Blue Sky Studios
Subsidiary of 20th Century Fox[1] | |
Industry |
Computer animation Motion pictures |
Founded | February 1987 |
Founder |
Chris Wedge Carl Ludwig Dr. Eugene Troubetzkoy Alison Brown David Brown Michael Ferraro |
Headquarters |
Greenwich, Connecticut, United States |
Key people |
Carlos Saldanha Chris Wedge Brian Keane, COO[2] |
Products | CGI animated films |
Owner |
News Corporation (1997–2013) 21st Century Fox (2013–present) |
Number of employees | 600 (2015)[3] |
Parent |
Independent (1987–97) 20th Century Fox (1997–present) |
Website |
www |
Blue Sky Studios is an American computer animation film studio based in Greenwich, Connecticut. The studio was founded in 1987 by Michael Ferraro, Carl Ludwig, Alison Brown, David Brown, Chris Wedge and Eugene Troubetzkoy after the company they worked in, MAGI, one of the visual effects studios behind Tron, shut down. Blue Sky Studios has been owned by 20th Century Fox since 1997. Using its in-house rendering software, the studio had worked on visual effects for commercials and films before completely dedicating itself to animated film production in 2002 with the release of Ice Age. Of the studio's ten animated films to date, Ice Age and Rio are its most successful film franchises, and The Peanuts Movie its most critically acclaimed film.
History
1987–97
Blue Sky was founded in February 1987 by Chris Wedge, Carl Ludwig, Dr. Eugene Troubetzkoy, Alison Brown, David Brown and Michael Ferraro, who had previously worked on the Disney film Tron while employed at MAGI/Synthavision.[4] Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, the studio concentrated on the production of television commercials and visual effects for film. Some of the more memorable commercials that Blue Sky worked on during this time period were a Chock Full O' Nuts spot with a talking coffee bean, and an intro for a Nickelodeon block called Nicktoons that featured the show's mascot, Nick Boy, realized as human-shaped orange goo. Using their proprietary animation pipeline, the studio produced over 200 spots for clients such as Chrysler, M&M/Mars, General Foods, Texaco, and the United States Marines.[5]
1997–present
In August 1997, 20th Century Fox's Los Angeles-based visual effects company, VIFX, acquired Blue Sky Studios to form a new visual effects and animation company.[6] The new company produced visual effects for films such as The X-Files, Blade, Armageddon, Titanic and Alien: Resurrection.[7] In 1998, Chris Wedge realized long unfulfilled dreams and produced the Academy Award-winning animated short film, Bunny.
Due to the F/X market crash, Fox decided to leave the visual effects business. In March 1999, they sold VIFX to another visual effects house, Rhythm & Hues Studios,[8] and considered selling Blue Sky next. At the time, the studio got the opportunity with the Ice Age script to turn it into a comedy. In 2002, Ice Age was released to great critical and commercial success. The film got a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, and established Blue Sky as the third studio, after Pixar and DreamWorks Animation, to launch a successful CGI franchise.[9]
In January 2009, the studio moved from White Plains, New York to Greenwich, Connecticut.[10]
In 2013, Chris Wedge took a leave of absence to direct Paramount Animation's live-action/computer-animated film Monster Trucks.[11]
Technology
The studio is notable for its proprietary CGI Studio, a rendering software system like Pixar's RenderMan. Initially developed by Eugene Troubetzkoy, Carl Ludwig, Tom Bisogno and Michael Ferraro,[5] CGI Studio was notable for its use of ray tracing as opposed to REYES-like scanline rendering prevalent throughout the CG industry.
Filmography
Feature films
Released films
# | Title | Release date | Budget[12] | Gross[12] | RT | MC[13] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ice Age | March 15, 2002 | $59 million | $383 million | 77% | 60 |
2 | Robots | March 11, 2005 | $75 million | $260 million | 64% | 64 |
3 | Ice Age: The Meltdown | March 31, 2006 | $80 million | $660 million | 57% | 58 |
4 | Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! | March 14, 2008 | $85 million | $297 million | 79% | 71 |
5 | Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs | July 1, 2009 | $90 million | $886 million | 45% | 50 |
6 | Rio | April 15, 2011 | $90 million | $484 million | 72% | 63 |
7 | Ice Age: Continental Drift | July 13, 2012 | $95 million | $877 million | 37% | 49 |
8 | Epic | May 24, 2013 | $93 million | $268 million | 64% | 52 |
9 | Rio 2 | April 11, 2014 | $103 million | $500 million | 48% | 49 |
10 | The Peanuts Movie | November 6, 2015 | $99 million | $244 million | 87% | 67 |
Upcoming films
Title | Release date | Refs. |
---|---|---|
Ice Age: Collision Course | July 22, 2016 | [14][15][16] |
Ferdinand | April 7, 2017 | [17][18] |
Anubis | March 23, 2018 | [17][14][19] |
Films in development
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Mutts | [20][21][22] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Alienology | [23] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Television specials
Short films
Commercials
Contributions
AccoladesAcademy Awards
Golden Globe Awards
See alsoReferences
External links
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