1906 is Brad Bird’s latest project, and no it’s not being released under Pixar.
Also, no, it’s not John Carter of Mars. Andrew Stanton is doing John Carter, and that one will also not be released under Pixar.
1906 is based on the book 1906 by James Dalessandro, I believe. It is a story that takes place within and around the events of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake.
According to the Hollywood Reporter, 1906 is a live action film. It’s being produced and distributed by Warner Brothers. It doesn’t seem Pixar is involved at all.
Well, I’m hoping it would be an Incredibles 2 but it probably won’t so I went for another original film because he will definitely not make a sequel to Ratatouille that’d be just stupid.
As awesome as the Incredibles was, I couldn’t imagine a sequel to. Now that I think about it, I couldn’t imagine a sequel to any Pixar film. However, there was Toy Story 2, and now fast approaching is a Toy Story 3 AND cars 2.
I guess what Im saying is that the Incredibles movie didnt leave enough bait at the end of the movie for a sequel. But then again, neither did Toy Story so I believe there could be a scrap of hope! I’m right there with you though, I want a sequel to The Increibles!
Yeah, it seems to mainly be a Warner Bros. movie, but it’s pretty interesting that Disney, and even Pixar, are backing this. It’ll be realy interesting to see how much Pixar gets involved, and what it means for the future of the studio.
1906 and John Carter are not Pixar productions, are live-action, are directed by Pixar directors, and get a certain amount of story support from Pixar.
They should be considered more projects of Warner Bros and… umm, whichever the other studio is.
Pixar has a lot of directors who want to make movies. There really isn’t enough room for them all to be doing something at the same time, so projects like 1906 and John Carter are ways for these directors to be able to work on their projects and make movies while still being retained by Pixar. As awesome as Pixar was, if their directors could only make one movie every 7-10 years, a number of them would likely leave, and we wouldn’t want that, would we?