D23’s Lineup of Events for 2016

UPDATED April 11: Please see below for date changes and event additions.

In 2016, D23 will expand member events with more experiences on the East Coast and new twists on current favorites.*

January 29
D23 Behind-the-Scenes Experience
Burbank, California

February 20
Alice in Wonderland
Burbank, California

March 3
Have a Wild Time at Zootopia
Chicago, IL

March 4
D23 Presents Walt Disney’s Chicago
Chicago, IL

March 18
Lunch with a Disney Legend: Charlie Ridgway
Walt Disney World Resort

March 19
Alice in Wonderland
Walt Disney World Resort

April 8
Lunch with a Disney Legend
Burbank, California

April 9
D23 Day at The Walt Disney Studios and Archives
Burbank, California

April 13
Enjoy a Complimentary Advance Screening of The Jungle Book in 3-D
Las Vegas, NV – Houston, TX – Portland, OR – Boston, MA – Atlanta, GA

April 20
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On Tour
Portland, Oregon

May 20
Finding Nemo
Disney’s Contemporary Resort, Walt Disney World

May 21
Finding Nemo
Walt Disney World Resort

June 4
Finding Nemo
Burbank, California

June 8
D23 Member Night at Newsies—On TourSalt Lake City, Utah

June 25
D23 Day at The Walt Disney Studios and Archives
Burbank, California

July 18
D23 Behind-the-Scenes Experience
Burbank, California

August 20
The Reluctant Dragon 75th anniversary screening event
Burbank, California

August 22—August 26
D23 Presents Aloha Aulani
Aulani, A Disney Resort & Spa

September 23
Lunch with a Disney Legend
Walt Disney World Resort

September 24:
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Walt Disney World Resort

Fall
D23 Disney Fanniversary Celebration: Beauty and the Beast
(More information coming in 2016)

October 8
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
Burbank, California

October 22 Week of October 1
Sip & Scream
Walt Disney World Resort

November 18 November 4
Lunch with a Disney Legend
Burbank, California

November 19 November 5
D23 Day at The Walt Disney Studios and Archives
Burbank, California

November 19–20
Destination D: Amazing Adventures
Walt Disney World Resort

*All events and dates are subject to change.

 D23 Behind-the-Scenes Experiences

In 2015, D23 Members had the opportunity to explore hidden Disney gems—such as the Animation Research Library—while hearing stories from Disney luminaries such as Walt Disney Archives founder Dave Smith and animator Andreas Deja. In 2016, D23 will bring back this popular event with incredible guests and new locations, while adding even more surprises and a special gift.

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Special Screenings on the Disney Studio Lot and at Walt Disney World Resort

 In 2016, D23 will once again offer special screenings on both coasts of Disney favorites including Alice in Wonderland, Finding Nemo, and Bedknobs and Broomsticks. Plus, to celebrate the 75th anniversary of The Reluctant Dragon, D23 will hold a special screening event on the Studio lot including special guests, picture spots, and more surprises.

D23’s Lunch With a Disney Legend

 Following a year that included exclusive luncheons with such luminaries as former Imagineer Orlando Ferrante and voice actress Kathryn Beaumont, D23 will be bringing back the popular event series on the Walt Disney Studios lot, as well as adding events on the East Coast. The first event will be at Walt Disney World Resort with Disney Legend Charlie Ridgway, who helped open Walt Disney World, Epcot Center, and Disneyland Paris.

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D23 Day at The Walt Disney Studios and Archives

 D23 Gold Member-exclusive tours of the historic Studio lot and Walt Disney Archives in Burbank return, highlighting historic moments from Disney film, television, and theme parks—and in 2016 we will be enhancing the experience with an exclusive tour of the newly restored Walt Disney’s office suite.

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Advance Screenings

This year, D23 Members were able to attend previews of Cinderella and Inside Out in cities such as New York, Orlando, Chicago, San Francisco, and Philadelphia. Next year, in partnership with The Walt Disney Studios, D23 will screen a selection of upcoming releases. And for those guests who may not live in the cities where movies are screened, D23 Gold Members across the country will be selected at random to receive complimentary movie passes, which will be included in issues of Disney twenty-three, D23’s quarterly publication.

