Where the Wild Things Are (lost production material of unfinished film adaptations of children's book; 1980s-2000s): Difference between revisions
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{{InfoboxLost | {{InfoboxLost | ||
|title=<center>Where The Wild Things Are (cancelled film adaptations)</center> | |title=<center>Where The Wild Things Are (cancelled film adaptations)</center> | ||
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'''''Where The Wild Things Are''''' is a 1963 children's book by famed author Maurice Sendak. The book captured the hearts of many children and is considered a classic. | '''''Where The Wild Things Are''''' is a 1963 children's book by famed author Maurice Sendak. The book captured the hearts of many children and is considered a classic. | ||
There have been many attempts to bring the book to the big screen. A few were made | ==Adaptations== | ||
There have been many attempts to bring the book to the big screen. A few were made that did not get past the pre-production stages. | |||
===Disney Adaptation=== | |||
In 1983, John Lasseter (future Pixar animator) took an idea to adapt the book into a film to Disney Animation Studios. They told him to do an animation test based off of his idea. The film was to feature 2D animated characters in a computer-generated, 3D environment. Disney, though impressed, decided to cancel the project.<ref>[https://www.cartoonbrew.com/disney/early-cg-experiments-by-john-lasseter-and-glen-keane-37145.html The original test's creation (1/2).] Retrieved 10 Dec '20</ref> | |||
== | Though the animation test was broadcasted on The Disney Channel and is commonly seen on YouTube, Lasseter completed a few more film elements before its cancellation.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20150921153755/http://nerdist.com/disney-once-test-animated-where-the-wild-things-are-and-it-was-great/ The original test's creation (2/2).] Retrieved 10 '20</ref> These have not been released. | ||
===Universal Adaptation=== | |||
A few more small attempts were made at making a film, most of which now only remain as scripts. In 2001, Universal Studios attempted another animated adaptation that was entirely done with computer-generated 3D graphics. The movie was apparently halfway completed before Universal pulled the plug for unknown reasons.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/23/movies/a-wild-rumpus-in-the-hollywood-jungle.html The Universal version] Retrieved 10 Dec '20</ref> | |||
None of the film's elements have been seen or have been leaked online, though a teaser trailer was reportedly attached to the theatrical release of 2000's ''How the Grinch Stole Christmas''.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20220510220002/https://www.reddit.com/r/lostmedia/comments/diygsy/original_where_the_wild_things_are_teaser_trailer/ A Reddit thread discussing the teaser trailer] Retrieved 10 Dec '20</ref> | |||
==Footage== | |||
{{Video|perrow =1 | {{Video|perrow =1 | ||
|service1 =youtube | |service1 =youtube | ||
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|description1 =John Lasseter's ''Where The Wild Things Are'' animation test. | |description1 =John Lasseter's ''Where The Wild Things Are'' animation test. | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Videos== | |||
{{Video|perrow =1 | |||
|service1 =youtube | |||
|id1 =t0IWKvNybyQ | |||
|description1 =Seeker of the Lost's video on the subject of the teaser trailer for the unproduced Universal film adaptation. | |||
}} | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[Where the Wild Things Are (lost Arcade Fire songs from film's soundtrack; existence unconfirmed; 2009)]] | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
[[Category:Lost animation]] | [[Category:Lost animation]] | ||
[[Category:Lost films]] | [[Category:Lost films]] | ||
[[Category:Completely lost media]] |
Latest revision as of 22:54, 17 November 2023
Where The Wild Things Are is a 1963 children's book by famed author Maurice Sendak. The book captured the hearts of many children and is considered a classic.
Adaptations
There have been many attempts to bring the book to the big screen. A few were made that did not get past the pre-production stages.
Disney Adaptation
In 1983, John Lasseter (future Pixar animator) took an idea to adapt the book into a film to Disney Animation Studios. They told him to do an animation test based off of his idea. The film was to feature 2D animated characters in a computer-generated, 3D environment. Disney, though impressed, decided to cancel the project.[1]
Though the animation test was broadcasted on The Disney Channel and is commonly seen on YouTube, Lasseter completed a few more film elements before its cancellation.[2] These have not been released.
Universal Adaptation
A few more small attempts were made at making a film, most of which now only remain as scripts. In 2001, Universal Studios attempted another animated adaptation that was entirely done with computer-generated 3D graphics. The movie was apparently halfway completed before Universal pulled the plug for unknown reasons.[3]
None of the film's elements have been seen or have been leaked online, though a teaser trailer was reportedly attached to the theatrical release of 2000's How the Grinch Stole Christmas.[4]
Footage
Videos
See Also
References
- ↑ The original test's creation (1/2). Retrieved 10 Dec '20
- ↑ The original test's creation (2/2). Retrieved 10 '20
- ↑ The Universal version Retrieved 10 Dec '20
- ↑ A Reddit thread discussing the teaser trailer Retrieved 10 Dec '20