Disneys - Treasure Planet

But time has a way of polishing neglected gems. Today, Treasure Planet is no longer seen as a failure, but as a visionary masterpiece—a beautiful, heartbreaking, and tragically ahead-of-its-time experiment that deserves to be called one of Disney’s most daring films. The idea for Treasure Planet began with legendary animator John Musker, who, while working on The Little Mermaid in the late 1980s, doodled a sketch of Mickey Mouse as a cyborg in space. He and co-director Ron Clements (the duo behind Aladdin and The Great Mouse Detective ) wanted to adapt Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island —but not as a period piece. Their pitch was radical: take the 18th-century seafaring adventure and transplant it into a galaxy of solar surfers, alien taverns, and etherium-fueled galleons.

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. Disneys Treasure Planet

More critically, the film’s third act rushes through its emotional climax. After Silver’s sacrifice, the resolution is swift, with Jim suddenly mature and confident. A deleted scene—showing Jim visiting Silver on a distant dock to return his cybernetic arm—would have added a final, devastating emotional beat. Without it, the ending feels slightly truncated. Treasure Planet opened in November 2002 against the second Harry Potter film ( Chamber of Secrets ) and the Bond movie Die Another Day . It finished a distant third. Domestically, it grossed just $38 million. Worldwide, it crawled to $109 million—a catastrophic loss given its $140 million budget. But time has a way of polishing neglected gems

The visual language is heavily influenced by manga and anime—specifically the work of Hayao Miyazaki and French comic artist Jean “Mœbius” Giraud. The character of Long John Silver, a cyborg with a prosthetic arm and a robo-eye that swivels independently, is a marvel of 2D/3D integration. Disney’s animators used a then-revolutionary technology called “Deep Canvas” (previously tested in Tarzan ) to create 3D backgrounds that cameras could swoop through, while characters remained hand-drawn. He and co-director Ron Clements (the duo behind