D23 Member Nights at Newsies—On Tour

 Disney fans are cheering for the Tony® Award-winning Newsies, now on tour. In 2016, guests in Salt Lake City, Portland, and other cities around the country are invited to see the show with premium seats on special nights and a talk-back with the cast following the show.

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Member Mixers Around the Country

After giving members a peek at the reimagined Disney Stores in Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, and Kentucky, in 2016, Disney Store will once again invite D23 Members for exclusive mornings of shopping, discounts, games, and goodies. Also this past year, D23 held mixers including Breakfast on Broadway in New York and Never Had a Friend Like D23 events to celebrate Aladdin in Phoenix, Sacramento, and Seattle. Look for more mixers in cities around the country in 2016.

Mickey’s of Glendale

The Walt Disney Imagineering employee store will once again offer shopping opportunities to D23 Gold Members at Walt Disney World Resort and in Southern California. Guests will be able to peruse collectibles and pick up official Imagineering merchandise. Dates to be announced in 2016.

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 D23 Disney Fanniversary Celebration—Beauty and the Beast

Following D23’s first “Home Edition” of Fanniversary, celebrating the 60th anniversary of Lady and the Tramp, D23 in 2016 will bring fans around the world unprecedented behind-the-scenes access to the spectacular, Academy Award®-winning animated feature Beauty and the Beast, which celebrates its 25th anniversary next year.

 Signature Events

Look for the return of some favorites, including Sip & Scream (a Halloween twist on D23’s Sip & Stroll event at Walt Disney World in the fall), as well as special holiday events on both the East and West Coasts. More details will be announced in 2016.

Five Moments from Walt’s Most Memorable Christmas

Walt Disney had many memorable Christmases—from the year he gave his wife, Lillian, a Springer Spaniel in a hatbox, to the year he surprised his daughters, Diane and Sharon, with a beautiful backyard playhouse. But when asked in 1957 of his most memorable Christmas, Walt thought back to his days as a paperboy, when he received a very memorable gift.

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Here are five moments from that special Christmas morning in 1911—the first one 10-year-old Walter spent in Kansas City, Missouri.

  1. The Christmas tree was simple, but special.

The tree in the Disney family sitting room was modest, ornamented with strung popcorn and cranberries with glowing candles and a piney smell—the perfect setting for the family to gather.

  1. Walt’s brother Roy gave Walt a toy that mesmerized him.

It was a shiny gyroscopic top, and young Walter was intrigued by its spinning ability. Incidentally, Walt showed interest in the gyroscope later in life, as evidenced by one he requested from the Sperry Gyroscope Company in 1944 that he displayed in his Studio office.

  1. Walter received a gift he had wanted for a long time.

Walt’s parents, Elias and Flora, surprised Walt with a pair of stylish boots he thought he’d never receive. “All the other kids sported them, while I had been wearing an old pair in rain and winter slush, to school and while delivering newspapers in Kansas City,” Walt once wrote. “I hadn’t been able to talk my parents into such extravagance.” But there they were…“Those wonderful, frivolous boots!” with a metal toe cap and two decorated leather strips.

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  1. Walter enjoyed the company of his family.

Of that special day, Walt remembered, “It just seemed the most wonderful Christmas any boy could possibly have, with the family affection very warm and heartfelt… Seeing the pleasure my parents had in my joy, I forgave them for having waited so long to fulfill my fondest wish.”

  1. Walt’s mother repurposed the Christmas decorations…

Ever frugal, Walt’s mother pulled the cranberries from the Christmas tree to make sauce.

Hulk and She-Hulk’s Marvel-ous SMASHED Potatoes

Though they’re as gamma-green as Bruce Banner and Jennifer Walters in their Hulk forms, you won’t need any help at all to SMASH up these easy mashed potatoes into a creamy, delicious bowl full of dinnertime deliciousness.

Ingredients

  • 3 pounds Yukon gold potatoes, peeled
  • Salt
  • 1 ½ cups whole milk
  • 6 tbsp. unsalted butter
  • 1 ½ tsp. garlic salt
  • ½ cup sour cream
  • ½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
  • Green food coloring

Directions

  1. Cut potatoes into 1-inch cubes and place in a large pot. Submerge the potatoes completely in water and put in enough salt until the water tastes fairly salty. Bring water to a boil then lower the heat to medium-low, and simmer for about 10 minutes or until potatoes break apart easily.
  2. In a small saucepan, cook milk and butter over low heat until butter melts. Remove immediately from heat and set aside.
  3. Once potatoes are done, drain in a colander and place in a large bowl. Mash potatoes by hand until desired texture is achieved. Slowly whisk in milk-and-butter mixture. Add garlic salt, sour cream, and black pepper, and use a whisk to combine.

