Shrek (Picture 4)
Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4.
Robin Williams, who had worked for Jeffrey Katzenberg before on Aladdin and had a bitter falling out with him and The Walt Disney Company over marketing agreements, has hinted in an interview that he refused a role in Shrek, because it would mean working for Katzenberg again. He would not state which role he had refused. Chris Farley was originally going to do the voice for Shrek and recorded at least half of the dialogue for the character, but died before the project was completed. DreamWorks then re-cast the voice role to Mike Myers. After Myers had completed providing the voice for the character, and the film was well into production, he asked to re-record all of his lines in a Scottish accent similar to the one his mother had used when she told him bedtime stories. Shrek (Picture 4). Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4. Myers had also employed a Scottish accent for a Saturday Night Live skit, a sketch in Wayne's World 2 and also for the characters Stuart MacKenzie in the motion picture So I Married an Axe Murderer, and Fat Bastard in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and Austin Powers in Goldmember. Don Bluth revealed in an interview that halfway through production of An American Tail: Fievel Goes West, Steven Spielberg approached Bluth with the concept of making Shrek as a traditionally animated film. Bluth agreed, and throughout the rest of the production of Fievel Goes West, he thought about what he was going to do to expand a small story into a feature length script. Spielberg only had two demands: Bill Murray would play Shrek and Steve Martin would play Donkey; both actors were available at the time. Shrek (Picture 4). Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4. However, when Fievel Goes West was released in cinemas, Spielberg spoke highly of it, but spoke even more highly of rival Disney's Beauty and the Beast. Bluth felt betrayed by this, leading to a bitter falling out between the two and Shrek being put in development hell. Shrek was originally set up to be animated as stop-motion. The tests were too costly and the executives were not pleased with the overall look and lack of facial expression in the main character. A test was then shot on live-action background plate miniature sets and the main characters were composited into the scene as computer graphics. Again, the look of the technique of the test wasn't conducive to produce an entire feature length animated film so the entire test was done as full computer graphics. Shrek was born and the project was green lit. Shrek (Picture 4). Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4.
Shrek (Picture 1)Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4.
Robin Williams, who had worked for Jeffrey Katzenberg before on Aladdin and had a bitter falling out with him and The Walt Disney Company over marketing agreements, has hinted in an interview that he refused a role in Shrek, because it would mean working for Katzenberg again. He would not state which role he had refused. Chris Farley was originally going to do the voice for Shrek and recorded at least half of the dialogue for the character, but died before the project was completed. DreamWorks then re-cast the voice role to Mike Myers. After Myers had completed providing the voice for the character, and the film was well into production, he asked to re-record all of his lines in a Scottish accent similar to the one his mother had used when she told him bedtime stories. Shrek (Picture 4). Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4. Myers had also employed a Scottish accent for a Saturday Night Live skit, a sketch in Wayne's World 2 and also for the characters Stuart MacKenzie in the motion picture So I Married an Axe Murderer, and Fat Bastard in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and Austin Powers in Goldmember. Don Bluth revealed in an interview that halfway through production of An American Tail: Fievel Goes West, Steven Spielberg approached Bluth with the concept of making Shrek as a traditionally animated film. Bluth agreed, and throughout the rest of the production of Fievel Goes West, he thought about what he was going to do to expand a small story into a feature length script. Spielberg only had two demands: Bill Murray would play Shrek and Steve Martin would play Donkey; both actors were available at the time. Shrek (Picture 4). Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4. However, when Fievel Goes West was released in cinemas, Spielberg spoke highly of it, but spoke even more highly of rival Disney's Beauty and the Beast. Bluth felt betrayed by this, leading to a bitter falling out between the two and Shrek being put in development hell. Shrek was originally set up to be animated as stop-motion. The tests were too costly and the executives were not pleased with the overall look and lack of facial expression in the main character. A test was then shot on live-action background plate miniature sets and the main characters were composited into the scene as computer graphics. Again, the look of the technique of the test wasn't conducive to produce an entire feature length animated film so the entire test was done as full computer graphics. Shrek was born and the project was green lit. Shrek (Picture 4). Shrek cartoon images gallery 4. Shrek cartoon pictures collection 4.
Shrek (Picture 2)
Shrek (Picture 3)
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