Will there ever be another successful American traditionally-animated movie?

With The Day The Earth Blew Up officially a flop, I think now is as good a time as any to ask ourselves what the future holds for hand-drawn animated films produced in the US. The last successful American traditionally animated movie to have a theatrical release was another Warner Bros. product, Teen Titans Go! To The Movies, in 2018. With a modest budget of $10 million, it managed to gross $52 million.

Since then, there have been only a couple attempts at putting traditionally-animated movies in theaters by American studios. The first was, The Bob's Burgers Movie, based on the TV show, which earned $38 million on a $34 million budget. The second, of course, was The Day The Earth Blew Up. Considering its $15 million budget, The Day The Earth Blew Up could easily have earned its money back if it had been given a proper release by Warner Bros., instead of being sold off to an independent distributor who lacked the means to effectively promote it. The last traditionally-animated American movie to gross over $100 million was The Princess and the Frog, and that was all the way back in 2009.

So, will we ever see a successful traditionally animated movie from an American studio again? I feel like for that to happen it would have to be a low-risk project from one of the established studios, meaning Disney, DreamWorks, or possibly Paramount. It would also probably have to be based on a well-known IP, though as we saw with The Day The Earth Blew Up and Bob's Burgers, that's no guarantee of success.

What are your thoughts on whether we'll see more traditionally animated movies in the future? Who would we expect to make them, if they do get made?