Mix in green food coloring one drop at a time until mashed potatoes are just the right shade of Incredible Hulk green.

Print a From All of Us to All of You Greeting Card

Produced by the Walt Disney Productions character merchandising division in Toronto, this Christmas card was inspired by the annual Disney television show From All of Us to All of You, which first aired December 19, 1958. The classic holiday show featured Christmas-themed Disney cartoons and was often updated to feature the Studio’s latest animated feature.

Here, Mickey plays the piano—just as he does in the show’s memorable introductory sequence, with many of the Disney characters gathering to sing! Kick off D23 Days of Christmas by printing out your own card (or two)!

Supplies:
8.5 x 11-inch white cardstock (printable)
Scissors

  1. Download and print out the greeting card image (Page 1) onto your cardstock.
  1. Cut around the provided grey line to remove any white border, leaving image intact.
  1. Fold horizontally along the center of the card (above Mickey and friends).
  1. Display with your other holiday cards… or write a message inside and give to a friend or family member!

NOTE: Cutting should be done by an adult.

Holiday Recipes and Crafts from Disney Family

In addition to our fun holiday recipes and crafts, our friends at Disney Family have offered up some festive holiday recipes and crafts from their own collection. We hope you enjoy them as much as we do!

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Mickey Paper Wreath

Brighten up your home this Christmas with this beautiful wreath that you can customize too look just the way you like. Build it for yourself or someone special this holiday.
Click here to view details.

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Mickey Mouse Gingerbread Cookies

What’s better during the holiday season than a tasty gingerbread cookie? A gingerbread cookie shaped like everyone’s favorite mouse.
Click here to view details.

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Lumiere’s Christmas Candle Cupcakes

Come Christmastime, even Lumiere has company. That’s because it takes a lot of candles to properly light up the Beast’s castle for the holidays. Inspired by the enchanted candlestick holder and his bright mantle-top guests, these festive cupcake candles are lit with candy flames.
Click here to view details.

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Tiramisu

From Disney’s BoardWalk at Walt Disney World Resort, the chefs are busy in the kitchen creating delectable Italian dishes like this classic tiramisù with the familiar flavor of coffee and rich mascarpone cream. Tiramisù may look complicated, but it’s relatively easy to create a dessert that will make you look like a pro.
Click here to view details.

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Olaf Ornament

You’ll melt for this adorable DIY decoration inspired by the snowman who loves summer.
Click here to view details.

Counting Down to ABC Family’s 25 Days of Christmas!

Trimming the tree… baking Christmas cookies… shopping for gifts. We love those holiday traditions, but we have another favorite—one that lets us kick back on the couch and watch some of our favorite classics from the big and small screen. Of course we’re talking about “25 Days of Christmas,” the gift ABC Family brings us every year—and will continue to bring us even after the network becomes Freeform in 2016. “25 Days of Christmas” begins on December 1, and we can hardly wait!

Our friends at ABC Family are as excited about “25 Days of Christmas” as we are—so excited that they’ve already kicked off their annual “Countdown to 25 Days of Christmas.” This year’s “Countdown to 25 Days of Christmas” began Sunday, November 22, and runs through Monday, November 30. The lineup offers something for everyone in your family, from Disney•Pixar’s Toy Story and Finding Nemo to all-new original specials Pretty Little Liars: 5 Years Forward and a brand-new holiday episode of Young & Hungry, “Young & Christmas.”

