Here is a full list of the films, shorts, and specials. The features are marked in bold:
- “Ice Age” (2002)
- “Gone Nutty” (2002)
- “Ice Age: The Meltdown” (2006)
- “No Time for Nuts” (2006)
- “Surviving Sid” (2008)
- “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” (2009)
- “Scrat’s Continental Crack-Up” (2010)
- “Scrat’s Continental Crack-Up: Part 2” (2011)
- “Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas” (2011)
- “Ice Age: Continental Drift” (2012)
- “Cosmic Scrat-tastrophe” (2015)
- “Ice Age: The Great Egg-Scapade” (2016)
- “Ice Age: Collision Course” (2016)
- “Scrat: Spaced Out” (2016)
- “The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild” (2022)
- “The End” (2023)
The “Ice Age” TV series is called “Ice Age: Scrat Tales,” and debuted on Disney+ in April 2022. Every single short and feature film heavily featured Scrat with the single exception of “Buck Wild,” a spinoff film starring adventurous opossum characters.
Controversially, when Disney purchased Fox, the company also acquired Blue Sky, the animation studio that oversaw the “Ice Age” movies as well as the films “Robots,” the “Rio” movies, “Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!,” “Epic,” and “The Peanuts Movie.” Blue Sky offered a counterpoint to Disney’s dominance, so many animation fans winced when the sale went through. Hearts were broken outright when, in 2021, Disney announced it was shuttering Blue Sky altogether. The final Blue Sky film in production was the fantasy film “Nimona” (which is either an obnoxious film or a delightful one, depending on who you ask), although Disney infamously abandoned it because it starred queer characters. It was later completed and landed on Netflix. As of this writing, “Nimona” has been nominated for an Academy Award.