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Search resuls for: "Chris Meledandri"


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A "Shrek" sequel has been rumored for years, but fans were beginning to lose hope after "Shrek Forever After" provided a neat finish to the story. Dohrn was a writer and artist on "Shrek 2" and "Shrek the Third," was the head of the story on "Shrek Forever After," and the voice of Rumpelstiltskin in the latter film. The movie's producers are Gina Shay, who produced "Shrek Forever After," and Illumination founder Chris Meledandri. There are no details yet on the plot or how it will follow "Shrek Forever After." Dreamwork Animation set "Shrek 5" to premiere on July 1, 2026, so we will likely hear more details about the plot soon.
Persons: , Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers, Cameron Diaz, Donkey, Fiona, pic.twitter.com, Antonio Banderas, Banderas, Puss, Banderas hasn't, Walt Dohrn, Brad Ableson, Dohrn, Gina Shay, Chris Meledandri, Dreamwork Organizations: Service, DreamWorks Animation, Business, Collider, DreamWorks
Can Nintendo stay competitive in the evolving videogames industry? WSJ’s Sarah E. Needleman and analyst Michael Pachter discuss Nintendo’s game-changing approach to the videogames industry. The founder of the animation studio behind “Super Mario” and the yellow, chattering “minions” cartoon characters says his movies aren’t made specifically for children. “Thematically there’s an underpinning to every one of our films. “When we sit down in our creative process, we’re never intending or focused on, ‘We’re making it for children,’ though it may come out that way.”
Can Nintendo stay competitive in the evolving videogames industry? WSJ’s Sarah E. Needleman and analyst Michael Pachter discuss Nintendo’s game-changing approach to the videogames industry. The founder of the animation studio behind “Super Mario” and the yellow, chattering “minions” cartoon characters says his movies aren’t made specifically for children. “Thematically there’s an underpinning to every one of our films. “When we sit down in our creative process, we’re never intending or focused on, ‘We’re making it for children,’ though it may come out that way.”
How the Minions Became Hollywood’s Mightiest Franchise Animation studio Illumination decided to allow fans to become informal advocates for the thumb-shaped, gibberish-speaking klutzes‘If we create stuff and it’s lame, it will be held against us,’ says Illumination CEO Chris Meledandri, the man behind the Minions. ‘But when it’s just DIY, there’s great freedom to it.’Photo Illustration by Eleanor Shakespeare for The Wall Street Journal
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