List of Disney live-action adaptations and remakes of Disney animated films

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of live-action or photorealistic remakes produced by Walt Disney Pictures of its animated films. The list also includes the film's sequels and spin-offs within their universe. This list does not include remakes of live-action/animation hybrid films (such as Pete's Dragon), animated movies that were produced by another studio and later reimagined into live-action films by Disney, live-action films another studio made based on the same story as a Disney feature that were later acquired (such as Fox's Ever After or Pathé's The Wind in the Willows/Mr. Toad's Wild Ride), the direct to video release The Jungle Book: Mowgli`s Story, or based on animated television shows (such as Kim Possible or Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers).

Released[]

Theatrical films[]

Film Original film Release date Director(s) Screenwriter(s) Producer(s) Ref.
Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book The Jungle Book (1967) December 25, 1994 Stephen Sommers Stephen Sommers, Ronald Yanover, and Mark Geldman Edward S. Feldman and Raju Patel [1]
101 Dalmatians One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961) November 27, 1996 Stephen Herek John Hughes John Hughes and Ricardo Mestres [2]
102 Dalmatians One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)[a] November 22, 2000 Kevin Lima Kristen Buckley, Brian Regan, Bob Tzudiker, and Noni White Edward S. Feldman [3]
Alice in Wonderland Alice in Wonderland (1951)[b] March 5, 2010 Tim Burton Linda Woolverton Richard D. Zanuck, Joe Roth, Suzanne Todd, and Jennifer Todd [4][5]
Maleficent Sleeping Beauty (1959)[c] May 30, 2014 Robert Stromberg Joe Roth [6][7]
[8]
Cinderella Cinderella (1950) March 13, 2015 Kenneth Branagh Chris Weitz Simon Kinberg, Allison Shearmur, and David Barron [9][10]
[11][12]
The Jungle Book The Jungle Book (1967) April 15, 2016 Jon Favreau Justin Marks Jon Favreau and Brigham Taylor [13][14]
[15]
Alice Through the Looking Glass Alice in Wonderland (1951)[d] May 27, 2016 James Bobin Linda Woolverton Joe Roth, Suzanne Todd, Jennifer Todd, and Tim Burton [16]
Beauty and the Beast Beauty and the Beast (1991) March 17, 2017 Bill Condon Stephen Chbosky and Evan Spiliotopoulos David Hoberman and Todd Lieberman [17][18]
[19]
Christopher Robin Winnie the Pooh films[e] August 3, 2018 Marc Forster Alex Ross Perry, Tom McCarthy, and Allison Schroeder (screenplay)
Greg Brooker and Mark Steven Johnson (story)
Brigham Taylor and Kristin Burr [20]
Dumbo Dumbo (1941) March 29, 2019 Tim Burton Ehren Kruger Justin Springer, Ehren Kruger, Derek Frey, and Katterli Frauenfelder [20]
Aladdin Aladdin (1992) May 24, 2019 Guy Ritchie John August and Guy Ritchie Dan Lin and Jonathan Elrich [20]
The Lion King[f] The Lion King (1994) July 19, 2019 Jon Favreau Jeff Nathanson Jon Favreau, Karen Gilchrist and Jeffrey Silver [22][20]
[23]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil Sleeping Beauty (1959)[g] October 18, 2019 Joachim Rønning Linda Woolverton, Noah Harpster, and Micah Fitzerman-Blue Joe Roth, Angelina Jolie and Duncan Henderson [24][25]
Cruella One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961)[h] May 28, 2021[i][27] Craig Gillespie Dana Fox and Tony McNamara (screenplay)
Aline Brosh McKenna, Kelly Marcel and Steve Zissis (story)
Andrew Gunn, Marc Platt, and Kristin Burr [25][28]
[29][30]
[31][32]
[33]

Disney+ films[]

Film Original film Release date Director(s) Screenwriter(s) Producer(s) Ref.
Lady and the Tramp Lady and the Tramp (1955) November 12, 2019 Charlie Bean Andrew Bujalski and Kari Granlund Brigham Taylor [5][34]
[35]
Mulan[j] Mulan (1998) September 4, 2020 Niki Caro Elizabeth Martin, Lauren Hynek, Rick Jaffa, and Amanda Silver Chris Bender, Tendo Nagenda, Jason T. Reed, and Jake Weiner [36][37]
[38]

