You just want to have new experiences and work with new people, so the idea of working with someone outside of your discipline is exciting.
A movie is the product of the chemistry of the people that make it. Whatever that core group of people is, that becomes the DNA of the movie.
What happens in animation is that you don't really start the story until you're boarding it, which usually means that you've gotta go through some sort of a script phase. And you can get caught in the doldrums there, overdeveloping that, when you don't really know what you have until you put it up in storyboards.
I don't know what I'm doing. I have no idea what I'm doing. I'm shopping around.
There are so many options in animation right now and this is such a great time to make animated movies that I want to make another one.
Warner Bros. is really open-minded, as far as studios go, when it comes to the types of movies they'll entertain, even with animated movies. It's a great place to be.