Here are some of the highlights we’ll be watching before and after our Turkey Day feasts:

Monday, November 23

4:30 p.m. ET—Disney•Pixar’s Toy Story
6:30 p.m. ET—Disney•Pixar’s Toy Story 2
8:30 p.m. ET—Disney•Pixar’s Finding Nemo

Tuesday, November 24

8 p.m. ET—Pretty Little Liars: 5 Years Forward
9 p.m. ET—Young & Hungry—“Young & Christmas”

Wednesday, November 25

4:30 p.m. ET—Cinderella (1950)
6:30 p.m. ET—Disney•Pixar’s Monsters, Inc.
8:30 p.m. ET—Disney•Pixar’s Ratatouille

Thursday, November 26

8:45 p.m. ET—Planes

Friday, November 27

3:30 p.m. ET—Tarzan

Saturday, November 28

6:30 p.m. ET—Disney•Pixar’s The Incredibles

Sunday, November 29

8 p.m. ET—Wreck-It Ralph

Monday, November 30

7 p.m. ET—Disney’s A Christmas Carol

Sanjay’s Super Team of Filmmakers

For the Birds. Partly Cloudy. The Blue Umbrella. Lava. One of the joys of seeing the latest film from Pixar Animation Studios is savoring another one of their innovative shorts—and with The Good Dinosaur, that tradition continues. In Sanjay’s Super Team, longtime Pixar animator (and accomplished artist in his own right) Sanjay Patel draws on his own experiences to tell the story of a young, first-generation Indian-American boy whose love for western pop culture conflicts head-on with his father’s traditions. Little Sanjay is captivated by the world of cartoons and comic books, while his dad tries—in vain—to engage him in the customs of his ancestral Hindu practice. But when Sanjay finds himself immersed in an awe-inspiring adventure like he’s never imagined, he returns with a new perspective that the pair can both embrace.

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D23 recently spoke with first-time director Sanjay and Super Team producer Nicole Paradis Grindle about bringing this “mostly true” story to animated life. “I was really fired up to get this voice out there, to get the story out there,” Sanjay explains. “To be able to collaborate with [Chief Creative Officer, Pixar and Disney] John Lasseter and the team here at Pixar… to be able to communicate better with audiences, to expose them to a culture that they might not otherwise know anything about—I was fired up for that, for sure.” But getting Super Team to the screen took a somewhat circuitous route. “I’ve been at Pixar for 20 years,” Nicole says, “[and] Sanjay’s been here almost 20 years, too—but we never got a chance to work together. This [project] was refreshingly different—a different voice and a different perspective.” Sanjay’s colorful graphic novels (like The Little Book of Hindu Deities)—which he always kept separate from his Pixar work—led to a recent exhibition at San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum; fellow Pixar artists caught the show and insisted he bring the work to Pixar’s in-house gallery. “John saw it and was blown away,” Nicole explains. “He said, ‘Sanjay, you need to make a movie here.’ It was really satisfying helping somebody who was so new to the director role—figuring out how to get his vision realized.”

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“I have nothing but happy memories working with this crew,” Sanjay admits. “Working on a short film is a really special experience. You’re working with a small group of people who all get to wrap their arms around the entire filmmaking experience, as a team. John was a champion of this short—a champion of my story, a champion of my father’s story. And most importantly, a champion of me telling it honestly. I’m so grateful he had that confidence.”

The Great Circle of Life

Disney’s The Lion King… From the first sight of Mufasa on Pride Rock to Simba songfully declaring, “I just can’t wait to be king,” the film is a true classic in the Disney canon, beloved by Disney fans since its release in 1995.

Now Disney Junior aims to welcome a new generation of fans to the Pride Lands. The Lion Guard: Return of the Roar is a family movie event, premiering this Sunday, November 22 at 7 p.m. ET/PT on Disney Channel, that introduces Kion—Simba and Nala’s second-born cub—as he discovers his destiny: to lead the Lion Guard, a team of the Pride Lands’ fiercest, bravest, fastest, strongest, and keenest of sight.

The Lion Guard’s executive producer, Ford Riley (Special Agent Oso), wanted the new TV movie and series to feel like it was rooted in the story of The Lion King. He went back into the original film’s history and came up with the idea of a “Lion Guard” that’s tasked with protecting the Pride Lands. “I developed the idea that the Lion Guard goes back generations,” Riley explains. “Kion is the second-born. He’s not going to grow up to be the king—his duty is to be the leader of the Lion Guard.” Simba, Riley points out, didn’t have siblings who could have led the Lion Guard in his generation. And The Lion King’s iconic, infamous second-born cub, Scar, used his “power of the roar” to follow the path of evil.

