DreamWorks, Shanghai studio hope ‘Abominable’ suits China
For the new animated movie “Abominable,” bringing a big city in China to life with accuracy means that even the trash has to look right. Chinese animators collaborating with DreamWorks animators urged them to dump metal trash cans from backdrops because “we don’t have metal trash cans.”
“It took nights and weekends to replace all of that, but it was worth it,” director Jill Culton said.
It’s understandable to feel some pressure not to offend China’s 1 billion potential moviegoers. It’s been 20 years since a Hollywood cartoon with a plucky Chinese heroine opened in China. The film, Disney’s “Mulan,” brought little honour to its box office grosses.
DreamWorks Animation and Shanghai-based Pearl Studio hope “Abominable,” which opens Sept. 27 in the U.S., can make the crossover leap.