Chris Sanders

American filmmaker (born 1962) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christopher Michael Sanders (born March 12, 1962)[1] is an American filmmaker, animator, writer, storyboard artist and voice actor. His credits include Lilo & Stitch (2002) and How to Train Your Dragon (2010), both of which he co-wrote and directed with Dean DeBlois; The Croods (2013) with Kirk DeMicco; and The Wild Robot (2024), receiving nominations for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature for all of them. In 2020, he made his live-action directorial debut with the adventure-drama The Call of the Wild. He created the popular Disney character Stitch in 1985, wrote the film's story, and voiced Stitch in most of his media appearances.

Born
Christopher Michael Sanders

(1962-03-12) March 12, 1962 (age 64)
Occupations
Yearsactive1984–present
Quick facts Born, Alma mater ...
Chris Sanders
Sanders at the 2014 Golden Globe Awards
Born
Christopher Michael Sanders

(1962-03-12) March 12, 1962 (age 64)
Alma materCalifornia Institute of the Arts (BFA)
Occupations
Years active1984–present
Employers
Spouse
Jessica Steele-Sanders
(m. 2015)
Children1
Signature
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As of 2025, he is working on sequels to The Wild Robot for DreamWorks and the live-action Lilo & Stitch for Walt Disney Studios.

Early life

Christopher Michael Sanders was born in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on March 12, 1962.

He had been intensely interested in comic strips and filmmaking, especially animation, from an early age. He was the only one of three siblings in his family to borrow his father's Super 8 film camera and, with encouragement from his father towards his drawing interests, make his own comics.[2] He later got interested in animation upon learning about the camera's single-frame feature.[2]

He went to Arvada High School in Arvada, Colorado. He initially wanted to take art classes at the school but was dissuaded when he asked the art teacher to teach him cartooning, only for the teacher to reply, "Comics aren't art."[2] Sanders later attended the California Institute of the Arts, graduating in 1984.

Career

Walt Disney Animation Studios

Sanders created the Lilo & Stitch character Stitch in 1985, and voiced the character. Sanders continues to voice the character in nearly every Disney production to date.

Sanders began his career as a character designer for Jim Henson's Muppet Babies. He then served as lead storyboard artist for Walt Disney Animation Studios, and was a storyboard artist, artistic director, production designer, and character designer on the company's films Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King, and Mulan.

In 1985[3], Sanders created a character named "Stitch" for an unsuccessful children's book pitch.[4] When Sanders was the head storyboard artist for Disney Feature Animation, then-Disney CEO Michael Eisner decided that, in the wake of a number of high-profile and large-budget Disney animated features during the mid-1990s, the studio might try its hand at a smaller and less expensive film.[4] Sanders was approached by Thomas Schumacher to pitch that idea, and Sanders reused the "Stitch" character he came up with.[5] The storyline required a remote, non-urban location, so Sanders chose Kauaʻi as the location.[6] Stitch became the central character of the 2002 film Lilo & Stitch, which Sanders co-directed and co-wrote with Dean DeBlois. Sanders would also end up voicing the character he created for the film. The film's commercial and critical success spawned a franchise with three sequel films and three television series, with Sanders reprising his role of Stitch throughout the original 2002–06 run of the franchise (Sanders did not reprise his role for the English dub of the anime Stitch! or the English-language-produced Chinese animated series Stitch & Ai, with Ben Diskin taking over the role for both series), as well in several later Disney crossover works such as Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep, Kinect: Disneyland Adventures, and the Disney Infinity series.

In the late 1980s, Sanders created an allegorical picture book entitled The Big Bear Aircraft Company, with the subheading "A book for the big retreat" clarifying that it was created for a Disney offsite event. The Big Bear Aircraft Company is a thinly disguised version of Disney itself, and the book is critical of the creative process at the company, which prioritized "big ideas, figuring they will be big successes" and noted that if proposed aircraft (i.e., movie ideas) "don't look the same as the ones [that were] built before, [the boss, Big Bear] gets uncomfortable." After handing each idea pitched by the "visual engineer" to a writer who "likes airplanes" but "has actually never worked on one before, and couldn't tell you for sure what makes one fly", the story states the assigned writer "is guaranteed of making the same mistakes every time. He will make his airplane look like everyone he's seen before ..." In the end, the head of the company, Big Bear, gets an airplane that is "a lot like last year's; not very inspiring and not very memorable. But people bought it before, and they'll probably buy it again. By playing it safe, he's insured his company's survival." However, since it is not the only aircraft company, these policies are destined to leave the company vulnerable to more imaginative competitors "with its wings of good reputation all shot off." The story concludes that Big Bear should instead give the visual engineers "the two things they need to do their job: Bear's trust and time" to allow smaller, more innovative ideas to flourish. Years later, to explain his motivation regarding the piece, Sanders wrote about his concern over "the ever-growing complexity of our films, and what I saw as an emerging pattern they were all cut from", citing the example that during the story development for Mulan, one of the major concerns was the manner of the villain's death rather than the idea that the villain had to die at all. This in turn motivated him to develop Lilo & Stitch, which he summarized as "a story about a villain who becomes a hero."[7]

