The Sun (Malaysia)

Animator extraordin­aire

> John Lasseter, credited as the man with rescuing Walt Disney Animation from closure, goes to infinity and beyond with his ideas

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WHEN John Lasseter was at high school, he borrowed a weighty hardback called The Art of Animation and was astonished to discover that people could actually make money from drawing.

The revelation inspired him to become one of history’s most successful and important animators, rivaled perhaps only by his friend, the legendary Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki, and the great Walt Disney himself.

Lasseter is widely credited with rescuing Walt Disney Animation from closure when he arrived from its new stable-mate Pixar in 2007 to become chief creative officer for both studios.

It hardly seems conceivabl­e now – with Frozen (2013) among the 10 highest grossing movies in history – but Disney was reeling from the derision heaped on Atlantis: The Lost Empire (2001), Brother Bear (2003) and Chicken Little (2005).

Outgunned for years by Pixar, Disney’s animation division was on the verge of being put out to pasture when the studio regained its mojo under Lasseter and started producing classics like Tangled and Wreck-It Ralph that harked back its glory days.

Lasseter’s impact on the world of animation cannot be overstated.

Pixar’s various achievemen­ts include 13 Oscars and US$11 billion (RM47.1 billion) in box office receipts from 18 movies since Lasseter’s Toy Story, the world’s first computer-generated feature film, opened in 1995.

Since Lasseter came on board, Walt Disney Animation Studios has picked itself spectacula­rly out of the doldrums to amass US$5 billion (RM21.4 billion) across eight movies, picking up four Academy Awards.

Raised in Whittier, southern California, Lasseter was seduced by the Mouse House’s magic early on via regular trips to the nearby Disneyland.

“Those moments, those feelings stay with me. Walt Disney, in his movies and Disneyland, entertaine­d people like nobody else in the world,” recalled the filmmaker.

Lasseter enrolled in the California Institute of Arts in 1975 and, with contempora­ries Tim Burton and Brad Bird, was taught by Disney’s legendary “Nine Old Men” team of core animators.

After graduating he was picked from thousands to join Walt Disney Feature Animation – but was fired soon after for working on an early version of computer animation without clearing it first with his bosses.

He joined Lucasfilm’s CGI team, The Graphics Group, in 1984 before it was sold to Apple’s Steve Jobs, who renamed it Pixar and transforme­d it – with Lasseter’s help – into a fully-fledged animation studio.

The Walt Disney Company bought Pixar in 2006, and Lasseter has since overseen all output from both studios.

His directing credits include Toy Story (1995) and its first sequel, A Bug’s Life (1998), Cars (2006), and Cars 2 (2011) but when asked which he prefers, he refuses to play favourites.

“Each one of them is like a child of mine that I love and they are all different,” he said.

Lasseter – whose successes have paid for a vineyard, a fleet of classic cars and a collection of 1,000 Hawaiian shirts – has developed a collaborat­ive approach to filmmaking that sets him apart from other studio chiefs.

He fosters a culture of intensive research, allowing filmmakers years to make sure they get their subjects right – especially on culturally sensitive projects like Moana, and the forthcomin­g Coco, which centres around Mexico’s Day of the Dead.

Perhaps the most striking innovation introduced by Lasseter was doing away with the old damsel-in-distress model of Disney princess in favour of a more interestin­g, unselfcons­ciously feminist version young girls could look up to.

Lasseter delights in discussing aspiration­al chef Tiana in The Princess and the Frog or strongwill­ed Polynesian chieftain’s daughter Moana, noting that his princesses “aren’t waiting around for a guy to come save them.”

“It’s hard work what we do but we don’t take the easy route. We don’t just carbon copy another sequel with exactly the same story just to print money. We throw it out, we start from scratch and we get a new emotional heart,” he said.

“And we want to say something to the world that is meaningful. And right now I’m so proud that we put joy out into the world.” – AFP-Relaxnews

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 ??  ?? (left) Lasseter has been the brains behind some of modern animation’s biggest hits, including (top, from far left) Toy Story; Frozen; Moana.
(left) Lasseter has been the brains behind some of modern animation’s biggest hits, including (top, from far left) Toy Story; Frozen; Moana.

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