada's animator pool and produce direct-to-video. Industry Canada rules were dispensed by the Canadian Government with a multi-year commitment from Disney for the company.

WDAC produced in 1997 Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas then worked with Australia and Japan subcontractors on Pocahontas II: Journey to a New World. With Canada's closure, work on Peter and Jane was moved to the Australia and Japan units.

Projects

TitleRelease typeRelease dateFranchiseOther production company(ies)
Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted ChristmasDirect-to-video11 November 1997Beauty and the Beastfor Disney Video Premieres
Pocahontas II: Journey to a New WorldDirect-to-video25 August 1998Pocahontas
The Lion King II: Simba's PrideDirect-to-video27 October 1998The Lion KingDisney Video Premieres
Walt Disney Animation Australia
The Little Mermaid II: Return to the SeaDirect-to-videoThe Little MermaidDisney Video Premiere
Walt Disney Animation Australia
Return to Never LandTheatrical15 February 2002Peter Pan

Disney Animation France

(Walt Disney Feature Animation)

Walt Disney Feature Animation, France S.A. (DAF), also credited as Walt Disney Feature Animation - Paris, France and originally named Brizzi Films, was an animation company based in Paris, France that operated from 1986 to 2007.

Brizzi Films was founded by Paul and Gaëtan Brizzi in 1986, in Paris, France. Brizzi worked on Babar in 1986 for Nelvana. In 1989, the Brizzi brothers sold the company to Disney Television Animation. The brothers continued on as general managers under the company's new name, Walt Disney Animation, France S.A. The first production they work on under Disney was DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp for Disney MovieToons. In 1990, WDA France worked on several TV shows and specials.

In 1994, the Brizzi brothers transferred to Walt Disney Feature Animation as sequence directors for The Hunchback of Notre Dame In January 1998, David Stainton was named senior vice president of creative affairs for Walt Disney Feature Animation, where he was charged with overseeing Disney Animation France.

Stainton moved to Walt Disney Television Animation in January 2000. In summer 2003, Disney Animation France was closed.

Projects

TitleRelease typeRelease dateFranchiseOther production company(ies)Walt Disney Feature Animation, France S.A.
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamplast1=Graserfirst1=Marctitle=Layoffs Hit 'Planes' Producer DisneyToon Studiosurl=https://variety.com/2014/biz/news/layoffs-hit-planes-producer-disneytoon-studios-1201280347/publisher=Varietyaccess-date=August 12, 2014date=August 11, 2014quote=Of the 60 employees on staff at the Glendale, Calif.-based division of Walt Disney Animation Studios, 16 are being affected by the layoffs and started to be told of the reductions last week, individuals close to the situation confirmed to Variety.archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140814232439/http://variety.com/2014/biz/news/layoffs-hit-planes-producer-disneytoon-studios-1201280347/archive-date=August 14, 2014url-status=live}}3 August 1990DuckTalesfor Disney MovieToons
TaleSpinTV episodes1990–91The Jungle Bookfor Walt Disney Television Animation
Winnie the Pooh and Christmas TooTV special14 December 1991Winnie the Pooh
Goof TroopTV episodes & specials1992Goofy
MarsupilamiSpecial1993
BonkersSpecial1993–94
A Goofy MovieTheatrical7 April 1995Goofy
Runaway BrainShort film11 August 1995Mickey MouseWalt Disney Feature Animation
The Hunchback of Notre DameFeature film21 June 1996The Hunchback of Notre Dame
HerculesFeature film (10 Minutes)27 June 1997Hercules
TarzanFeature Film18 June 1999Tarzanlast=Abbottfirst=Jimurl=https://www.orlandosentinel.com/1999/06/08/a-fresh-tarzan/title=A Fresh Tarzannewspaper=Orlando Sentineldate=June 8, 1999access-date=September 8, 2015archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151117032542/http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/1999-06-08/lifestyle/9906070397_1_animated-tarzan-keane-characterarchive-date=November 17, 2015url-status=live}}
Fantasia 2000Animated the Firebird Suite - 1919 Version Segment1 January 2000Fantasia
The Emperor's New GrooveFeature film15 December 2000The Emperor's New Groove
Atlantis: The Lost EmpireFeature film15 June 2001Atlantis
Lilo & StitchFeature film21 June 2002Lilo & Stitch
Treasure PlanetFeature film27 November 2002Treasure Planet
The Jungle Book 2Feature Film14 February 2003The Jungle BookWalt Disney Animation Australia
Brother BearFeature film1 November 2003Brother Bear

