List of Pixar films
This is a list of films from Pixar Animation Studios, an American CGI film production company based in Emeryville, California, United States. As of 2018, Pixar has released 20 feature films, which were all released by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures through the Walt Disney Pictures banner. The company produced its first feature-length film, Toy Story, in 1995. Their second production, A Bug's Life, was released in 1998, followed by their first sequel, Toy Story 2, in 1999. Pixar had two releases in a single year twice: Inside Out and The Good Dinosaur in 2015 and Cars 3 and Coco in 2017.
Their upcoming slate of films include Toy Story 4 (2019),[1][2][3] Onward (2020),[4] an untitled film set to be released in 2020,[2] another untitled film set to be released in 2021,[5] and two more untitled films set to be released in 2022.[6]
Films
Released
# | Film | Release date | Director(s) | Co-director(s) | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Executive producer(s) | Editor(s) | Composer(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Screenplay | Story | |||||||||
1 | Toy Story | November 22, 1995 | John Lasseter | Joel Cohen, Alec Sokolow, Andrew Stanton & Joss Whedon | Pete Docter, Lasseter, Joe Ranft & Stanton | Bonnie Arnold & Ralph Guggenheim | Edwin Catmull & Steve Jobs | Robert Gordon & Lee Unkrich | Randy Newman | |
2 | A Bug's Life | November 25, 1998 | Andrew Stanton | Donald McEnery, Bob Shaw & Stanton | Lasseter, Joe Ranft & Stanton | Darla K. Anderson & Kevin Reher | Lee Unkrich | |||
3 | Toy Story 2 | November 24, 1999 | Ash Brannon & Lee Unkrich | Doug Chamberlin, Rita Hsiao, Andrew Stanton & Chris Webb | Brannon, Pete Docter, Lasseter & Stanton | Karen Robert Jackson & Helene Plotkin | Sarah McArthur | Edie Bleiman, David Ian Salter & Unkrich | ||
4 | Monsters, Inc. | November 2, 2001 | Pete Docter | David Silverman & Lee Unkrich | Dan Gerson & Andrew Stanton | Jill Culton, Docter, Ralph Eggleston & Jeff Pidgeon | Darla K. Anderson | John Lasseter & Stanton | Robert Grahamjones & Jim Stewart | |
5 | Finding Nemo | May 30, 2003 | Andrew Stanton | Lee Unkrich | Stanton | Bob Peterson, David Reynolds & Stanton | Graham Walters | John Lasseter | David Ian Salter | Thomas Newman |
6 | The Incredibles | November 5, 2004 | Brad Bird | Bird | John Walker | Stephen Schaffer | Michael Giacchino | |||
7 | Cars | June 9, 2006 | John Lasseter | Joe Ranft | Dan Fogelman, Jorgen Klubien, Lasseter, Phil Lorin, Kiel Murray & Ranft | Lasseter, Klubien & Ranft | Darla K. Anderson | Ken Schretzmann | Randy Newman | |
8 | Ratatouille | June 29, 2007 | Brad Bird | Jan Pinkava | Bird | Bird, Jim Capobianco & Pinkava | Brad Lewis | John Lasseter & Andrew Stanton | Darren T. Holmes & Stan Webb | Michael Giacchino |
9 | WALL-E | June 27, 2008 | Andrew Stanton | Jim Reardon & Stanton | Pete Docter & Stanton | Jim Morris | John Lasseter | Stephen Schaffer | Thomas Newman | |
10 | Up | May 29, 2009 | Pete Docter | Bob Peterson | Docter & Peterson | Docter, Tom McCarthy & Peterson | Jonas Rivera | John Lasseter & Andrew Stanton | Kevin Nolting | Michael Giacchino |
11 | Toy Story 3 | June 18, 2010 | Lee Unkrich | Michael Arndt | John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton & Unkrich | Darla K. Anderson | Lasseter | Ken Schretzmann | Randy Newman | |
12 | Cars 2 | June 24, 2011 | John Lasseter | Brad Lewis | Ben Queen | Dan Fogelman, Lasseter & Lewis | Denise Ream | Stephen Schaffer | Michael Giacchino | |
13 | Brave | June 22, 2012 | Mark Andrews & Brenda Chapman | Steve Purcell | Andrews, Chapman, Irene Mecchi & Purcell | Chapman | Katherine Sarafian | Pete Docter, John Lasseter & Andrew Stanton | Nicholas C. Smith | Patrick Doyle |
