The funny thing about this movie is how they pretty much had to reverse engineer what made the Peanuts cartoons simplistic stylistically. Low budget animation recreated in higher quality just...comes out wrong somehow. Kind of like when cartoons put an anime sequence in, but it doesn't really look authentic because they're just trying to poorly ape the style of a specific show. As it pertains to this animation studio, the completely awkward "ninja" sequence of the Horton Hears a Who movie had too high a frame rate, and anime that do have those kinds of frame rates in movies don't look like that.
It seems the devil is in the details. The Peanuts characters, no matter how many toys we make of them, don't translate to 3-D well (look above about the Snoopy Toys all having the same expression, and when they don't, things get...weird). Snoopy has Homestar eyes (or rather the other way around, but you get the idea). In trying to copy the simplicity of the original cartoons, they wound up making things painfully difficult. The big scenery porn of Snoopy flying around on his "Sopwith Camel" had one rule holding them back... never in any of the scenes were they supposed to show the doghouse actually leaving the ground (according to a making of video I saw). So they had to make a 3-D battle revolving around how they had no money to actually animate it in the original specials. Then again, that's something totally forgivable for a 2-D free to view TV special. Not so much in a 10 bucks a ticket movie.
That said, there are noticeable bumps in quality with the original specials once they started getting more established. The 60's specials (the Christmas one specifically, but you can see it in the Halloween one as well) had very choppy animation due to their relatively low budgets. Because, why put a huge budget into something that there was no future perspective on? But you look at the 1970's Thanksgiving special, the animation improved considerably, and there were some bigger action sequences, like Snoopy fighting with the folding chairs, which had some very smooth animation. (I haven't seen too many specials made since Great Pumpkin and before Thanksgiving in a while to give a case by case basis). Then the 80's came along and they have a very significant style to them. That's due to the animation studio, and that style can be seen in Early Garfield specials (it really sticks out in the Halloween one), the Cathy specials, and then that Frosty Returns thing.
It seems the devil is in the details. The Peanuts characters, no matter how many toys we make of them, don't translate to 3-D well (look above about the Snoopy Toys all having the same expression, and when they don't, things get...weird). Snoopy has Homestar eyes (or rather the other way around, but you get the idea). In trying to copy the simplicity of the original cartoons, they wound up making things painfully difficult. The big scenery porn of Snoopy flying around on his "Sopwith Camel" had one rule holding them back... never in any of the scenes were they supposed to show the doghouse actually leaving the ground (according to a making of video I saw). So they had to make a 3-D battle revolving around how they had no money to actually animate it in the original specials. Then again, that's something totally forgivable for a 2-D free to view TV special. Not so much in a 10 bucks a ticket movie.
That said, there are noticeable bumps in quality with the original specials once they started getting more established. The 60's specials (the Christmas one specifically, but you can see it in the Halloween one as well) had very choppy animation due to their relatively low budgets. Because, why put a huge budget into something that there was no future perspective on? But you look at the 1970's Thanksgiving special, the animation improved considerably, and there were some bigger action sequences, like Snoopy fighting with the folding chairs, which had some very smooth animation. (I haven't seen too many specials made since Great Pumpkin and before Thanksgiving in a while to give a case by case basis). Then the 80's came along and they have a very significant style to them. That's due to the animation studio, and that style can be seen in Early Garfield specials (it really sticks out in the Halloween one), the Cathy specials, and then that Frosty Returns thing.