Disney Animation Japan

ウォルト・ディズニー・テレビジョン・インターナショナル ジャパン Woruto Dizunī Terebijon Intānashonaru Japan Walt Disney Japan

** Walt Disney Animation Japan** (WDAJ), officially Walt Disney Animation (Japan) Inc., and formerly known as Pacific Animation Corporation, also known as ** Walt Disney Television International Japan** (WDTVI-J), was an animation production subsidiary of Disney Television Animation, a component of the Walt Disney Company, which is in charge of Disney's television business in Japan. Pacific Animation Corporation was one of two animation firms that formed after the end of Topcraft in 1984, with the other being Studio Ghibli. Pacific Animation did three TV series and 1 television film for Rankin/Bass. In 1988, the Walt Disney Company purchased Pacific Animation Corporation, which was renamed as Walt Disney Animation Japan.

The Japanese studio was set up to provide the animation services for Disney's animated television series in 1989. As direct-to-video increased in importance, the overseas studios moved to making feature films.

DAJ worked on The Tigger Movie (2000). In 2003, the company produced Piglet's Big Movie for DisneyToon Studios and 101 Dalmatians II: Patch's London Adventure. In September 2003, Disney announced the closure of the studio, with Pooh's Heffalump Movie (2005) to be its final work.

DAJ was closed in June 2004 with 30 employees expected to be transferred to one of the two Disney's remaining animation units. With the closure of the Japanese studio, its remaining work for DisneyToon Studios was split between its US and Australia animation units. Employees not transferred decided to launch a new company, The Answer Studio.

Projects

TitleRelease typeRelease dateFranchiseOther production company(ies)Pacific AnimationDisney Animation Japan
Button NoseTV show episodes1985for Sanrio
The Life and Adventures of Santa ClausTV film1985for Rankin/Bass Productions
ThunderCatsTV show episodes1985
SilverHawks1986
The Comic Strip1987
Peppermint RoseTV special1992for Muller-Stratford Productions
Disney's Adventures of the Gummi BearsTV shows1989–1990Disney Television Animation
Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers1990
TaleSpin1990–1991The Jungle Book
Darkwing Duck1991–1992
The Little Mermaid1992The Little Mermaid
Goof Troop1992
Bonkers1993Raw Toonage
Aladdin1994–1995Aladdin
101 Dalmatians: The Series1997101 Dalmatians
Hercules1998Hercules
Buzz Lightyear of Star Command2000Toy Story
Aladdin and the King of ThievesDirect-to-videoAugust 13, 1996AladdinDisney Animation Australia
Disney Video Premieres
title=Pooh's Grand Adventure: The Search for Christopher Robin (1997) Production Creditsurl=https://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/175841/Pooh-s-Grand-Adventure-The-Search-for-Christopher-Robin/creditswebsite=New York Times Moviesaccess-date=September 8, 2015archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307234209/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/175841/Pooh-s-Grand-Adventure-The-Search-for-Christopher-Robin/creditsarchivedate=March 7, 2016url-status=dead }}Direct-to-videoAugust 5, 1997Winnie the PoohDisney Video Premieres
Pocahontas II: Journey to a New WorldDirect-to-videoAugust 25, 1998Pocahontas
title=The Tigger Movie (2000) Full Production Creditsurl=https://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/181913/The-Tigger-Movie/creditswebsite=New York Times Moviesaccess-date=September 8, 2015archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309222749/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/181913/The-Tigger-Movie/creditsarchive-date=March 9, 2016url-status=live}}TheatricalFebruary 11, 2000Winnie the PoohWalt Disney Television Animation
DisneyMovie Toons
Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure BeginsDirect-to-videoAugust 8, 2000Toy Story
Return to Never LandTheatricalFebruary 15, 2002Peter Pan
The Hunchback of Notre Dame IIDirect-to-videoMarch 19, 2002The Hunchback of Notre DameWalt Disney Television Animation
Disney Video Premiere
Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh YearDirect-to-video12 November 2002Winnie the Pooh
101 Dalmatians II: Patch's London AdventureDirect-to-videoJanuary 21, 2003101 Dalmatians
Piglet's Big MovieTheatricalDateMarch 21, 2003Winnie the PoohDisneyToon Studios
Pooh's Heffalump MovieFebruary 11, 2005

Disney Animation U.K.