14 | Monsters University | June 21, 2013 | Dan Scanlon | Robert L. Baird, Dan Gerson & Scanlon | Kori Rae | Pete Docter, John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton & Lee Unkrich | Greg Snyder | Randy Newman | ||
15 | Inside Out | June 19, 2015 | Pete Docter | Ronnie del Carmen | Josh Cooley, Docter & Meg LeFauve | del Carmen & Docter | Jonas Rivera | John Lasseter & Andrew Stanton | Kevin Nolting | Michael Giacchino |
16 | The Good Dinosaur | November 25, 2015 | Peter Sohn | Meg LeFauve | Erik Benson, LeFauve, Kelsey Mann, Bob Peterson & Sohn | Denise Ream | John Lasseter, Andrew Stanton & Lee Unkrich | Stephen Schaffer | Mychael & Jeff Danna | |
17 | Finding Dory | June 17, 2016 | Andrew Stanton | Angus MacLane | Stanton & Victoria Strouse | Stanton | Lindsey Collins | John Lasseter | Axel Geddes | Thomas Newman |
18 | Cars 3 | June 16, 2017 | Brian Fee | Kiel Murray, Bob Peterson & Mike Rich | Fee, Ben Queen, Eyal Podell & Jonathon E. Stewart | Kevin Reher | Jason Hudak | Randy Newman | ||
19 | Coco | November 22, 2017 | Lee Unkrich | Adrian Molina | Matthew Aldrich & Molina | Aldrich, Jason Katz, Molina & Unkrich | Darla K. Anderson | Steve Bloom | Michael Giacchino | |
20 | Incredibles 2 | June 15, 2018 | Brad Bird | Bird | John Walker & Nicole Paradis Grindle | Stephen Schaffer |
Upcoming
# | Film | Release date | Director(s) | Co-director(s) | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Executive producer(s) | Editor(s) | Composer(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Screenplay | Story | |||||||||
21 | Toy Story 4[1][7] | June 21, 2019 | Josh Cooley | Stephany Folsom[8] & Andrew Stanton | Pete Docter, John Lasseter, Stanton & Lee Unkrich | Jonas Rivera[9] & Mark Nielsen | Docter, Stanton & Unkrich | Axel Geddes | Randy Newman | |
22 | Onward[4] | March 6, 2020 | Dan Scanlon[10] | TBA | C.S. Anderson & Scanlon[11] | Scanlon | Kori Rae[10] | Pete Docter | TBA | Mychael & Jeff Danna[12] |
After the releases of Toy Story 4 and Onward, four original untitled projects are slated for June 19, 2020, June 18, 2021, March 18, 2022, and June 17, 2022.[6][13]
Brian Fee, Mark Andrews, Domee Shi and Pete Docter have been working on original films,[14][15][16][17] Jonas Rivera is producing Docter's film.[18] In spite of taking over as Pixar's chief creative officer, Docter still plans to complete his film.[19] In 2018, FC Barcelona approached Pixar with the talks to create an animated film.[20]
Production cycle
In July 2013, Pixar Studios President Edwin Catmull said that the studio planned to release one original film each year, and a sequel every other year, as part of a strategy to release "one and a half movies a year."[21] On July 3, 2016, Pixar president Jim Morris revealed that after Toy Story 4, there are no plans for further sequels, and right now Pixar is only developing original ideas with five films currently in the works.[13]
Cancelled projects
In 2005, Pixar began collaborating with Disney and Warner Bros. on a live-action film adaptation of James Dalessandro's novel 1906, with Brad Bird attached to direct.[22] It would have marked Pixar's first involvement in a live-action production. The film was abandoned by Disney and Pixar due to script problems and an estimated budget of $200 million, and it is now in limbo at Warner Bros.[23] In June 2018, Bird mentioned the possibility of adapting the novel as a TV series, with the earthquake sequence as a feature film.[24]