By December 2006, Sanders had been removed as the director of the upcoming Disney animated film American Dog by John Lasseter. By March 2007, Sanders had been negotiating his exit from Disney.[8] After the departure of Sanders from Disney, directing duties were handed to Chris Williams and Byron Howard, and the film was retitled Bolt. Sanders later stated he had no ill will over being removed from the film, and hoped he could revisit some of his ideas in the future. He approved of the final film and the changes made, stating: "I think it would have been frustrating if the movie were essentially the same but with only slight changes. And I suppose my scenes and storylines are still sitting there on the shelf. I could actually pull them out and do them again. But it would be completely different."[9] Despite his departure from Disney, Sanders continues to voice Stitch in all official Disney media except for the aforementioned Eastern-produced shows.[a]

DreamWorks Animation

By March 2007, Sanders had moved to DreamWorks Animation and had then taken over as director on Crood Awakening (later renamed to The Croods), a project previously in co-production with Aardman Animations before they departed from DreamWorks.[10] At the time, Sanders said about the move: "I've been so anxious to start working on things, and so I talked to a lot of people... I like the way DreamWorks looks at animation. Animation still has a lot of different places to go, and I don't want to miss out on a chance to try some new things with it."[10]

On September 24, 2008, it was reported that Sanders and DeBlois would be screenwriting and directing How to Train Your Dragon for DreamWorks Animation.[11] The film was released on March 26, 2010, and was a huge success with both critics and at the box office, grossing nearly $500 million worldwide. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Score at the 83rd Academy Awards. The movie also won ten Annie Awards, including Best Animated Feature.

After completing How to Train Your Dragon, Sanders returned to The Croods, which was released on March 22, 2013.[12] He shared directing and writing credits with Kirk DeMicco, who had joined in the middle of production. The film proved to be a success, grossing over $500 million.[13] Sanders and DeMicco then worked on The Croods sequel for three and a half years, before its cancellation in late 2016.[13][14] However, the sequel was revived in September 2017, although with Joel Crawford replacing both Sanders and DeMicco as director.[15][16] After the sequel was out, now titled The Croods: A New Age, Sanders and DeMicco were both credited for the story while Sanders reprised his role as Belt.

20th Century Studios/return to Disney

In October 2017, it was announced that Sanders would be directing a new film adaptation of the 1903 Jack London novel The Call of the Wild for 20th Century Fox.[17][18] The film, his live-action and solo directorial debut, was released in February 2020. The film received mixed critical reception, with a 63% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes (as of March 2024),[19] making it the lowest-received film in Sanders's directorial career thus far, and grossed $107.6 million[20][21] on a budget of $125–$150 million,[22] becoming Sanders's first directorial box-office bomb.

While it was speculated in February 2020 that Sanders would reprise his voice role of Stitch in the live-action remake of Lilo & Stitch,[23] he claimed in a September 2022 interview that Disney had not yet approached him on reprising the role, although he stated that he was always open to returning to voice his creation.[24] In April 2023, it was confirmed he would reprise his role in the remake,[25] which was released in 2025, earning over $1 billion in the global box office. Sanders would ultimately do five voice recordings for the film, each session taking about four hours, which he stated was hard for him to maintain his "Stitch voice" for such a long period of time.[2]

Return to DreamWorks and scriptwriting for Lilo & Stitch again

On September 28, 2023, it was revealed that Sanders would return to DreamWorks Animation to write and direct an animated film adaptation of Peter Brown's book series The Wild Robot.[26] The film was released in September 2024 to critical acclaim. The following month, Sanders confirmed that he would be directing a sequel to the film.[27] By March 2026, it was confirmed he was only returning as screenwriter for The Wild Robot Escapes.[28]

