Amblimation was a British animation production company that served as the animation subsidiary of Amblin Entertainment. It was formed by Steven Spielberg in May 1989, following the success of Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), and after he parted ways with Don Bluth due to creative differences.

The studio closed in 1997 after only eight years of operation after the box office failures of We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story and Balto. All 250 of Amblimation's crew members went on to join DreamWorks Animation, which was later acquired in 2016 by Universal's parent companies Comcast and NBCUniversal for $3.8 billion.

History

Film director and producer Steven Spielberg first began working in animation when he served as executive producer on An American Tail and The Land Before Time, both directed by Don Bluth, as well as Robert Zemeckis's Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Following the successes of all three films, Spielberg planned to collaborate with Bluth again to produce a sequel to An American Tail; however, owing to creative differences, both men parted ways. In light of Bluth's departure, Spielberg chose former Disney animator Phil Nibbelink and former Richard Williams storyboard artist Simon Wells, the great-grandson of science-fiction author H. G. Wells, both of whom had previously worked with him as supervising animators on Who Framed Roger Rabbit, to direct the sequel, Fievel Goes West. Fievel Goes West was officially put into production when the studio first opened in May 1989, and at the time, the studio was also developing We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story, an animated adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Cats Eventually, Cats was scrapped, and Nibbelink and Wells returned to finish We're Back!. However, shortly afterwards, Wells left the project again to direct Balto, leaving Nibbelink to finish We're Back! alone. Ultimately, We're Back! was a box-office bomb, grossing just over $9 million and failing to reach the massive success of Jurassic Park, which Spielberg had released the previous summer.

The commercial failure of We're Back! led to budgetary constraints on Balto, and would lead to it being Amblimation's final film. In October 1994, Spielberg co-founded DreamWorks Pictures with former Disney chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg and music executive David Geffen, and relocated 120 of Amblimation's crew members to Los Angeles as Balto neared completion, to form DreamWorks Animation. In early June 1995, Edgar Bronfman, Jr., then-head of Universal's parent company at the time, Seagram, agreed to discontinue Amblimation as part of a distribution deal with Geffen, despite the objections of his colleague, Michael Ovitz. After Balto failed at the box office, Amblimation was officially closed, and most of the remaining crew members joined DreamWorks to begin working on The Prince of Egypt, while some moved on to join other studios. DreamWorks would also pick up one of Amblimation's in-development projects, being the adaptation of Shrek! where it would become the 2001 animated film, Shrek.

Filmography

Theatrical feature films

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="text-align:center; margin=auto; width:100%;"

|-

! width="100" | Title

! width="100" | Release date

! width="95" | Director(s)

! width="115" | Story by

! width="115" | Screenplay by

! width="115" | Producer(s)

! width="95" | Budget

! width="95" | Box office gross

|-

! scope=row rowspan="2" | An American Tail: Fievel Goes West

| rowspan="2" |

| rowspan="2" | Phil Nibbelink<br>Simon Wells

|

| rowspan="2" | Flint Dille

| rowspan="2" | Steven Spielberg<br>Robert Watts

| rowspan="2" |$16.5 million

| rowspan="2" | $40,766,041

|-

| Charles Swenson

|-

! scope=row | We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story

|

| Phil Nibbelink<br>Simon Wells<br>Ralph Zondag<br>Dick Zondag

|

| John Patrick Shanley

| rowspan="3" | Steve Hickner

| $20 million

| $9,317,021 (US)

|-

! scope=row rowspan="2" | Balto

| rowspan="2" |

| rowspan="2" | Simon Wells

|

| rowspan="2" | Cliff Ruby<br>Elana Lesser<br>David Steven Cohen<br>Roger S.H. Schulman

| rowspan="2" | $31 million

| rowspan="2" |$11,348,324