A Pixar film titled Newt was announced in April 2008, with Pixar planning to release it in 2011,[25] which was later bumped to 2012,[26] but it had finally been cancelled by early 2010.[27][28] John Lasseter noted that the film's proposed plot line was similar to another film, Blue Sky Studios' Rio, which was released in 2011.[29] In March 2014, in an interview, Pixar president Edwin Catmull stated that Newt was an idea that was not working in pre-production. When the project was passed to Pete Docter, the director of Monsters, Inc. and Up, he pitched an idea that Pixar thought was better, and that concept became Inside Out.[30][31]
In 2010, Henry Selick formed a joint venture with Pixar called Cinderbiter Productions, which was to exclusively produce stop-motion films.[32] Its first planned feature ShadeMaker was set for release in 2013,[33] but was cancelled in 2012 due to creative differences.[33][34] Selick was then given the option to shop the project (now titled The Shadow King) to other studios.[35]
In addition, when the now-defunct Circle 7 Animation was open, there were plans for sequels to Finding Nemo (which became Finding Dory) and Monsters, Inc. (which became a prequel in Monsters University), as well as a different version of Toy Story 3.[36]
Co-production
Buzz Lightyear of Star Command: The Adventure Begins is a traditionally animated direct-to-video film produced by Disney Television Animation with an opening sequence created by Pixar. The film was released on August 8, 2000, and led to a television series, with Pixar creating the CGI portion of the opening theme.[37]
Collaboration
Pixar assisted in the English localization of several Studio Ghibli films, mainly those from Hayao Miyazaki.[38]
Pixar was brought onboard to fine tune the script for The Muppets.[39] The film was released on November 23, 2011.
Pixar assisted with the story development for The Jungle Book, as well as providing suggestions for the film's end credits sequence. The film was released on April 15, 2016. Additional special thanks credit was given to Mark Andrews.[40]
Mary Poppins Returns includes a sequence combining live-action and traditional hand-drawn animation. The animation was supervised by Ken Duncan and James Baxter. Over 70 animators specializing in hand-drawn 2D animation from Pixar and Walt Disney Animation Studios were recruited for the sequence.[41] The film was released on December 19, 2018.
Related productions
Planes is a spin-off of the Cars franchise, produced by the now defunct Disneytoon Studios and co-written and executive produced by John Lasseter. The film was conceived from the short film Air Mater, which introduces aspects of Planes and ends with a hint of the film. It was released on August 9, 2013. A sequel, Planes: Fire & Rescue, was released on July 18, 2014. A third Planes film was announced in July 2017, with a planned release on April 12, 2019,[42] but was subsequently removed from the release schedule on March 1, 2018.[43] The film was eventually cancelled when Disneytoon Studios shut down on June 28, 2018.[44]
Ralph Breaks the Internet, produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and co-executive produced by Lasseter, features Kelly Macdonald reprising her role as Merida from Brave,[45] as well as a cameo from Tim Allen reprising his role as Buzz Lightyear from the Toy Story franchise,[46] and a sample of Patrick Doyle's score from Brave.[46] The film, released on November 21, 2018, also features many visual references to Pixar and its films.[47] Additionally, Andrew Stanton received a "Narrative Guru" credit.[46]
Reception
Critical and public reception
The table employs a heatmap to help the reader rapidly get a feeling of how Pixar films are received, without having to read and mentally decode each percentage.
