Chris Buck

Christopher James Buck (born February 24, 1958) is an American film director, animator, and screenwriter known for co-directing Tarzan (1999), Surf's Up (2007) (which was nominated for the 2007 Oscar for Best Animated Feature), Frozen (2013), which won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature in 2014, Frozen II (2019), and Wish (2023). He also worked as a supervising animator and story artist on Pocahontas (1995) and Home on the Range (2004).

Chris Buck
Buck in 2015
Born
Christopher James Buck

(1958-02-24) February 24, 1958 (age 66)
Alma materCalifornia Institute of the Arts
Employer(s)Walt Disney Animation Studios (1978-2004; 2008–present)
Sony Pictures Animation (2004-2008)
Known forFilm direction, screenwriting
Notable workTarzan
Surf's Up
Frozen
Frozen Fever
Frozen II
Wish
Spouse
Shelley Rae Hinton
(m. 1989)
Children3
AwardsAcademy Award
Annie Award
BAFTA Award

He has won for one Academy Award, Annie Award and BAFTA Award, and has been nominated for two Academy, two BAFTA and five Annie Awards.[1]

Life and career

A native of Wichita, Kansas, Buck was inspired to explore animation by the first film he ever saw in a movie theatre as a child: Pinocchio (1940).[2] His family eventually moved to Placentia, California, where he graduated from El Dorado High School.[3]

Buck studied character animation for two years at CalArts, where he also taught from 1988 to 1993. At CalArts, Buck became friends with both John Lasseter[2] and Michael Giaimo. He began his career as an animator with Disney in 1978.[citation needed]

Besides his work as a co-director on Tarzan, Buck's other credits at Disney also include the 1995 animated feature Pocahontas, where he oversaw the animation of three central characters: Percy, Grandmother Willow, and Wiggins. Buck also helped design characters for the 1989 animated feature The Little Mermaid, performed experimental animation for The Rescuers Down Under (1990) and Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), and was an animator on The Fox and the Hound (1981) and The Black Cauldron (1985).[4]

Buck helped develop several films at Hyperion Pictures and served as a directing animator on the feature Bébé's Kids. He storyboarded Tim Burton's live-action featurette Frankenweenie (1984) and worked with Burton again as directing animator on the Brad Bird-directed Family Dog episode of Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stories and as director of the subsequent primetime animated series.

Buck's credits include a number of animated commercials (including some with the Keebler Elves) for such Los Angeles–based production entities as FilmFair, Kurtz & Friends, and Duck Soup.

Buck went on to co-direct Surf's Up at Sony Pictures Animation, which was released in June 2007.[5]

Buck with Frozen co-director Jennifer Lee and producer Peter Del Vecho

In 2008, Buck's old friend Lasseter, by then Disney Animation's chief creative officer, persuaded him to come back to Disney from Sony.[6]: 6, 11  Around September 2008, Buck pitched three ideas to Lasseter, one of which was a fairytale musical version of The Snow Queen; Lasseter liked the idea and authorized Buck to proceed with development.[6]: 6, 11  After it was put on hold during 2010,[7] the film was officially announced in December 2011 under the title Frozen, with a release date of November 27, 2013.[8] In turn, Buck persuaded Giaimo to come back to Disney to serve as the film's art director,[6]: 33  for which Giaimo would go on to win the Annie Award for Best Production Design in an Animated Feature Production.

In September 2014, it was announced that Buck and Lee would co-direct a short film based on the Frozen characters called Frozen Fever. It was released in March 2015, alongside Cinderella.[9]

On March 12, 2015, Disney announced that Buck and Lee would co-direct Frozen II, the sequel to Frozen.[10] It was released in November 2019.

Buck directed Wish, which was released in November 2023.[11]

Personal life

Buck is married to Shelley [12] Rae Hinton Buck, an Emmy and Oscar Award winner in sound editing. They had three sons, Ryder, Woody, and Reed.[13]

Their oldest son, Ryder, died at age 23 on October 27, 2013, in a car collision, when he was hit by two cars after his car broke down on the Glendale Freeway just one month before Frozen was released.[12] Ryder was a singer and songwriter performing in his band Ryder Buck and the Breakers, and was recovering from a year-long battle with a Stage 4 testicular cancer.[12] On March 2, 2014, upon accepting the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for co-directing Frozen at the 86th Academy Awards, Buck dedicated the award to his son Ryder.[12] The tragedy was an inspiration for the song "The Next Right Thing" in Frozen II, as well as a character named "Ryder."[14]

Reed lent his voice to Arnold, a little penguin from Surf's Up, directed by his father.[15]