Upcoming[]

Theatrical films[]

Film Original film Release date Director(s) Screenwriter(s) Producer(s) Ref.
The Little Mermaid The Little Mermaid (1989) May 26, 2023 Rob Marshall Jane Goldman and David Magee Rob Marshall, John DeLuca, Lin-Manuel Miranda, and Marc Platt [39][40]
[41]
Untitled The Jungle Book sequel The Jungle Book (1967)[k] TBA Jon Favreau Justin Marks Jon Favreau and Brigham Taylor [42]
Untitled The Lion King prequel The Lion King (1994)[l][m] Barry Jenkins Jeff Nathanson Adele Romanski and Mark Ceryak [43][44]
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) Marc Webb Erin Cressida Wilson Marc Platt [45][46]
[47]
Untitled Aladdin sequel Aladdin (1992)[n] TBA John Gatins and Andrea Berloff Dan Lin and Jonathan Eirich [48]
Hunchback The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) David Henry Hwang David Hoberman, Todd Lieberman, Josh Gad, and Don Hahn [49][50]
Bambi Bambi (1942) Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Lindsey Beer Chris Weitz, Paul Weitz, and Andrew Miano [51]
Hercules Hercules (1997) David Callaham Anthony and Joe Russo, Jeffery Silver, and Karen Gilchrist [52][53]
Untitled Cruella sequel 101 Dalmatians (1961)[o] Craig Gillespie Tony McNamara Jeff Nathanson [54]

Disney+ films[]

Film Original film Release date Director(s) Screenwriter(s) Producer(s) Ref.
Peter Pan & Wendy Peter Pan (1953) 2022 David Lowery David Lowery and Toby Halbrooks Joe Roth and Jim Whitaker [55][56]
[57][58]
[59][60]
[61]
Pinocchio Pinocchio (1940) TBA Robert Zemeckis Chris Weitz and Robert Zemeckis Chris Weitz and Andrew Milano [62][63]
[64][65]
[66][67]
[68][69]
[70]
The Sword in the Stone The Sword in the Stone (1963) Juan Carlos Fresnadillo Bryan Cogman Brigham Taylor [71][72]
[73]
Robin Hood Robin Hood (1973) Carlos López Estrada Kari Granlund Justin Springer [74]
Lilo & Stitch Lilo & Stitch (2002) TBA Mike Van Waes Dan Lin and Jonathan Eirich [75][76]
[77]
Untitled Prince Anders film Aladdin (1992)[p] Jordan Dunn, Michael Kvamme, Shane Andries and Chris Smith TBA [78][79]
Tink Tinker Bell (2008) Victoria Strouse TBA [80][81]

Scrapped projects[]

A live-action spin-off of Prince Charming titled Charming was in development with Stephen Chbosky writing and directing.[82] A prequel to Aladdin titled Genies, written by Mark Swift and Damian Shannon and produced by Tripp Vinson, was announced in 2015.[83] In March 2016, the studio announced a new film in development titled Rose Red, a live-action spin-off of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs which was to be told from the perspective of Snow White's sister, Red Rose.[84] The film was to be produced by Vinson and written by Justin Merz,[84] Evan Daugherty,[84] and Kristin Gore.[85] Brie Larson was considered for the title role.[85] In May 2021, it was reported that all of those projects were scrapped for unknown reasons.[77][better source needed]

Reception[]

Box office performance[]

