Daily Dispatch

Robbie Collin

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THE sorcerer’s hat is so big you can see it from the freeway. Crowning the entrance to the Feature Animation Building at Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California, it’s four storeys tall, midnight blue and trimmed with a silvery yellow moon and stars: think Mickey Mouse’s broom-wrangling headgear in Fantasia , but big enough to top the tallest turret of Sleeping Beauty Castle.

And in its conical shadow one September evening in 2005, John Musker and Ron Clements were finished.

On the plaza outside the studio, the two long-serving animators – directors of The Little Mermaid and Aladdin, and pioneers of the Nineties Disney Renaissanc­e during which the studio scaled creative peaks unseen since Walt’s own heyday – were having a leaving party.

“Though it was not,” Clements wincingly reflects, “an entirely voluntary one.”

Treasure Planet, their Robert Louis Stevenson adaptation, had been a $70-millionlos­ing box office bomb, outgrossed by the computer-generated animation Ice Age four times over.

The techniques taught to them in person by Disney’s “Nine Old Men” – the legendary artists behind masterpiec­es like Pinocchio and Snow White – were now expensive and out of fashion.

To Michael Eisner, the then-CEO of Disney, the art form was dying – and Musker and Clements represente­d a past that the studio had to make a break from.

For what it was worth (not much), they thought otherwise – and in the preceding months they’d pitched a number of ideas to the studio.

“It wasn’t like we’d decided we wanted to pursue other things,” Clements recalls.

“But we were having a hard time getting anything going, and they were practicall­y asking us to leave,” continues Musker.

So leave they did. What happened next is one of the most extraordin­ary comeback stories in recent Hollywood history.

As you’d expect from Disney, there’s a happy ending. It arrives in South Africa (including East London) next week in the shape of Moana, the 56th feature from Walt Disney Animation Studios, and the company’s first princess film since the worldconqu­ering, billion-dollarbox-office-busting Frozen , so you might say there are expectatio­ns to live up to.

It’s a marriage of cuttingedg­e computer graphics and venerable handmade techniques that no one at their leaving party 11 years ago would have dreamt possible.

I meet Musker and Clements just down the road from that sorcerer’s hat, at Disney’s Tujunga campus in Studio City.

Both men are 63 years old, Musker is a fast talker, tall with a bristly moustache; Clements shorter, rounder, bearded and more contemplat­ive.

They look oddly familiar, perhaps because of their habit of drawing themselves into many of their films: they were parade-watchers in Aladdin, stonemason­s in Hercules, Mardi Gras revellers in 2009’s The Princess and the Frog.

Moana is the fourth princess film Musker and Clements have directed – a timeless Disney tradition

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