The Ultimate Blue Sky Studios Animated Film Guide: 2002-2009
Created | Updated Jun 9, 2017
2002-2009 | 2010-2014
Blue Sky Studios is a computer animation company owned by 20th Century Fox that has created one of the most successful computer-animated film franchises of all time. To date its films can be divided into two: films in the hugely successful Ice Age series and Blue Sky Studios' other work, including the two films in the Rio series. Blue Sky makes its films on a much smaller budget than rivals Disney, Pixar and DreamWorks, yet this has not affected their films' quality, popularity or success.
Forming of Blue Sky Studios
Blue Sky Studios can trace its beginning to a computer animation company called MAGI (Mathematical Applications Group, Inc), a computer animation company founded in 1972 that in 1982 was hired to provide half of the effects for Disney's film Tron1. After MAGI shut down in 1986, six former employees2 decided to found their own computer animation company. Thus in early 1987 Blue Sky Studios was formed. At first they concentrated on making adverts, winning an award for a razor commercial, which enabled them to progress to providing effects in the mid 1990s for films such as Alien Resurrection (1997) and Fight Club (1999).
During this period, in 1997 20th Century Fox acquired a stake in the company, hoping to use it as their effects department. Desperate to originate their own work, in their part time the Blue Sky team made a short film called Bunny about a cantankerous rabbit trying to cook in her kitchen, only to be bothered by an annoying moth. The film won the 1998 Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. Following this success, in 1999 20th Century Fox bought the remainder of Blue Sky Studios. Fox had ambitious plans hoping to rival Disney's success, although their own animation studio, Fox Animation Studios, made only two films3 and allowed Blue Sky to make their first full-length animated film, Ice Age.
1. Ice Age (2002)
Directors | Chris Wedge with Carols Saldanha |
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Plot | While most animals migrate south to avoid the Ice Age and find food, a pack of sabre-tooth tigers attack a Neanderthal camp, hoping to eat the chief's baby. The baby's mother flees with the baby, before dying next to two mammals; Manny, who believes himself to be the last surviving mammoth, and Sid an annoying sloth. They decide to return the baby to its people and are joined by Diego, a sabre-tooth tiger who claims to be tracking the baby's father but secretly plans to lure the group into a trap prepared by his pack. Meanwhile a squirrel called Scrat tries desperately hard to get a nut. |
Length | 81 minutes |
Setting | Earth circa 20,000 BC, during the Ice Age |
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Ice Age was only the ninth American computer animated film4. With a plot in which a varied group of prehistoric animals undertake a journey together, the story shares similarities with the Don Bluth-directed The Land Before Time (1988) and Disney's Dinosaur released a year earlier, only with beasts rather than dinosaurs, and an added emphasis on comedy. Don Bluth had in fact been strongly considered to direct Ice Age until he refused due to his dislike of CGI.
The character of Scrat was an almost last-minute addition to the film and does not feature in the original script. Originally the plan had been to make a dramatic adventure. When the decision was made to change the tone to a comedy, it was realised that although humorous lines could be added to the script, there was little inherently funny about the story of a baby separated from his parents. The character of Scrat was able to introduce more humour. Originally a minor character who appeared only in an introduction sequence added when the film was nearing completion to ensure the first scene of the film featured the power and majesty of the ice, as he was popular with test audiences his role was greatly expanded.
Hugely successful, at time of release it was briefly the second-most successful computer-animated film so far behind Toy Story 2, although it was overtaken by Shrek. Despite this it was the most-successful animated film of 2001, beating Disney's Lilo & Stitch, Return to Never Land and Treasure Planet as well as DreamWorks Animation's Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron. This demonstrated that Blue Sky could compete with more-established studios. The film was nominated for the 2002 Academy Award for Best Animated Film, losing to Hayao Miyazaki's masterpiece Spirited Away. This is the only Oscar-nominated full-length Blue Sky Studios film to date.
2. Robots (2005)
Director | Chris Wedge |
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Plot | Young inventor Rodney Copperbottom dreams of travelling to Robot City and impressing his hero Bigweld with his invention. Yet when he arrives he discovers that Robot City is divided between the rich and shiny and the rusting poor. Bigweld himself has vanished, Bigweld Industries has been taken over and is now controlled by Ratchet, who plans to stop selling spare parts. This means that all the robots will have no choice but to pay for his expensive upgrades – if not they will be labelled outmodes and melted down in the chop shop. Can Rodney find Bigweld and somehow save the day? |
Length | 90 minutes |
Setting | Rural Rivet Town and metropolis Robot City, in a world inhabited by robots |
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Robots is a fun film filled with ambition. Many of the scenes, sequences and scenery are breathtaking and the voice cast, combining Ewan McGregor, Robin Williams in his first animated voice role since playing the Genie in Aladdin, Halle Berry and Sir Terry Wogan, is simply stellar. Having announced their presence with Ice Age, Blue Sky Studios made Robots cram-packed with details, jokes and cameos (including a robotic Sid from Ice Age) that repeat watching is certainly rewarded. Aimed at an older audience than Ice Age it did not make as much money, yet it was still the third most successful animated film of the year following DreamWorks Animation's Madagascar and Disney's Chicken Little, ahead of Aardman's Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit and Tim Burton's Corpse Bride.