While the story for The Lion Guard stems from the epic storytelling of the original animated classic feature, Riley found inspiration closer to home. He’d been approached by Disney Junior to develop a series that continues the adventures of the Pride Lands, and he was struck by the idea of an “imaginary super hero team” his son and his friends had created. Riley conceived of a Lion Guard comprised of different animals—not just lions. “It’s a very diverse group,” he notes. “Bunga, the honey badger, is the bravest. Fuli, the cheetah, is the fastest. Beshte, the hippo, is the strongest; and Ono, the egret, is the keenest of sight.”

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The African savanna that Kion and his friends protect looks like the savanna Disney fans remember wildebeasts stampeding across. The Lion Guard’s director, Howy Parkins (Jake and the Never Land Pirates), says that in re-creating the movie’s look for television, “The backgrounds have to look like The Lion King. We were lucky we could get Barry Atkinson, who painted on The Lion King.” Parkins also credits the series’ production designer, Plamen Christov, for The Lion Guard’s rich, transportive visual style.

A team of Education and Science experts at Disney’s Animal Kingdom advises Riley and Parkins on every member of the Pride Lands population. “We want to play within the rules of nature,” Parkins says, so the Animal Kingdom group reads every script and advises on whether the characters act true to life. Some of the factoids they uncover inspire plot twists and add depth to the characters. Fuli, the cheetah, may be the Pride Lands’ fastest animal—but only in short bursts and in straight lines. Details like that, Riley and Parkins point out, create complications that make their jobs a little easier—not to mention more fun.

And while children of the ’90s embraced the worry-free concept of “Hakuna Matata,” Riley and Parkins have worked with Swahili expert Sarah Mirza to inspire new catchphrases. “Zuka Zama” is sure to become a playground mantra for kids—and a pep talk for adults—with its spirit that essentially translates to “pop up and dive in” According to Riley, “Ninety percent of our characters and their names are derived from Swahili words.”

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Among those character names are two familiar ones: Mufasa and Pumbaa. Parkins and Riley were thrilled that James Earl Jones and Ernie Sabella have returned to bring their inimitable voices to the roles. Parkins adds that the film’s younger cast—which includes Max Charles as Kion, Joshua Rush as Bunga, Atticus Shaffer as Ono, Diamond White as Fuli, and Dusan Brown as Beshte, in addition to Rob Lowe and Gabrielle Union as Simba and Nala—“brings a lot of life to the show.” You can see the young actors showing that “Zuka Zama” spirit in this behind-the-scenes look at the recording process:

But, of course, a movie event based on The Lion King can’t just look like The Lion King. It has to sound like The Lion King,” Parkins stresses. He says that songwriter Beau Black (Miles from Tomorrowland) and composer Christopher Willis (Mickey Mouse) have created songs that make you stop and wonder if they were in the original movie. Willis read the movie script, Riley explains and, “Just reading it, he composed a suite of music that involved African chanting and heroic themes. Before we even had picture back, he’d created this sort of score.

“Most of the time [in television animation] we start with a little plant and we water it… and it starts to grow and you kind of gain your audience after you air,” Parkins says. “This… this is huge.”

Don Hahn, who produced the original feature film, admits that he and his fellow filmmakers had no idea while they were making The Lion King that it would turn into the worldwide phenomenon that has inspired theatrical shows, theme park experiences, and now a TV movie and series. “You’re so involved in making the movie that you just don’t see that,” Hahn says. “The story is based on Hamlet… it’s based on the Bible story of Joseph… in Africa… with Elton John… I mean, come on, it sounds ridiculous! It’s as ridiculous as rats in a kitchen for Ratatouille,” he laughs.

“But you know those movies work because they have a heart to them and they have a team of people that want to breathe life into those characters. It’s the same today,” Hahn adds. “We’re still talking about this today because there’s another team of people breathing life into these characters again. And for me, as a producer and a guy who was around for the original movie, that’s pretty thrilling.”

Giving Thanks for Our Favorite Disney Families

Thanksgiving is a time for family—and though that endearing term often refers to a traditional blood-related grouping of mom, dad and the kids, the fam that gathers for the feast can come in all sizes and shapes and configurations. For the Disney fanatic, D23 has cooked up a full menu of favorite Disney families for which we give thanks during this special season [or day].

