Was “Ralph Breaks the Internet” the first Disney production to feature computer-animated renditions of...
"Ralph Breaks the Internet" famously features most Disney princesses together sharing the same scene. While this includes modern computer-animated characters like Anna, Elsa, Merida, Moana and Rapunzel which appear to be nearly identical to their versions in the original movies; it also features some princesses which I've only seen in traditional (hand-drawn) animation (ignoring live-action versions for the purposes of this question).
These characters include:
- Ariel
- Aurora
- Belle
- Cinderella
- Mulan
- Jasmine
- Pocahontas
- Snow White
Admittedly, I can't say I've seen every Disney spin-off or short that these characters appear in. I've only seen the main theatrical movies related to each character.
My question is this: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters, and their costumes designs, created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet", or have these versions appeared previously in some other Disney production and the costume designs are based on (or at least resemble) those?
I realize that the "comfy clothes" designs are new. I'm talking about the scene in which they appear in their more traditional attire:
animation ralph-breaks-the-internet
|
show 3 more comments
"Ralph Breaks the Internet" famously features most Disney princesses together sharing the same scene. While this includes modern computer-animated characters like Anna, Elsa, Merida, Moana and Rapunzel which appear to be nearly identical to their versions in the original movies; it also features some princesses which I've only seen in traditional (hand-drawn) animation (ignoring live-action versions for the purposes of this question).
These characters include:
- Ariel
- Aurora
- Belle
- Cinderella
- Mulan
- Jasmine
- Pocahontas
- Snow White
Admittedly, I can't say I've seen every Disney spin-off or short that these characters appear in. I've only seen the main theatrical movies related to each character.
My question is this: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters, and their costumes designs, created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet", or have these versions appeared previously in some other Disney production and the costume designs are based on (or at least resemble) those?
I realize that the "comfy clothes" designs are new. I'm talking about the scene in which they appear in their more traditional attire:
animation ralph-breaks-the-internet
As clarification, are you interested in ANY Disney production, or just movies? Say, would you accept videogame 3d renders?
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:09
@GGMG Any official Disney production is fair game. Movies, shorts, cartoon shows... and yes games. As long as they feature 3d characters like the ones shown here.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:12
1
Gotcha. I added my answer, the series Kingdom Hearts have 3D renders of the princesses that predate RBtI by almost a decade. Unfortunately, now your title and comment don't match, I'd advise you update your question to reflect you're not just looking for movies.
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:24
What what? Cinderella's dress is white. Source: VHS
– Joshua
Dec 13 '18 at 20:11
1
Right. Feel free to edit. Thanks.
– Tushar Raj
Jan 4 at 13:28
|
show 3 more comments
"Ralph Breaks the Internet" famously features most Disney princesses together sharing the same scene. While this includes modern computer-animated characters like Anna, Elsa, Merida, Moana and Rapunzel which appear to be nearly identical to their versions in the original movies; it also features some princesses which I've only seen in traditional (hand-drawn) animation (ignoring live-action versions for the purposes of this question).
These characters include:
- Ariel
- Aurora
- Belle
- Cinderella
- Mulan
- Jasmine
- Pocahontas
- Snow White
Admittedly, I can't say I've seen every Disney spin-off or short that these characters appear in. I've only seen the main theatrical movies related to each character.
My question is this: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters, and their costumes designs, created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet", or have these versions appeared previously in some other Disney production and the costume designs are based on (or at least resemble) those?
I realize that the "comfy clothes" designs are new. I'm talking about the scene in which they appear in their more traditional attire:
animation ralph-breaks-the-internet
"Ralph Breaks the Internet" famously features most Disney princesses together sharing the same scene. While this includes modern computer-animated characters like Anna, Elsa, Merida, Moana and Rapunzel which appear to be nearly identical to their versions in the original movies; it also features some princesses which I've only seen in traditional (hand-drawn) animation (ignoring live-action versions for the purposes of this question).
These characters include:
- Ariel
- Aurora
- Belle
- Cinderella
- Mulan
- Jasmine
- Pocahontas
- Snow White
Admittedly, I can't say I've seen every Disney spin-off or short that these characters appear in. I've only seen the main theatrical movies related to each character.
My question is this: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters, and their costumes designs, created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet", or have these versions appeared previously in some other Disney production and the costume designs are based on (or at least resemble) those?
I realize that the "comfy clothes" designs are new. I'm talking about the scene in which they appear in their more traditional attire:
animation ralph-breaks-the-internet
animation ralph-breaks-the-internet
edited Jan 11 at 7:53
RyanfaeScotland
21419
21419
asked Dec 13 '18 at 7:00
Tushar RajTushar Raj
1,32711536
1,32711536
As clarification, are you interested in ANY Disney production, or just movies? Say, would you accept videogame 3d renders?
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:09
@GGMG Any official Disney production is fair game. Movies, shorts, cartoon shows... and yes games. As long as they feature 3d characters like the ones shown here.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:12
1
Gotcha. I added my answer, the series Kingdom Hearts have 3D renders of the princesses that predate RBtI by almost a decade. Unfortunately, now your title and comment don't match, I'd advise you update your question to reflect you're not just looking for movies.
