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How Ne Zha 2 dethroned Inside Out 2 as the highest-grossing animated film ever

How Ne Zha 2 dethroned Inside Out 2 as the highest-grossing animated film ever

CBC14-03-2025

If you're an animation fan, by now you've probably heard of the Chinese fantasy feature Ne Zha 2. If you haven't, then you may be surprised to learn that the film has recently surpassed Disney and Pixar's Inside Out 2 to become the highest-grossing animated film of all time.
The sequel follows the titular character Ne Zha, as he embarks on a sort of vengeance mission with the help of kings, gods and other mythical creatures, in order to restore health and peace to his community.
The film is not only the biggest film of 2025 and the biggest film ever produced in China, but it's also the fifth-highest grossing movie in global box office history, having made more than $2 billion.
Today on Commotion, film critic Rachel Ho joins host Elamin Abdelmahmoud to explain how the franchise film achieved world domination and earned its place in animated film history.
WATCH | Today's episode on YouTube (this segment begins at 16:21):

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Did 'bean mouth' really kill Pixar's Elio at the box office?
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Starting in the early 2000s, Kricfalusi wrote blog posts criticizing a particular style of art and derivative mentality he believed came out of the California Institute of the Arts — an influential arts and animation school founded by Walt Disney and his brother, Roy, in 1961. His criticisms were pointedly about the style championed by Disney, then copied to diminishing returns — including in movies like Treasure Planet and The Iron Giant. Though the animation in those movies looks nothing like what most people today think of as the CalArts style, the name stuck. And as many graduates of the school became associated with shows and movies that shared a similar bean-mouth design — including Elio, which has a pair of CalArts alumni listed as directors — the two names came to describe a common gripe. "That phrase has become a shorthand for a more fair criticism. Which frankly is: 'Animation as innovation rather than animation as imitation,' " Maher said. 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Cartoon characters teach children about faith
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