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King Stefan, the Queen, and Princess Aurora from Sleeping Beauty

Thanksgiving often means reunions, and surely King Stefan and his Queen must have given thanks when they, at last, reunited with their royal daughter, Aurora. The 16-year-old princess has been in hiding since infancy and now—awakened by love’s first kiss from the evil Maleficent’s spell—this fairy-tale family is together again, complete with a ready-made son-in-law-to-be in the heroic form of Prince Phillip.

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The Parrs from The Incredibles

The Parrs seem like any other nuclear family in the neighborhood—but the neighbors don’t suspect that this family-next-door are actually super-powered crime fighters. Placed by the Superhero Relocation Program in the suburbs of Metroville, father Bob (Mr. Incredible), mother Helen (Elastigirl), daughter Violet (with the super power of invisibility), and son Dash (super speed) become embroiled in a super villain’s plot that means each member of family must use his or her individual gifts to work together as a team—exactly as a family should.

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The Golden Girls

These aging but active women share a house in Miami, forming one of the most fascinating—and most hilarious—families ever. Bosom buddies Rose, Blanche and Dorothy, along with Dorothy’s feisty mother, Sophia, support each other in this all-female family, right down to occasionally getting on each others’ nerves. The funny, fond family bond of these independent but interconnected senior citizens inspires us to laugh and love a little more fully, especially at Thanksgiving.

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Lady and Tramp

We found this rough-and-ready mutt and pedigreed pooch irresistible when they were courting (spaghetti, anyone?), but we love them even more in the final happily-ever-after scene when we they are happily married. (Could Tramp’s license also be considered a marriage license?) Cozily ensconced in Jim Dear and Darling’s house, Lady and Tramp’s adorable family consists of three little ladies and one little scamp—and this canine clan’s love expands to include faithful friends Jock and Trusty in the family photo.

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The families of Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress

Being in a family sometimes makes you feel as if you’re running around in circles, and maybe that partly accounts for the popularity of this classic show. Originally created for the 1964-1965 New York World’s Fair and starring 32 Audio-Animatronics® figures, Walt Disney’s Carousel of Progress follows a typical American family through four generations of the past 100 years. Guests at Magic Kingdom Park in Walt Disney World Resort discover in this Tomorrowland attraction how the simple pleasures of family life can be enhanced by progress, no matter how dizzy things get.

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The Robinsons from Meet the Robinsons

This delightfully eclectic clan is the epitome of an all-encompassing family. The Robinsons incorporate everyone from mom and dad Franny and Cornelius to Grandpa Bud and Grandma Lucille to zany aunts and wacky uncles. Even Carl the robot is a member of the family. They gladly embrace Lewis, the genius-IQ orphan from another era, though time-travelling Wilbur Robinson has his own time-twisting reasons for welcoming Lewis. We are thankful for this daffy dynasty’s eccentricity—doesn’t it empower your own creativity?—and, most of all, their inclusiveness.

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The Taylors on Home Improvement

This TV family was a ratings winner, which seems only appropriate as Home Improvement was, at least in part, about TV. Tim Taylor hosts the DIY show Tool Time, but that doesn’t mean he’s Mr. Fix-it when it comes to the ups and downs of life at home with his wife, Jill, and their three sons. Despite his bravado and because of his bungling, Tim learns again and again (thanks at times to extended family member, philosophical neighbor Wilson) that family values, though not as handy as Binford Tools, patch things up every time.

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Donald and his Nephews

Huey, Louie, and Dewey know how to both help and hinder their forever-frustrated uncle, Donald Duck. Though they have been known to embark on the occasional epic adventure, these identical triplets share an ordinary Duckburg house with their “Unca” Donald. He’s also an official single “dad,” for Donald’s income tax form, as seen in The New Spirit (1942), reveals that he legally adopted the sometimes troublemaking, sometimes troubleshooting trio.

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Lilo and Stitch

A lonely little orphan girl, her older sister, and an outlaw alien known as Experiment 626 discover the meaning of ‘ohana—the Hawaiian concept of family that extends far beyond the immediate family. Stitch, as Lilo calls the alien, embraces ‘ohana as his own. This loving concept of community is expansive, so the two sisters and Stitch incorporate surfer dude David, the aliens Jumba and Pleakly, and the unlikely social worker Cobra Bubbles into their quirky little family.