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:24
What what? Cinderella's dress is white. Source: VHS
– Joshua
Dec 13 '18 at 20:11
1
Right. Feel free to edit. Thanks.
– Tushar Raj
Jan 4 at 13:28
|
show 3 more comments
As clarification, are you interested in ANY Disney production, or just movies? Say, would you accept videogame 3d renders?
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:09
@GGMG Any official Disney production is fair game. Movies, shorts, cartoon shows... and yes games. As long as they feature 3d characters like the ones shown here.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:12
1
Gotcha. I added my answer, the series Kingdom Hearts have 3D renders of the princesses that predate RBtI by almost a decade. Unfortunately, now your title and comment don't match, I'd advise you update your question to reflect you're not just looking for movies.
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:24
What what? Cinderella's dress is white. Source: VHS
– Joshua
Dec 13 '18 at 20:11
1
Right. Feel free to edit. Thanks.
– Tushar Raj
Jan 4 at 13:28
As clarification, are you interested in ANY Disney production, or just movies? Say, would you accept videogame 3d renders?
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:09
As clarification, are you interested in ANY Disney production, or just movies? Say, would you accept videogame 3d renders?
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:09
@GGMG Any official Disney production is fair game. Movies, shorts, cartoon shows... and yes games. As long as they feature 3d characters like the ones shown here.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:12
@GGMG Any official Disney production is fair game. Movies, shorts, cartoon shows... and yes games. As long as they feature 3d characters like the ones shown here.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:12
1
1
Gotcha. I added my answer, the series Kingdom Hearts have 3D renders of the princesses that predate RBtI by almost a decade. Unfortunately, now your title and comment don't match, I'd advise you update your question to reflect you're not just looking for movies.
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:24
Gotcha. I added my answer, the series Kingdom Hearts have 3D renders of the princesses that predate RBtI by almost a decade. Unfortunately, now your title and comment don't match, I'd advise you update your question to reflect you're not just looking for movies.
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:24
What what? Cinderella's dress is white. Source: VHS
– Joshua
Dec 13 '18 at 20:11
What what? Cinderella's dress is white. Source: VHS
– Joshua
Dec 13 '18 at 20:11
1
1
Right. Feel free to edit. Thanks.
– Tushar Raj
Jan 4 at 13:28
Right. Feel free to edit. Thanks.
– Tushar Raj
Jan 4 at 13:28
|
show 3 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Not if we're counting videogames.
The game series Kingdom Hearts, an official Disney/Square Enix joint production, has 3D renders of your mentioned characters, along with almost every "official" Disney princess (and a few unofficial ones).
In your order:
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
Interestingly enough, the only princess you mentioned that hasn't made it into the games yet is Pocahontas. In that case, this might be her first 3D outing.
1
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
7
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
7
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
5
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
4
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
|
show 3 more comments
A few of the princesses also appeared in Disney Junior's animated show Sofia the First.
From Disney movie list:
Ariel, Aurora, Belle, Cinderella, Mulan, Jasmine and Snow White appeared in the series. Only Pocahontas has not been in the show.
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
2
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
2
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
1
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
2
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
|
show 2 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Not if we're counting videogames.
The game series Kingdom Hearts, an official Disney/Square Enix joint production, has 3D renders of your mentioned characters, along with almost every "official" Disney princess (and a few unofficial ones).
In your order:
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
Interestingly enough, the only princess you mentioned that hasn't made it into the games yet is Pocahontas. In that case, this might be her first 3D outing.
1
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
7
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
7
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
5
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
4
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
|
show 3 more comments
Not if we're counting videogames.
The game series Kingdom Hearts, an official Disney/Square Enix joint production, has 3D renders of your mentioned characters, along with almost every "official" Disney princess (and a few unofficial ones).
In your order:
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
Interestingly enough, the only princess you mentioned that hasn't made it into the games yet is Pocahontas. In that case, this might be her first 3D outing.
1
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
7
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
7
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
5
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
4
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
|
show 3 more comments
Not if we're counting videogames.
The game series Kingdom Hearts, an official Disney/Square Enix joint production, has 3D renders of your mentioned characters, along with almost every "official" Disney princess (and a few unofficial ones).
In your order:
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
Interestingly enough, the only princess you mentioned that hasn't made it into the games yet is Pocahontas. In that case, this might be her first 3D outing.
Not if we're counting videogames.
The game series Kingdom Hearts, an official Disney/Square Enix joint production, has 3D renders of your mentioned characters, along with almost every "official" Disney princess (and a few unofficial ones).
