Disney executives hesitated for nearly a decade. The film was expensive (budgeted at $140 million), technically complex, and lacked the princesses or sidekicks that defined the Renaissance. It was only greenlit because of Clements and Musker’s sterling track record. By the time production ramped up in the early 2000s, the studio’s luck had run out. What makes Treasure Planet unforgettable is its world. The film’s production designers created a “retro-futurism” that blended the golden age of sail with sci-fi. Ships don’t fly through space; they sail through a breathable, star-filled void called the “etherium.” Solar collectors unfurl like canvas sails. Portals open like the jaws of a mechanical whale.
In the pantheon of Walt Disney Animation Studios, few films have a legacy as complicated as Treasure Planet . Released in 2002, it arrived at a tumultuous time for the studio. The dizzying highs of the Disney Renaissance (1989-1999) had faded, and audiences were beginning to shift their attention to computer-generated fare from Pixar and DreamWorks. Treasure Planet was a passion project, decades in the making, that fused classic literature with a futuristic, anime-infused aesthetic. It was also one of the biggest financial disasters in Disney’s history. Disneys Treasure Planet
The real treasure was never the loot of a thousand worlds. It was the story of a boy and a cyborg pirate, teaching each other how to trust again. And that, more than any box office gross, is priceless. Disney executives hesitated for nearly a decade