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Watterson

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I think that if I ever heard someone give voice to Calvin or Hobbes in an animated special, I’d never be able to read the comic again. It’s not that I’m bothered by commercialism, but rather that I regard both as perpetually unsettled identities; hearing either would require me to force an age and (perhaps) an ethnic identity onto the character, and I think that would ruin the illusion.

Years ago, you hadn’t quite dismissed the notion of animating the strip. Are you a fan of Pixar? Does their competency ever make the idea of animating your creations more palatable?
The visual sophistication of Pixar blows me away, but I have zero interest in animating Calvin and Hobbes. If you’ve ever compared a film to a novel it’s based on, you know the novel gets bludgeoned. It’s inevitable, because different media have different strengths and needs, and when you make a movie, the movie’s needs get served. As a comic strip, Calvin and Hobbes works exactly the way I intended it to. There’s no upside for me in adapting it.

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