100% 75% 50% 25% 0%
Film | Rotten Tomatoes[48] | Metacritic[49] | CinemaScore[50] | Critics' Choice[51] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Toy Story | 100% | 95/100 | A | — |
A Bug's Life | 92% | 77/100 | — | |
Toy Story 2 | 100% | 88/100 | A+ | 100/100 |
Monsters, Inc. | 96% | 78/100 | 92/100 | |
Finding Nemo | 99% | 90/100 | 97/100 | |
The Incredibles | 97% | 88/100 | ||
Cars | 74% | 73/100 | A | 89/100 |
Ratatouille | 96% | 96/100 | 91/100 | |
WALL-E | 95% | 95/100 | 90/100 | |
Up | 98% | 88/100 | A+ | 95/100 |
Toy Story 3 | 92/100 | A | 97/100 | |
Cars 2 | 0% | 0/100 | F | 0/100 |
Brave | 79% | 69/100 | A | 81/100 |
Monsters University | 80% | 65/100 | 79/100 | |
Inside Out | 98% | 94/100 | 93/100 | |
The Good Dinosaur | 76% | 66/100 | 75/100 | |
Finding Dory | 94% | 77/100 | 89/100 | |
Cars 3 | 70% | 59/100 | 66/100 | |
Coco | 97% | 81/100 | A+ | 89/100 |
Incredibles 2 | 94% | 80/100 | 86/100 |
Box office performance
Film | Budget | North America | Worldwide gross (unadjusted) |
Ref(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opening | Gross (unadjusted) | ||||
Toy Story | $30 million | $29.1 million | $191.8 million | $373.6 million | [52] |
A Bug's Life | $120 million | $33.3 million | $162.8 million | $363.3 million | [53] |
Toy Story 2 | $90 million | $57.4 million | $245.9 million | $497.4 million | [54] |
Monsters, Inc. | $115 million | $62.6 million | $255.9 million | $525.4 million | [55] |
Finding Nemo | $94 million | $70.3 million | $339.7 million | $940.3 million | [56] |
The Incredibles | $92 million | $70.5 million | $261.4 million | $633.0 million | [57] |
Cars | $120 million | $60.1 million | $244.1 million | $462.2 million | [58] |
Ratatouille | $150 million | $47.0 million | $206.4 million | $620.7 million | [59] |
WALL-E | $180 million | $63.1 million | $223.8 million | $533.3 million | [60] |
Up | $175 million | $68.1 million | $293.0 million | $735.1 million | [61] |
Toy Story 3 | $200 million | $110.3 million | $415.0 million | $1,067.0 million | [62] |
Cars 2 | $200 million | $66.1 million | $191.5 million | $562.1 million | [63] |
Brave | $185 million | $66.3 million | $237.3 million | $540.4 million | [64] |
Monsters University | $200 million | $82.4 million | $268.5 million | $744.2 million | [65] |
Inside Out | $175 million | $90.4 million | $356.5 million | $857.6 million | [66] |
The Good Dinosaur | $175 million | $39.2 million | $123.1 million | $332.2 million | [67][68] |
Finding Dory | $200 million | $135.1 million | $486.3 million | $1,028.6 million | [69] |
Cars 3 | $175 million | $53.7 million | $152.9 million | $383.9 million | [70] |
Coco | $175 million | $50.8 million | $209.7 million | $807.1 million | [71][72] |
Incredibles 2 | $200 million | $182.7 million | $608.6 million | $1,242.8 million | [73] |
- Note: Only grosses from the original theatrical runs. They do not include any theatrical re-releases or home media releases. Grosses have not been adjusted for inflation.
Academy Award wins and nominations
Film | Best Picture |
Animated Feature | Original Screenplay | Original Score | Original Song | Sound Editing | Sound Mixing | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Toy Story | Award not introduced yet | Nominated | Nominated | Nominated | Won Special Achievement | |||
A Bug's Life | ||||||||
Toy Story 2 | Nominated | |||||||
Monsters, Inc. | Nominated | Nominated | Won | Nominated | ||||
Finding Nemo | Won | Nominated | ||||||
The Incredibles | Won | Nominated | ||||||
Cars | Nominated | Nominated | ||||||
Ratatouille | Won | Nominated | Nominated | Nominated | Nominated | |||
WALL-E | ||||||||
Up | Nominated | Won | ||||||
Toy Story 3 | Won | Nominated for Adapted Screenplay | ||||||
Brave | ||||||||
Inside Out | Nominated | |||||||
Coco | Won | |||||||
Incredibles 2 | Nominated |
See also
- List of Pixar shorts
- List of computer-animated films
- List of Disney theatrical animated features
- List of Walt Disney Animation Studios films
- List of Blue Sky Studios films
References
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I am currently working on another film, which is original and is being written and directed by me, but that's all I can say about that.
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I have a pitch late this week to John Lasseter for a new movie.
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Pete [Docter] and Jonas [Rivera], the producer, have a new and equally weird idea that they are working on...
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(help) - ^ "Toy Story (1995)". Box Office Mojo.
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- ^ "Cars (2006)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "Ratatouille (2007)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "WALL-E (2008)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "Up (2009)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "Toy Story 3 (2010)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ "Cars 2 (2011)". Box Office Mojo.
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- ^ "Finding Dory (2016)". Box Office Mojo.
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- ^ "Coco (2017)". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ FilmL.A. (August 8, 2018). "2017 Feature Film Study" (PDF). p. 23. Retrieved March 19, 2019.
- ^ "Incredibles 2 (2018)". Box Office Mojo.