Filmography

Feature films

YearFilmCredited as
DirectorWriterAnimatorCharacter
Designer
Visual
Development
OtherNotes
1981The Fox and the HoundNoNoCharacterNoNoNo
1985The Black CauldronNoNoYesNoNoNo(uncredited)
1987The Brave Little ToasterNoNoNoYesNoNo
1988Oliver & CompanyNoNoYesNoNoNo
1989The Little MermaidNoNoNoYesNoNo
1990The Rescuers Down UnderNoNoNoYesYesNo
1992Bébé's KidsNoNoNoNoNoYesAnimation Director
1995PocahontasNoNoSupervisingYesYesNoStoryboard Artist / Supervising Animator: Percy/Grandmother Willow/Wiggins
1999TarzanYesNoNoNoNoNo
2004Home on the RangeNoNoSupervisingNoNoNoSupervising Animator: Maggie
Mickey's Twice Upon a ChristmasNoNoNoNoNoYesAnimation Consultant; Direct-to-video
2006Open SeasonNoNoNoNoNoYesSpecial Thanks
2007Surf's UpYesScreenplayNoNoNoYesVoice of Filmmaker #2
2013FrozenYesStoryNoNoNoNo
2014Big Hero 6NoNoNoNoNoYesCreative Leadership
2016ZootopiaNoNoNoNoNoYes
MoanaNoNoNoNoNoYes
2018Ralph Breaks the InternetNoNoNoNoNoYes
2019Frozen IIYesStoryNoNoNoYes
2021Raya and the Last DragonNoNoNoNoNoYes
EncantoNoNoNoNoNoYes
2022Strange WorldNoNoNoNoNoYes
2023Wish[16]YesStoryNoNoNoYes

Short films

YearFilmCredited as
DirectorWriterAnimatorOtherNotes
1979Doctor of DoomNoNoNoYesVoice of Pepe
1982Fun with Mr. FutureNoNoYesNo
1984FrankenweenieNoNoNoYesSpecial Thanks
1987Sport Goofy in SoccermaniaNoNoSupervisingNo
1988Winter[17]NoNoNoYesSpecial Thanks
The Thing What Lurked in the TubNoNoNoYes
1989Palm Springs[17]NoNoNoYes
1990Next Door[17]NoNoNoYes
1991Box-Office BunnyNoNoKeyNo
2010Not Your TimeNoNoYesYesHimself
2015Frozen FeverYesStoryNoNo
2017Olaf's Frozen AdventureNoNoNoYesSpecial Thanks
2018A Bug in the RoomNoNoNoYes
2020Once Upon a SnowmanNoNoNoYesCreative Consultant

Television

YearTitleCredited as
DirectorAnimation
department
Character
Designer
Notes
1987Amazing StoriesNoSupervisingNoAnimation Supervisor - 1 Episode
1990Bill & Ted's Excellent AdventuresNoNoYesCharacter Designer - 13 Episodes
1993Family DogYesNoNoSeries Director
1996Quack PackNoNoYesCharacter Designer - 1 Episode

Documentaries

YearTitleRole
2014The Story of Frozen: Making a Disney Animated ClassicHimself
2020Into the Unknown: Making Frozen IIHimself; Special Thanks

Accolades

YearAwardcategoryWorkResultReference
1995Annie AwardsBest Individual Achievement for AnimationPocahontasNominated[1]
1999Outstanding Individual Achievement for Directing in an Animated Feature ProductionTarzanNominated
2000Sierra AwardBest Animated FilmNominated
2008Academy AwardsBest Animated FeatureSurf's UpNominated
Annie AwardsBest Directing in an Animated Feature ProductionNominated
Best Writing in an Animated Feature ProductionNominated
2013EDA AwardBest Animated Feature FilmFrozenNominated
AFCA AwardBest Animated FilmWon
Dubai International Film FestivalPeople's Choice AwardWon
SLFCA AwardBest Animated FilmWon
2014Academy AwardsAcademy Award for Best Animated FeatureWon
BAFTA Film AwardBest Animated Featured FilmWon
BAFTA Children's AwardBAFTA Kids Vote - Feature FilmWon
Best Feature FilmNominated
Annie AwardsOutstanding Achievement in Directing in an Animated Feature ProductionWon
Gold Derby AwardAnimated FeatureWon
Hugo AwardsBest Dramatic Presentation - Long FormNominated
International Online Cinema Awards (INOCA)Best Animated FeatureWon
Italian Online Movie Awards (IOMA)Best Animated Feature Film (Miglior film d'animazione)Nominated
Seattle Film Critics AwardBest Animated FeatureWon
VES AwardOutstanding Animation in an Animated Feature Motion PictureWon
2015Tokyo Anime AwardGrand Prize, Feature FilmWon
2019Seattle Film Critics AwardBest Animated FeatureFrozen IINominated
2020BAFTA Film AwardBest Animated Featured FilmNominated
Annie AwardsOutstanding Achievement for Directing in an Animated Feature ProductionNominated
Golden Globe awardBest Animated Feature FilmNominated
LEJA AwardBest Animated FeatureNominated
OFTA Film AwardBest Animated PictureNominated

References

External links