On July 23, 2025, The Hollywood Reporter reported that Sanders would be writing the script for the sequel to the live-action Lilo & Stitch, which Sanders himself confirmed at a Lilo & Stitch panel held at San Diego Comic-Con two days later.[29][30]

Personal life

Sanders married writer Jessica Steele-Sanders on May 18, 2015, on the Big Island of Hawaii.[‡ 1] Together, they wrote an illustrated novel, titled Rescue Sirens: The Search for the Atavist (2015).[31] They have a daughter named Nicole.[32] Sanders filed for divorce in September 2023 citing "irreconcilable differences",[33] but has since withdrawn the divorce as of 2025.[‡ 1]

Sanders also previously drew the webcomic Kiskaloo, which follows a talking cat and former Hollywood actor who lives with two Haida sisters.[34]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Other Notes
1994 The Lion King No Story Yes Production designer
1998 Mulan No Yes Yes Story supervisor
1999 Fantasia 2000 No Concept No Segment "Pines of Rome"
2002 Lilo & Stitch Yes Yes Yes With Dean DeBlois; character designer
2010 How to Train Your Dragon Yes Yes No With Dean DeBlois
2013 The Croods Yes Yes No With Kirk DeMicco
2020 The Call of the Wild Yes No No Live-action debut
The Croods: A New Age No Story No
2024 The Wild Robot Yes Yes No
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Animation department

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
1988 Garfield: His 9 Lives animation stylist (segment "Diana's Piano")
1990 The Rescuers Down Under storyboard artist / character designer / visual development
1991 Beauty and the Beast storyboard artist / visual development artist
1992 Aladdin storyboard artist
1994 The Lion King
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Executive producer

Voice-acting credits

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role Notes
1998 Mulan Little Brother
1999 Tarzan Baby Baboon
2002 Lilo & Stitch Stitch Credited as "Christopher Michael Sanders"
2003 Stitch! The Movie Direct-to-video
2004 The Lion King 1½ Direct-to-video, archive audio
Stitch's Great Escape! Theme park attraction (closed 2018)
2005 Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch Direct-to-video
The Origin of Stitch Direct-to-video short
2006 Leroy & Stitch Stitch, Leroy, Leroy Clones Direct-to-video
2013 The Croods Belt
2014 Penguins of Madagascar Antarctic Penguin
2020 The Croods: A New Age Belt
2023 Once Upon a Studio Stitch Short film, archive audio
2025 Lilo & Stitch
2025 Walt Disney World Railroad Theme park attraction originally opened in 1971, voiceover only on Main Street, U.S.A. to Fantasyland route during Beyond Big Thunder Mountain expansion construction in Frontierland
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Credited as
1984–1988 Muppet Babies model designer
1985 Little Muppet Monsters
1986–1987 The Glo Friends
1996 Quack Pack storyboard artist
1998–1999 Histeria!
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Voice actor

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Role
2003–2006 Lilo & Stitch: The Series Stitch, Experiment 627
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Video games

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Voice role Notes
1999 Tarzan Activity Center Baby Baboon
Tarzan
2002 Disney's Lilo & Stitch Stitch Vocal effects only
Lilo & Stitch: Trouble in Paradise
Disney's Stitch: Experiment 626
Lilo & Stitch: Hawaiian Adventure
2003 Lilo & Stitch's Island of Adventures
2005 Kingdom Hearts II English version (including add-on Final Mix+ in 2007)
2008 Disney Think Fast
2010 Kingdom Hearts Birth by Sleep English version
2011 Kinect: Disneyland Adventures
2013 Disney Magical World
2014 Disney Infinity 2.0
2015 Disney Infinity 3.0 Reused audio from Disney Infinity 2.0
2023 Disney Speedstorm Released in early access in April 2023 and fully released in September 2023;
Stitch added in a July/August 2023 update
Disney Dreamlight Valley Released in early access in 2022; Stitch added in a December 2022 update
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Selected awards and nominations

Notes

  1. Sanders incorrectly claims that he's "done Stitch's voice for everything since the first film,"[2] not acknowledging Stitch! or Stitch & Ai and Ben Diskin's English voice role for those animated series. Sanders does, however, continue to provide new Stitch voice recordings as of 2025, with him saying in a February 2025 interview, "I go to the [recording] studio 10 times a year to do stuff."[2]

References

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