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Paramount To Start An Own Animation Division

The partnership between Paramount and DreamWorks Animation is getting more confusing by the day. The contract is

set to expire on December 31, 2012, and although Paramount offered a one-year extension to DreamWorks Animation, Jeffrey Katzenberg has declined. So Paramount decided to go in a different direction, and is launching their own animation division, titled (you guessed it) Paramount Animation. The studio plans on releasing one animated film per year.  I’m not so sure if this is good news for Paramount. As it stands Dreamworks in no way compares to the talent working behind Pixar but they do deliver box office hits and from time to time surprise us with something relatively decent. In fact the year might end with Rango potentially being the best animated feature of 2011. To be fair it seems Paramount had no choice in the matter but the question remains: Do they have the talent to successfully compete with other animated studios such as Pixar and Dreamworks? Here is the press release.

(Los Angeles, CA – July 6, 2011) — Paramount Pictures, a unit of Viacom Inc. (NYSE:VIA and VIA.B), will launch an in-house animation division, with its first title slated for release in 2014. In making the announcement, Paramount Chairman & CEO Brad Grey said the initiative was part of the studio’s long-term strategy for growth and that the new division, Paramount Animation, will focus on high quality animation with budgets per picture of up to $100 million.

Paramount Animation’s mandate will be the development of the broadest range of family CGI animated films, with a key piece being titles under the label of Viacom’s Nickelodeon, the number one entertainment brand for kids worldwide. Paramount will also look to build on Viacom’s already thriving global consumer products business by seeking to capitalize on merchandising opportunities tied to all Paramount Animation releases.

The division will be part of the Paramount Motion Picture Group, reporting to the group’s president, Adam Goodman, and will initially target one release per year. Vice Chair Rob Moore, COO Frederick Huntsberry and Goodman are now conducting a search for the leader of the division.

“We’ve come a long way over the last six years,” said Grey.  “Our team has worked hard to build best in class production, marketing and distribution divisions which have proven they consistently execute at the highest level across all genres and price points. Establishing an in-house animation division was the logical next step for us.”

“The marketplace has never offered as many opportunities to create wonderfully imaginative pictures at very appealing budget levels, so we feel this is a perfect moment to launch this effort. We are now eager to expand in animation with appropriate and prudent overhead and production budgets in a way that will allow us to be nimble, creative and innovative,” added Grey. “Paramount also has the distinct advantage of being part of the Viacom family, giving us the ability to leverage its portfolio of powerful and youthful brands to create and market great films and consumer products.”

While Paramount has released an array of successful animated films in its history, the company’s first fully owned CGI animated property was Rango, released to great acclaim in March 2011. The Western, directed by Gore Verbinski and featuring the voice of Johnny Depp in the title role, has grossed over $240 million worldwide and is the best reviewed animated movie so far this year.