New York Post

DISNEY RIVALS’ AIM: CATCH THAT MOUSE!

‘Animated’ competitio­n

- By ALEXANDRA STEIGRAD asteigrad@nypost.com

Everyone in Hollywood these days seems to be vying for Disney’s crown as the king of animation.

Tinseltown has gone animation crazy in the wake of the pandemic, which has stalled live-action production and accelerate­d demand for family-friendly content that can be streamed at home.

Studios are now plowing money into making cartoons like never before — despite knowing that toppling the creator of Mickey Mouse and “Frozen” will be tricky, if not impossible, sources said.

“All the streamers wanted animated shows to brand their networks, but the pandemic has made it even more so. Everyone is doubling down,” said Titmouse founder and president Chris Prynoski, who has worked on shows like MTV’s “Beavis and Butthead” and Nickelodeo­n’s “Baby Shark’s Big Show!”

Animation deals are “exploding,” added a dealmaker with a top Hollywood agency who has seen budgets for animated content balloon. Before the rise of streaming, animated budgets were between $350,000 and $750,000 per episode. Now, some shows have budgets of more than $5 million, the source said.

Netflix has made no bones about its efforts to challenge Disney.

“We’re very fired up about catching them [Disney] in family animation — maybe eventually passing them, we’ll see, a long way to go just to catch them — and maintainin­g our lead in general entertainm­ent that’s so stimulatin­g,” Netflix founder and co-Chief Executive Officer Reed Hastings said in January.

It’s not just Netflix that’s eager to chip away at Disney’s market share. HBO Max, Paramount+ and Amazon Prime Video, just to name a few, have also jumped headlong into the race as the pandemic strangles other forms of film and TV production.

And it’s a trend that’s expected to last for years — even after the pandemic ends — as Hollywood studios vie for family-friendly material to help them win the streaming wars.

“I think it’s going to be a really interestin­g next couple of years in the animation industry,” said Sam Register, president of Warner Bros. Animation and Cartoon Network studios. “We all have great content. We all have studios. I don’t think any one company is absolutely a projected dominant player in this space.”

But experts see the Bob Chapekled Disney maintainin­g its perch, thanks to the decades it’s spent building its library of animated content and intellectu­al property, as well as its solid reputation for providing family entertainm­ent.

“Disney has that platinum brand,” said media analyst Michael Nathanson of MoffettNat­hanson. “Even if there’s a little bit of share loss,” it will stay on top, he predicted.

“For the other products, HBO Max, Paramount+, you have to convince

people, who are new to those brands, that those brands stand for kids entertainm­ent,” he said.

There’s more room to compete in adult animation, Nathanson added.

It’s one reason AT&T’s new streaming service, HBO Max — buttressed by its Warner Bros. studio — paid more than $500 million for the streaming rights to long-running raunchy cartoon “South Park” ahead of the platform’s May 2020 launch.

This year, the studio run by Jason Kilar’s WarnerMedi­a also scored a family-friendly animated hit with its “Tom & Jerry” movie, which debuted in cinemas and on HBO Max simultaneo­usly last month. The comedy raked in $13.7 million over its opening weekend — the best domestic opening of the year.

Warner Bros., which created new episodes of “Looney Tunes” for

HBO Max last year, is also slated to debut “Gremlins,” an animated prequel based on the 1984 film, later this year.

Amazon also went the adult route with its first original animation series, “Undone,” about life after almost dying, in 2019. And in March it will debut the adult animated series “Invisible” by “The Walking Dead” creator Robert Kirkman.

The Jeff Bezos-led streamer has also invested in a slew of children’s programs, including “Pete the Cat” and “Lost in Oz,” as well as licensed shows like “Dora the Explorer” and “SpongeBob SquarePant­s.”

Netflix, which launched its animation studio in 2018, has made the biggest strides by far in both family and adult fare. On the adult side, it has hits like “Big Mouth,” about an awkward teen, and “BoJack Horseman,” about a washed-up Hollywood horse.

For kids, Netflix last year released “The Willoughby­s,” about four siblings and featuring the voices of Ricky Gervais and Alessia Cara, plus animated musical “Over the Moon,” which was directed by Glen Keane, a legendary ex-Disney animator.

The streaming giant has also invested an estimated $1 billion for the rights to bring beloved children’s author Roald Dahl’s works to life in animated form.

“It feels like we’re in the golden age of animation here at Netflix,” head of animation Melissa Cobb told The Post. “In a few short years we’ve created a one-of-a-kind studio, one that is breaking down the walls creators face, like a house style, language or borders.”

Still, even Netflix isn’t predicted to topple Disney anytime soon.

“I do not think Netflix will pass Disney, but Netflix has a great track record and I expect them to have some major hits,” said Jeff Wlodarczak, founder and CEO of Pivotal Research Group.

“As for other streamers in animation, to keep up with Disney and Netflix, very large dollars will need to be spent and I question whether most will be able.

“But for the next couple of years,” he added, “I expect others to try.”

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