Film U.S. release date Box office gross All-time ranking Budget Ref.
U.S. and Canada Other territories Worldwide U.S. and Canada Worldwide
The Jungle Book December 25, 1994 $43,229,904 N/A N/A 1,950 3,098 $30 million [86]
101 Dalmatians November 27, 1996 $136,189,294 $184,500,000 $320,689,294 428 422 $75 million [87]
102 Dalmatians November 22, 2000 $66,957,026 $116,654,745 $183,611,771 1,186 898 $85 million [88]
Alice in Wonderland March 5, 2010 $334,191,110 $691,276,000 $1,025,467,110 65 44 $200 million [89]
Maleficent May 30, 2014 $241,410,378 $517,129,407 $758,539,785 138 93 $180 million [90]
Cinderella March 13, 2015 $201,151,353 $342,363,000 $543,514,353 201 179 $95 million [91]
The Jungle Book April 15, 2016 $364,001,123 $602,549,477 $966,550,600 48 43 $175 million [92]
Alice Through the Looking Glass May 27, 2016 $77,041,381 $222,415,643 $299,457,024 1,011 470 $170 million [93]
Beauty and the Beast March 17, 2017 $504,014,165 $759,506,961 $1,263,521,126 14 16 $160 million [94]
Christopher Robin August 3, 2018 $99,215,042 $98,529,335 $197,744,377 746 834 $75 million [95]
Dumbo March 29, 2019 $114,766,307 $238,518,314 $353,284,621 592 371 $170 million [96]
Aladdin May 24, 2019 $355,559,216 $695,134,737 $1,050,693,953 51 34 $183 million [97]
The Lion King July 19, 2019 $543,638,043 $1,113,305,351 $1,656,943,394 11 7 $260 million [98]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil October 18, 2019 $113,929,605 $377,800,484 $491,730,089 608 220 $185 million [99]
Mulan September 4, 2020 N/A[j] $69,965,374 $69,965,374 N/A[j] 2,429 $200 million [100]
Cruella May 28, 2021 $86,101,500 $137,447,319 $223,548,819 897 720[101] $100 million [102]
Total $3,281,395,447 $6,167,096,147 $9,404,812,271 N/A N/A $2,343,000,000 N/A

Critical and public response[]

Film Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic CinemaScore
The Jungle Book (1994) 80%[103] 63[104] A–[105]
101 Dalmatians 41%[106] 49[107] A[105]
102 Dalmatians 31%[108] 35[109] B+[105]
Alice in Wonderland 51%[110] 53[111] A–[105]
Maleficent 54%[112] 56[113] A[105]
Cinderella 83%[114] 67[115] A[105]
The Jungle Book (2016) 94%[116] 77[117] A[105]
Alice Through the Looking Glass 28%[118] 34[119] A–[105]
Beauty and the Beast 71%[120] 65[121] A[105]
Christopher Robin 72%[122] 60[123] A[105]
Dumbo 46%[124] 51[125] A–[105]
Aladdin 57%[126] 53[127] A[105]
The Lion King 52%[128] 55[129] A[105]
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil 39%[130] 43[131] A[105]
Lady and the Tramp 65%[132] 48[133] A[105]
Mulan 73%[134] 66[135] A[105]
Cruella 74%[136] 59[137] A[105]

Academy Award wins and nominations[]

Film Best Costume Design Best Makeup and Hairstyling Best Production Design Best Visual Effects
102 Dalmatians Nominated
Alice in Wonderland Won Won Nominated
Maleficent Nominated
Cinderella
The Jungle Book (2016) Won
Beauty and the Beast Nominated Nominated
Christopher Robin Nominated
The Lion King
Maleficent: Mistress of Evil Nominated
Mulan Nominated Nominated

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ 102 Dalmatians is a sequel to 101 Dalmatians.
  2. ^ Alice in Wonderland (2010) acts as a sequel to Alice in Wonderland (1951).
  3. ^ Maleficent is a spin-off of Sleeping Beauty.
  4. ^ Alice Through the Looking Glass is a sequel to Alice in Wonderland (2010).
  5. ^ Christopher Robin acts as a sequel to the Winnie the Pooh franchise, mainly the Walt Disney Animation Studios-made Winnie the Pooh films.
  6. ^ The film, aside from its opening shot, was made with photorealistic computer animation.[21]
  7. ^ Maleficent: Mistress of Evil is a sequel to Maleficent (2014).
  8. ^ Cruella is a reboot of 101 Dalmatians (1996).
  9. ^ Disney also decided to release the film simultaneously on Disney+ with Premier Access in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.[26]
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c Mulan was released through Disney+ streaming service with a premium fee due to the effects of COVID-19 restrictions. However, it also had a theatrical release in several countries where theaters were open.
  11. ^ The film is a sequel to The Jungle Book (2016).
  12. ^ The film is a prequel/sequel to The Lion King (2019).
  13. ^ The film will be made with photorealistic computer animation.
  14. ^ The film is a sequel to Aladdin (2019).
  15. ^ The film is a sequel to Cruella (2021).
  16. ^ The film is a spin-off to Aladdin (2019).

References[]

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