Animation and family fun
Mark 2008 holiday movies


In the animated movie “Bolt,“ a puppy TV star learns that unfamous friends can be a big help as he tries to get back to Hollywood in Los Angeles.(Disney Photo)

According to a famous song, there’s no place like home for the holidays.

Unless it’s the movie theater this year.

Movies coming out for the holidays between now and the end of December are homier than home, with family stories, family dogs and family fun at every turn.

Not that every movie is homey — there are science fiction thrillers, a James Bond adventure and even war stories on the schedule, too.

But the 2008 holiday movie season is rich in stories that families can see together, talk about and even learn from.

Six of them are animated features — full-length cartoons with colorful characters and the voices of favorite stars like Miley Cyrus, John Travolta and Matthew Broderick, as well as “Harry Potter” movie veterans Emma Watson (Hermione) and Robbie Coltrane (Hagrid).

The animated African adventure “Madagascar 2” opened in theaters at the start of this month and quickly established its popularity with $63 million in ticket sales the first weekend.

“Madagascar 2” will be joined in theaters November 21 by “Bolt,” a Disney feature about a lost puppy TV star who finds his way home with the help of some unfamous friends (and the voices of John Travolta and Miley Cyrus).

In December four more animations will be competing for viewers, headed by “The Tale of Despereaux,” which features Emma Watson; “Delgo,” a fantasy about uniting a divided world; “$9.99,” a story of a man who finds the meaning of life; and “Opus: The Last Christmas,” a film based on the newspaper comic strip.

The star-packed “Despereaux” (DES-pair-OH) is a modern fairy tale featuring a brave mouse who loves to read, an unhappy princess who needs his help and a rascally rat who becomes a villain.

“Delgo” offers a fantasy adventure in which a teenage dreamer is forced to find a way to unite a world that is divided between people who live on land and those who rule the skies, but need to come together to defeat a common enemy.

Money season

Ever since “Titanic” opened at Christmas in 1997 and went on to become the biggest money-maker ever (at $1.8 billion), movie companies have looked at the winter holidays as a huge source of income.

They’ve stretched the traditional Thanksgiving-to-New Year holiday season all the way back to Halloween, and each year they line up some of the biggest stars to attract viewers.

They’ve invested millions of dollars in the hope of making millions more.

Last year, holiday movies were second only to summer movies in earning their share of the year’s $9.6 billion total ticket sales.

Learning from dogs

One of the most eagerly awaited holiday movies this year is not an animation but the story of a dog.

A very loveable, but very bad, dog.

“Marley & Me” is based on a true story of a man and his wife who get a misbehaving puppy as a pet.

But the couple, played by Owen Wilson and Jennifer Aniston, discover they learn as much from the pooch as from each other.



  • Animated movies combine the storytelling of movies with the creativity of art. The result is a colorful kind of movie that can appeal to both kids and adults. As a class, talk about animated movies you have seen recently and when you were younger. What did you like best about them? Did the things you like change as you got older? What does animation give a movie that live actors and action do not?

  • Animated movies have been a hit with families ever since Walt Disney put “Snow White” on the big screen in 1937. Follow the success of holiday animated movies in the weekly “Box Office” movie reports in the newspaper. Make a bar graph showing ticket sales for each movie. Write a paragraph predicting which animated movie you think will be the most popular for the holidays, and why.

  • Holiday movies are a great way to practice math with big numbers. Look for news about movie ticket sales in the newspaper this week. If the average ticket price is $7 today, use a calculator to figure how many tickets were sold for the top movie last weekend. Think up two other movie math problems to share with a friend.

  • Both “Despereaux” and “Delgo” explore how people from humble backgrounds rise to overcome obstacles and help others. In the newspaper, find a story about someone who came from a humble background or overcame obstacles to achieve success. Write a paragraph describing how the person achieved success — and why.






  •