In your order:
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
Interestingly enough, the only princess you mentioned that hasn't made it into the games yet is Pocahontas. In that case, this might be her first 3D outing.
answered Dec 13 '18 at 8:22
GGMGGGMG
1,044817
1,044817
1
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
7
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
7
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
5
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
4
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
|
show 3 more comments
1
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
7
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
7
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
5
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
4
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
1
1
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
+1. Thanks. Wasn't aware of this. Have to say that these versions look significantly less detailed than the Ralph versions. But it's something.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:25
7
7
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
@TusharRaj As GGMG noted in their comment, some of the Kingdom Hearts games are over a decade old at this point, so with the progress of technology, the models will naturally look outdated compared to the ones in Ralph Breaks The Internet.
– F1Krazy
Dec 13 '18 at 12:36
7
7
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
@F1Krazy Additionally, there's usually a difference between real-time rendered game graphics and prerendered videos (though that difference has been getting smaller as time goes on).
– JAB
Dec 13 '18 at 19:42
5
5
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
@JAB I want to emphasize that a little; even modern AAA games have a tiny, tiny fraction as many polygons as a single scene in a 3D movie. The gap is closing mostly because we're discovering tricks that, while you're distracted by a game, you don't notice. There's a reason movies need massive render farms to compile everything in under a year and Just Cause 3 can run on my dinky laptop.
– Nic Hartley
Dec 13 '18 at 22:23
4
4
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
@Nic I’d actually flip that around: there’s a difference because movies can accept massive render farms working for a year to produce a final scene, while games have to run in real time on dinky laptops. That’s why the difference in detail hasn’t narrowed as much as you might expect — as computers get more powerful and games can have more detailed graphics, movies also use the increased power to improve their graphics instead of to cut rendering resources.
– cpast
Dec 14 '18 at 4:03
|
show 3 more comments
A few of the princesses also appeared in Disney Junior's animated show Sofia the First.
From Disney movie list:
Ariel, Aurora, Belle, Cinderella, Mulan, Jasmine and Snow White appeared in the series. Only Pocahontas has not been in the show.
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
2
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
2
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
1
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
2
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
|
show 2 more comments
A few of the princesses also appeared in Disney Junior's animated show Sofia the First.
From Disney movie list:
Ariel, Aurora, Belle, Cinderella, Mulan, Jasmine and Snow White appeared in the series. Only Pocahontas has not been in the show.
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
2
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
2
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
1
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
2
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
|
show 2 more comments
A few of the princesses also appeared in Disney Junior's animated show Sofia the First.
From Disney movie list:
Ariel, Aurora, Belle, Cinderella, Mulan, Jasmine and Snow White appeared in the series. Only Pocahontas has not been in the show.
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
A few of the princesses also appeared in Disney Junior's animated show Sofia the First.
From Disney movie list:
Ariel, Aurora, Belle, Cinderella, Mulan, Jasmine and Snow White appeared in the series. Only Pocahontas has not been in the show.
Ariel:
Aurora:
Belle:
Cinderella:
Mulan:
Jasmine:
Snow White:
edited Dec 13 '18 at 17:53
answered Dec 13 '18 at 12:25
AvaAva
2215
2215
2
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
2
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
1
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
2
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
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show 2 more comments
2
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
2
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
1
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
2
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
2
2
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
+1. Thanks. This answer illustrates my point. Though these are indeed CG appearences predating Ralph, I wouldn't say they resemble the character designs shown in the movie.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 13:00
2
2
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@TusharRaj, the thing is, the character designs for Ralph 2 are new because they're made to match the movie's art style. Even Elsa, Anna and Rapunzel are different. They didn't reuse the previous models. So, what's exactly your question?
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 16:58
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
@Arturo: Were the computer-animated versions of these characters created brand-new for "Ralph Breaks the Internet" This.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 14 '18 at 17:00
1
1
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
@TusharRaj, your question seems ambiguous, because the 3D princesses have more than one computer-animated version. Rapunzel has 4 versions (original, Sofia the 1st, Kingdom Hearts, Ralph 2). There's no "the" computer animated version.
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:07
2
2
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
@TusharRaj, I call it ambiguous because after having clear answers to your question, you seem to complain they don't resemble the character designs shown in Ralph 2. So, that led me to believe there's 2 questions. 1) Are there other 3D versions of the 2D princesses? 2) Are the specific character designs in Ralph 2 newly created for the movie? The current answers answer 1), but you seem to be asking for 2).
– Arturo Torres Sánchez
Dec 14 '18 at 17:19
|
show 2 more comments
As clarification, are you interested in ANY Disney production, or just movies? Say, would you accept videogame 3d renders?
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:09
@GGMG Any official Disney production is fair game. Movies, shorts, cartoon shows... and yes games. As long as they feature 3d characters like the ones shown here.
– Tushar Raj
Dec 13 '18 at 8:12
1
Gotcha. I added my answer, the series Kingdom Hearts have 3D renders of the princesses that predate RBtI by almost a decade. Unfortunately, now your title and comment don't match, I'd advise you update your question to reflect you're not just looking for movies.
– GGMG
Dec 13 '18 at 8:24
What what? Cinderella's dress is white. Source: VHS
– Joshua
Dec 13 '18 at 20:11
1
Right. Feel free to edit. Thanks.
– Tushar Raj
Jan 4 at 13:28