Crest Animation Productions
Crest Animation Productions, and was an Indian-American animation studio located in Burbank, California, United States. The studio's most well known work include Alpha and Omega and The Swan Princess.
History
The studio was founded by film director Richard Rich in 1986, who previously worked at Walt Disney Productions. In 1987, the studio was owned by Nest Family Entertainment to produce and distribute educational animated Christian and historical videos for children such as Animated Stories from the New Testament, Animated Hero Classics and Animated Stories from the Bible. In 1994, the two studios produced and released their first and most famous collaborated feature film called The Swan Princess, based on the classic ballet Swan Lake, it was distributed for New Line Cinema. The film was rather successful on its first opening weekend. It also spawned two sequels, ' and ', neither of which did a good performance. In 1999, the two studios teamed up with Morgan Creek Productions and Rankin/Bass Productions to produce an animated adaptation of Rodgers and Hammerstein's The King and I for Warner Bros.. However, the film bombed at the box office and received very negative reviews, which forced Nest Family Entertainment to sell off the studio to Crest Animation Studios in 2000 to form RichCrest Animation Studios. In 2001, the studio produced and released its last collaborated feature film with Nest Family Entertainment, The Trumpet of the Swan, based on E.B. White's 1970 novel of the same name. It was distributed by TriStar Pictures and also performed poorly. RichCrest Animation Studios continued to produce Bible videos for Nest Family Entertainment until 2005. In February 2007, it was renamed to Crest Animation Productions and announced that it was "expanding its business to become a full-service animation studio specializing in the development and production of CGI-animated properties for theatrical, television, home entertainment and interactive distribution". The studio was finally shut down in 2013, after failing to make a profit. Many of its productions contracts were handed over to other studios for completion. For example, Norm of the North, a film that was in production at Crest before closing, along with future Alpha and Omega sequels were handed over to be finished at Splash Entertainment.Filmography
Theatrical Features
Rich eraTitle | Release Date | Notes |
The Swan Princess | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
The King and I | Co-production with Morgan Creek Productions, Rankin/Bass Productions and Nest Family Entertainment |
RichCrest era
Title | Release Date | Notes |
The Trumpet of the Swan | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
' |
Crest era'
Title | Release Date | Notes |
Alpha and Omega'' | Co-production with Lionsgate Films; and produced in CGI. |
Direct-to-Video
Rich eraTitle | Release Date | Notes |
Animated Stories from the New Testament | 1987-2004 | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment |
Animated Hero Classics | 1991-97, 2004 | Co-Production with Living History Productions, Nest Family Entertainment and Warner-Nest Animation |
Animated Stories from the Bible | 1992-95 | Co-Production with Nest Family Entertainment |
' | ||
' | ||
The Scarecrow |
RichCrest era
Title | Release Date | Notes |
' | 2003 | Co-production with TLC Entertainment and SMEC Media |
Arthur's Missing Pal | Co-production with WGBH-TV, Mainframe Entertainment and Marc Brown Studios |
Crest era
Note: All films CGI.
Title | Release Date | Notes |
The Little Engine That Could | Co-production with Universal Animation Studios | |
The Swan Princess Christmas | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
' |
Films originally slated for production at Crest
Title | Release Date | Notes |
' | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
' | ||
' | ||
' | ||
Norm of the North | Co-produced by Splash Entertainment and Assemblage Entrainment | |
' | May 10, 2016 | |
' | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
' | November 8, 2016 | |
' | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
' | May 9, 2017 | |
' | Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment | |
Co-production with Nest Family Entertainment |