A familiar pattern is brewing with Disney's cinematic calendar, and it doesn't exactly give us hope. As Disney prepares for this year's releases, only one project comes with any originality, and the company's success could hinge on it.
Here's our first look at Pixar's original series, "Win Or Lose." The show, which centers around a championship softball game, premieres Feb. 19.
It’s another year of high-profile animated sequels, led by Disney’s “Zootopia 2,” DreamWorks’ “The Bad Guys 2,” and Nickelodeon/Paramount’s “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for Square Pants” and the “Untitled Smurfs Animated Film .”
Walt Disney World's biggest fans anticipate many changes at the resort in the new year. Disney Parks Blog, the official communications channel sharing official parks news and announcements, recently p
Our expert who first called NVIDIA in 2009 is predicting 2025 will see a historic AI breakthrough.
Disney’s owners have discovered that their primary mission is to “entertain and sell tickets,” in the words of CEO Bob Iger. It has taken them a great many years and a few million dollars along the way.
He is the only two-time winner of the award. Source: Walt Disney Studios After graduation, Lasseter and several of his classmates were hired at Walt Disney Feature Animation, but the new class of ...
Disney ‘s head of theatrical distribution, Tony Chambers, is leaving his current role to serve as president of the Walt Disney Company in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Disney has promoted 30 year studio veteran Tony Chambers to President EMEA. He was previously head of theatrical distribution since 2021.
You can see the trailer in the video player above. "Win Or Lose" premieres February 19 on Disney+. The Walt Disney Company is the parent company of Pixar, Disney+ and this ABC station.
At least 64 Disney employees lost their homes in the Palisades and Eaton fires and hundreds more remain evacuated from their homes, the New York Times reported. About 100 displaced Disney employees have been staying in rooms at the Disneyland Hotel, Pixar Place Hotel and Disney’s Grand Californian, according to the Times.
Full-year ticket sales were down just 3.4% from 2023, reaching $8.74 billion, a far cry from the nearly 27% shortage at the midway point of 2024.