Daniel Chong

American filmmaker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daniel Chong is a Chinese-American animator, storyboard artist, writer, director, and producer. He is best known as the creator of Cartoon Network's television series We Bare Bears (2015–2019), and as the director, writer, and executive producer of We Bare Bears: The Movie (2020). He has worked as a member of Pixar's senior creative team and wrote and directed Hoppers (2026).[1]

Occupations
  • Animator
  • storyboard artist
  • writer
  • director
  • producer
Yearsactive2008–present
Employers
Quick facts Occupations, Years active ...
Daniel Chong
Occupations
  • Animator
  • storyboard artist
  • writer
  • director
  • producer
Years active2008–present
Employers
Known for
Close

Career

Chong began his career as an intern for Cartoon Network Studios, and went on to work as a storyboard artist for numerous animation studios, including Walt Disney Animation Studios, Illumination Entertainment, and Pixar Animation Studios.[2] He worked as a storyboard artist on the animated films Bolt (2008), Cars 2 (2011), Dr. Seuss' The Lorax (2012), Free Birds (2013), and Inside Out (2015).

While working at Pixar, Chong worked on the television specials Toy Story of Terror! (2013) and Toy Story That Time Forgot (2014), the former of which won him an Annie Award.[3]

Chong went on to create the animated series We Bare Bears, which premiered on Cartoon Network in 2015. The initial idea for We Bare Bears came from a webcomic that he had created in 2010 called The Three Bare Bears. The webcomic ended almost a year later, but he carried the idea with him.[2] Chong has cited Seinfeld, Broad City, Peanuts, Aardman Animations and Wes Anderson as inspirations for the style and tone of the show.[4] Chong directed, wrote, and executive produced a film adaptation of the series, We Bare Bears: The Movie, which was released in June 2020, thus ending the series.[5] A spinoff series titled We Baby Bears premiered in 2022; Chong serves as executive producer.[6]

In December 2020, Chong revealed on Twitter that he had returned to Pixar and was working on a project there.[7] The film was officially revealed as Hoppers in August 2024; it was released on March 6, 2026.[1][8]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Executive
Producer
Story
Artist
Pixar Senior
Creative Team
2008 Bolt No No No Yes No
2011 Cars 2 No No No Yes No
2012 Dr. Seuss' The Lorax No No No Yes No
2013 Free Birds No No No Additional No
2015 Inside Out No No No Yes No
2020 We Bare Bears: The Movie Yes Yes Yes Yes No
2022 Turning Red No No No No Yes
Lightyear No No No No Yes
2023 Elemental No No No No Yes
2024 Inside Out 2 No No No No Yes
2025 Elio No No No No Yes
2026 Hoppers[1] Yes Story No No Yes
Toy Story 5 No No No No Yes
TBA Incredibles 3 No No No No Yes
Close

Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Creator Writer Executive
Producer
Story
Artist
Notes
2010–2011 Cars Toon: Mater's Tall Tales No Story No No Short films: "Moon Mater", "Mater Private Eye", "Air Mater"
2013 Toy Story of Terror! No No No Yes TV specials
2014 Toy Story That Time Forgot No No No Yes
2015–2019 We Bare Bears Yes Yes Yes Yes 140 episodes
2022–present We Baby Bears No No Yes No 63 episodes
Close

Awards and nominations

More information Year, Association ...
Year Association Category Work Result
2014 Annie Awards Outstanding Achievement in Storyboarding in an Animated TV/Broadcast Production Toy Story of Terror Won
2016 BAFTA Children's Awards Best International We Bare Bears Won
2018 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Short Form Animated Program Nominated
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI