
Age: 59
male
British character animator. He was first known for his work on several Walt Disney Animation Studios films, including various characters in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Rafiki in The Lion King, Belle in Beauty and the Beast, and Quasimodo in The Hunchback of Notre Dame. After Notre Dame, Baxter moved over to DreamWorks Animation, where he worked on films such as The Prince of Egypt, The Road to El Dorado, Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron, Shrek 2 and Madagascar. Early in 2005, Baxter left DreamWorks and set out on his own as an independent animator. He became the head of his own studio, James Baxter Animation, in Pasadena, California, where he has directed the animation for the 2007 film Enchanted and the opening credits to Kung Fu Panda, for which he received an Annie Award. As of the summer of 2008, James Baxter Animation has closed and Baxter has returned once again to DreamWorks Animation as a supervising animator. Baxter has also worked on Tummy Trouble, How to Train Your Dragon and The Croods. In May 2013, Baxter was a guest animator for an episode of Adventure Time entitled "James Baxter the Horse".The episode's story focused on the lead characters trying to emulate a horse who can cheer everyone up by neighing his name (James Baxter) and balancing on a beach ball. Both the horse's animation (which is visually distinct from the other characters) and voice were provided by Baxter. The episode's title card features a drawing of the horse drawing a horse on a beach ball, while sitting at an animation table. -Wikipedia

I imagine that this fourth film would feature humans and it would take place after the events of The Lion King II: Simba's Pride and The Lion Guard (if it is canon) and the story would be shakespearean just like the first two Lion King films and it would answer the question that everyone has been asking "What time is Lion King set in?". I was influenced by Once Upon A Forest, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, Bambi (the half where he is adult and the sequences that involved man), Jungle Emperor Leo: The Movie, and those episodes of Babar (when he was a kid and featured the hunter) when I thought of this idea. The inhabitants of the Pridelands believed that humans are not real (just like with in Happy Feet) and they refer to the humans as watu.