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Winnie the Pooh and Friends

The charming citizens of “the enchanted neighborhood where Christopher Robin plays” form a truly unique community, but their concern and care for each other make them a true family. Is it any surprise that the silly ole bear and his Hundred Acre Wood friends appeared in not one but two Thanksgiving shows, A Winnie the Pooh Thanksgiving and Winnie the Pooh: Seasons of Giving? Naturally, the stories revolve around feasting and food, but when it comes to Thanksgiving dinner, we’re all a little like Pooh Bear, and stuff ourselves with more than fluff.

The Good Dinosaur: An Unforgettable Friendship

Sixty-five million years ago, a giant asteroid was on a collision course with Earth. The impact’s debris, most scientists agree, choked off the sun’s energy—throwing a proverbial wrench into the planet’s food chain and killing off gigantic dinosaurs that roamed its lands. But what if that asteroid missed our planet completely? It’s a thoroughly intriguing idea… and it’s the notion behind The Good Dinosaur, Disney•Pixar’s newest animated film.

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With The Good Dinosaur, Pixar Animation Studios introduces us to an Apatosaurus named Arlo (voice of Raymond Ochoa), whose life is forever altered after a tragic accident. Young Arlo learns the power of confronting his fears—and what he is truly capable of—while searching for his family through harsh, mysterious landscapes, making an unlikely human friend (voice of Jack Bright) along the way. Joining the improbably duo is a host of gentle—and not-so-gentle—giants, voiced by the likes of Anna Paquin (True Blood), Sam Elliott (The Big Lebowski), Frances McDormand (Olive Kitteridge) and Jeffrey Wright (The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1). D23 sat down to chat with The Good Dinosaur’s director, Peter Sohn, about bringing Arlo’s big adventures to the big screen.

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The Good Dinosaur has always been about taking the classic “boy and his dog” story and flipping it on his ear. As Peter explains, “When I got a chance to pick up the movie and move forward with it, it [became] about trying to honor Bob [Peterson]’s original pitch… where the ‘boy’ is the dinosaur and the ‘dog’ is this little kid.” That small human, “Spot,” grows to understand Arlo—and winds up accompanying him through what’s become another of the film’s characters: nature itself. “The ‘survival’ aspect of the movie really was always there, since the beginning of this process,” Peter says. “So, how do you make a dinosaur feel like a boy? We really wanted it [to feel like] an 11-year-old boy stuck in the wilderness. That aspect of a ‘kid’ learning how to survive out there with the help of his ‘dog’ has become the movie.”

Fate, it seems, brought longtime Pixar animator Peter (directing his first feature-length project after helming the 2009 short Partly Cloudy) to The Good Dinosaur, a film (and a story) that mirrors his own life in ways both large and small. There’s the art of animation, a universal language that drew Peter and his family closer together. “We grew up in a grocery store in New York City,” Peter explains, “and if there was some money left over at the end of the week, our mom would take my brother and me to the movies. She loved American movies, but she grew up in Korea—so she would ask us questions in Korean, and I would sit there trying to translate as best as I could. I remember seeing Disney movies with her and not having to translate anything, it was so visually clear. Those movies affected me a great deal when I was a kid. There was something so universal to all of it that was so inspiring.”

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Then there’s Arlo and his family (both blood and chosen)—sharing a bond not unlike the one between Peter and his fellow Pixar artists who worked on the film. “Growing up, I only found a couple other friends that could share my love for animation,” Peter says. “When I got to California, I found people who were the same, who believed it doesn’t matter what background you’re from or what language you speak. I’ve now been at Pixar for 15 years. This is going to sound like a cliché, but the people here—how they’ve put forward their talents [during the production of this film]—is very emotional for me. It’s been one of my favorite things about this whole process.”

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Ultimately, Peter hopes Arlo and Spot’s story speaks to young and old alike. “We’ve been trying to make a world that is huge in scope, both beautiful and dangerous at the same time,” Peter points out. “Trying to find that duality in this film is something of a great challenge, [and] it’s something that we’re very proud of. For Arlo, he lived a life of fear—and finding a way to get through that is something that I hope my own son and daughter can one day appreciate. It’s about really understanding that there are ways to get through, and that love can be the answer.”