3. Ice Age: The Meltdown (2006)
Director | Carlos Saldanha |
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Plot | Scrat's attempts to bury a nut in a glacier inadvertently causes it to crack and the water inside to leak, the first sign that the ice is melting and the ice age may be over. With the glaciers melting and the earth about to be flooded, all the animals in the nearby area are under threat of drowning unless they can make it to a giant tree that will act as an ark. On their journey Manny, who has long believed himself to be the last mammoth, encounters a female mammoth named Ellie, who believes she is an opossum and the adopted sister of two opossum twins. Is Sid a sloth god? Will the herd escape the floods and avoid the prehistoric aquatic reptiles that are hunting them? |
Length | 91 minutes |
Setting | Earth circa 20,000 BC, during the Ice Age |
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Also called Ice Age 2: The Meltdown, this sequel made Ice Age into the third computer-animated film series after Toy Story and Shrek. At time of writing the five films in the Ice Age series are the second most successful animated film series after the Shrek films. This film combines prehistoric creatures with the story of Noah's Ark, while many of the sequences featuring Scrat were based on ideas proposed for the character for the first film. The film also features two surviving sea reptiles from the time of the dinosaurs, an ichthyosaur and a pliosaur, which would tie-in with the next film in the series.
Technically the main characters are much more lifelike than in the first film, with their fur being much more realistic. As characters, the recurring characters of Manny, Diego and Sid also gel together more than in previous films and interact well with Ellie, the girl with the brain of a possum and body of a mammoth.
Another huge box office hit, Ice Age: The Meltdown was the most successful animated film of 2006, beating Pixar's Cars, Animal Logic's Happy Feet, DreamWorks Animation's Over the Hedge, Sony Animation's Open Season and ImageMovers' Monster House.
4. Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! (2008)
Directors | Jimmy Hayward & Steve Martino |
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Plot | Horton the elephant hears a voice coming from a tiny speck. After learning that this comes from the mayor of Whoville, a city on the speck, Horton decides to take the Speck somewhere safe. Yet a kangaroo feels that Horton's belief in something she cannot see or hear undermines her authority and will stop at nothing to destroy it. |
Length | 86 minutes |
Setting | Whoville, a city on a world that is actually a tiny speck on a clover in the Forest of Nool |
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Music | Soundtrack by John Powell.
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Based on the 1954 story by Dr Seuss and called both Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! and simply Horton Hears a Who!, this is a charming tale which informs us that a person is a person, no matter how small5. This was the first computer-animated Dr Seuss adaptation and followed two live-action Seuss adaptations, The Grinch (2000) which also starred Jim Carrey and featured the Whos of Whoville, and The Cat in the Hat (2003).
This was the second Blue Sky film in a row starring Will Arnett as a vulture. A conscious decision was made to ensure that Horton the elephant was different to Manny the mammoth from the Ice Age series. This was accomplished by giving him a much more expressive mouth, ears that would fold into amusing shapes as well as Horton occasionally walking on two legs.
There are frequent visual and spoken references to Dr Seuss' other books, especially Horton Hatches the Egg (1940). Another computer animated Dr Seuss adaptation, The Lorax, was made in 2012, however this adaptation was by Illumination Entertainment rather than Blue Sky.
Overall Horton Hears a Who was another box office success and was the fifth most successful animated film of the year, behind DreamWorks Animation's Kung Fu Panda and Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, Pixar's WALL·E and Disney's Bolt.
5. Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009)
Directors | Carlos Saldanha & Mike Thurmeier |
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Plot | While Manny is overprotective of Ellie while she is pregnant, a fear caused by his own family having been killed by hunters, Diego, struggling to catch prey, fears that he is no longer in his prime and considers leaving the herd. Sid also feels sidelined and decides to adopt three eggs he believes have been abandoned only for them to turn out to be Tyrannosaurus eggs. When their mother takes her babies and Sid back to her home in a vast underground cavern, Manny, Ellie, Diego, Crash and Eddie follow to rescue him. They discover a lost world full of dinosaurs and encounter a lone one-eyed weasel named Buck, who is obsessed with hunting the white dinosaur that took his eye. |
Length | 94 minutes |
Setting | Earth circa 20,000 BC, during the Ice Age |
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Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs is another highly enjoyable chapter in the series, in which the characters are taken out of the Ice Age and out of their comfort zones, and so find their place in the herd. The film deals with how change impacts on a group of friends who despite not always getting on, nevertheless are willing to go through anything for each other. As Manny worries about becoming a father, Sid proves that he has what it takes to be a parent, echoing how it was caring for a young baby that brought them together in the first place. The film also contains lots of highly enjoyable dinosaur action in which their vast size makes even the mammoths seem small and Diego tame in comparison.
The third film in the Ice Age series was also the third Ice Age film to top the most successful animated film chart, beating Pixar's Up, DreamWorks Animation's Monsters vs Aliens, Disney/ImageMovers Digital's A Christmas Carol, Disney's The Princess and the Frog, Sony Pictures Animation's Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs and Laika's Coraline.