Walt Disney Animation U.K., Limited (DAE), was an animation studio based in England, Great Britain, United Kingdom that operated from 1986 to 1991.

This short-lived unit was set up in Camden Town, London in 1986 for the animation production of The Great Mouse Detective produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and Who Framed Roger Rabbit, using a combination of animators from Burbank, Richard Williams' associates and animators from all over Europe (many of whom would later join the prestigious Feature Animation unit in Burbank when Roger Rabbit had finished production). In 1990, the first production they worked on under Disney was DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost Lamp for Disney MovieToons and Walt Disney Animation, France S.A. In summer 1991, Disney Animation U.K. Limited; the last thing that the British animation studios ever animated were two episodes of TaleSpin and one episode of The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh.

Projects

TitleRelease typeRelease dateFranchiseOther production company(ies)Episode
Who Framed Roger RabbitTheatricalWho Framed Roger Rabbit
DuckTales the Movie: Treasure of the Lost LampTheatricalDuckTales
The New Adventures of Winnie the PoohTV showWinnie the PoohDisney Television Animation"April Pooh"
TaleSpinTV showThe Jungle Book"Pizza Pie in the Sky" and "The Incredible Shrinking Molly"

Walt Disney Animation Studios Vancouver

(Walt Disney Studios) Walt Disney Animation Studios Vancouver is a division of Walt Disney Animation Studios. The division was open on August 4, 2021, and began operations in January 2022. Amir Nasrabadi, former finance lead at Disney Animation, is the head of the studio. The studio works on Disney Animation's future long-term series, specials, and movies, with its first work being Moana 2. By March 2025, Disney Animation announced they will no longer be producing long-term series, with an unspecified number of staff being laid off from the studio as a result of this decision.

Projects

Release dateTitleNotes
2023Once Upon a StudioCo-production with Walt Disney Animation Studios
2024IwájúCo-production with Walt Disney Animation Studios, Kugali Media, and Cinesite
Moana 2Co-produced with Walt Disney Animation Studios
2025Zootopia 2
TBAUntitled The Princess and the Frog special

ImageMovers Digital

In 2007, The Walt Disney Company and ImageMovers set up a joint venture animation facility, ImageMovers Digital, a Marin County-based film company, where Robert Zemeckis would produce and direct 3D animated films using performance capture technology.

Notes

References

References

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  3. Strike, Joe. (March 28, 2005). "Disney's Animation Cash Crop – Direct-to-Video Sequels". AnimationWorld.
  4. Eller, Claudia. (March 16, 2005). "Disney Plans Life After Pixar With Sequel Unit". Los Angeles Times.
  5. Daly, Steve. (June 16, 2006). "Woody: The Untold Story". Entertainment Weekly Magazine.
  6. (January 30, 2004). "Pixar dumps Disney". CNN Money.
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  8. Eller, Claudia. (March 21, 2006). "Disney Closes Unit Devoted to Pixar Sequels". [[Los Angeles Times]].
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  10. (April 1983). "A Dream in the Making". Cinefex LLC..
  11. Swartz, Kirsten Lee. (February 25, 1991). "SIMI VALLEY: Oscar to Honor Special Effects Firm". Los Angeles Times.
  12. (September 10, 2008). "Millstein to head Disney Animation". Variety.
  13. McNary, Dave. (October 28, 1999). "DISNEY, DQI TO FORM THE SECRET LAB". Daily News.
  14. Graser, Marc. (October 23, 2002). "Disney can't keep Secret". Variety.
  15. DiOrio, Carl. (September 25, 2000). "Inside Move: Disney kills 'Wildlife' pic". Variety.
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