When it comes to film moguls, there are few as successful or influential as Jeffrey Katzenberg. He had a hand in Raiders of the Lost Ark and reunited the Star Trek crew for their big-screen outings (getting on his hands and knees in a restaurant to beg Leonard Nimoy to return to his pointy-eared Vulcan) – but his biggest achievement was to bring about Disney’s second golden age of animation.
Through the 1970s and ’80s, Disney released a string of lacklustre animations that threatened the future of the studio. Katzenberg turned the tide, overseeing the release of The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin and The Lion King, which paved the way for Disney to become the entertainment monolith it is today. Katzenberg left Disney in 1994 and set up DreamWorks with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen. Their stable includes the Shrek, Madagascar and How to Train Your Dragon franchises, as well as a Kung Fu Panda.
“Those three words, no matter who you say it to, no matter where you are in the world, it makes people smile,” Katzenberg says. One imagines the pitch meeting for Kung Fu Panda was one of the shortest ever. “It was a eureka moment and those are few and far between,” he confirms.
The first Kung Fu Panda came out in 2008 but its full potential is only now being realised. Kung Fu Panda 3 has just become the highest-grossing animated film in China. Box-office tills are still ringing but the film has already made more in China than in the US. China is on the brink of becoming the biggest market for films. Did Katzenberg see that coming?
“The answer is no but neither did anyone else,” he says. “If you go back when we started the franchise, China had not really begun its ascendency. When the first movie came out there was a huge excitement and, frankly, respect and admiration for the movie. It was the first time any western film did such a good job of embracing the culture and values of China.”
That is one of the great traditions of animated movies – they are borderless
Will Chinese influences become more apparent in films, as they try to capitalise on that market?