Author: Ryan Ball

  • Cast to Finish Potter Saga

    The vfx-laden blockbuster Harry Potter franchise will continue with stars Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson attached to help bring the final two installments in the book series to the screen. Warner Bros. Pictures will have to hurry and shoot Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows before Radcliffe’s five o’clock shadow becomes too noticeable and kids no longer identify with the maturing actors.

    “When Daniel, Rupert and Emma were first cast as Harry, Ron and Hermione, we knew they were not only talented, but had a very special chemistry,’ says Jeff Robinov, president of roduction for Warner Bros. Pictures. ‘Through the years, and in each of the Harry Potter films, we have watched them grow into extraordinary young adults, as well as remarkable actors. It would be inconceivable to imagine anyone else in the roles with which they have become so identified.’

    “I feel a huge sense of loyalty to the character of Harry and the fans who have supported these films over the years,’ Radcliffe comments. ‘I am indebted to J.K. Rowling, Warner Bros. and David Heyman for giving me this fantastic opportunity.”

    Heyman, who has produced all of the films in the series to date and was instrumental in bringing Rowling’s books to the screen, will produce both of the last two adventures for the boy wizard. Up first is the fifth film in the series, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, which Warner Bros. will release in the U.S. on July 13.

  • ’86 Transformers Revisited in London

    As the world waits to see what Michael Bay does with his live-action/CG adaptation of the Transformers franchise, Londoners will get a chance to see the 1986 animated feature film Transformers: The Movie on the big screen again. According to The Hollywood Reporter, independent distributor Metrodome Distribution will give the pic a two-week theatrical re-release in one theater in London’s West End beginning May 4.

    While capitalizing on the media hype DreamWorks and Paramount are creating for the July 4 release of Bay’s Transformers, Metrodome is also using the theatrical engagement to promote its June 4 release of Transformers: The Movie’Ultimate Edition, a two-disc DVD featuring a re-mastered widescreen edition of the film.

    A feature-length extension of the wildly popular animated TV series, Transformers: The Movie continues the battle between the Autobots and the Decepticons, two different sects of robots that transform into vehicles. The film features the voice of Orson Welles in his final role, as well as Eric Idle, Judd Nelson, Leonard Nimoy, Casey Kasem, Robert Stack, John Moschitta, Peter Cullen and Frank Welker. The home entertainment group of Sony BMG Music Ent. put out a 20th anniversary DVD edition of the movie in the U.S. last November.

  • Dragon’s Lair on Blu-ray Quest

    Don Bluth’s 1983 laser-disc arcade favorite Dragon’s Lair will be the first video game to be released in the high-definition Blu-ray Disc format using Blu-ray Java (BD-J). The title for Playstation 3 and all Blue-ray players has been digitally restored and enhanced for 1080p HD presentation with an all-new 5.1 surround sound mix, and also includes brand-new interviews and commentary with Bluth and colleagues Gary Goldman and Rick Dyer.

    Dragon’s Lair features hand-drawn animation and has players controlling the actions of Dirk the Daring, a valiant knight on a quest to rescue the fair princess Daphne from the clutches of an evil dragon and other treacherous monsters and obstacles that await in a medieval castle enchanted by a dark wizard. The new video transfer was pulled directly from the original film and cleaned frame by frame by Digital Leisure and authoring studio Infinite HD.

    ‘I’ve seen the newly restored footage and it just looks amazing,’ says Bluth. ‘It looks even better than I can remember. The visuals, the 5.1 surround sound audio, all I can say is Wow! Now a whole new generation can enjoy Dragon’s Lair all over again.’

    Dragon’s Lair Blu-ray will be available April 9 at software and movie retailers, as well as online at www.digitalleisure.com. Digital Leisure plans to follow the release with Blue-ray versions of Space Ace and Dragon’s Lair II: Time Warp.

  • Highlander’s Panzer Dies

    Film producer Bill Panzer, whose credits include the Highlander film and TV series, passed away on March 17 from complications associated with a fall. He served as a co-exec producer on 1994’s Highlander: The Animated Series, and one of his final projects as producer was Starz Home Entertainment’s direct-to-video animated feature film, Highlander: The Search for Vengeance. He was 64 years old.

    Panzer’s first film was the 1976 mafia pic The Death Collector (a.k.a. Family Enforcer), starring Joe Pesci. Other notable credits include the 1983 Sam Peckinpah thriller The Osterman Weekend, but it was 1986’s Highlander that would define his career for the next two decades. The moderately successful movie about head-hunting immortals became a cult favorite and spawned four sequels and three TV series, including the Saturday morning animated show and the live-action Highlander: The Raven. A fifth sequel, Highlander: The Source, starring Adrian Paul, was recently completed and is in need of a distributor.

    Highlander: Search for Vengeance is directed by Yoshiaki Kawajiri, the respected anime master behind the hits Ninja Scroll and Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, as well as the ‘Program’ segment of The Animatrix. Animation was handled by Japan’s Madhouse, whose credits include Satoshi Kon’s Millennium Actress and Tokyo Godfathers. Production was overseen by Hong Kong’s Imagi Animation Studios Ltd., which provided primary animation for reigning box-office champ TMNT. Starz Home Entertainment will release the anime take on the Highlander mythology this June.

  • Production I.G Unveils Ghost Hound at TAF

    As Production I.G celebrates its 20th anniversary, the Japanese animation house

    announced a new original project titled Ghost Hound (Shinreigari / Ghost Hound) at The Tokyo Int’l Anime Fair, which wraps up on March 25 at Tokyo Big Sight. The series is written by Production I.G staff and Ghost in the Shell scribe Shirow Masamune, and will premiere in Japan this fall on WOWOW.

    The main crew behind Ghost Hound includes director Ryutaro Nakamura (Serial Experiments Lain, Kino’s Travels), scriptwriter Chiaki J. Konaka (Serial Experiments Lain, The Big O) and character designer Mariko Oka (Jigoku Shojo, Jing: King of Bandits). The story will be co-developed by Crossroad.

    A Ghost Hound comic book drawn by Kanata Asahi will start serializing on March 30 in Japan’s Monthly Comic Blade, a publication of Mag Garden.

  • Portfolio Clones Deals for Carl2

    Toronto-based producer/distributor Portfolio Ent. has closed four major deals for it’s tween-targeted animated comedy series Carl2, finding new broadcast homes for the show at ABC and ABC2 in Australia, and selling more episodes to VRT in Belgium and Canal + Cyfrowy in Poland. The series also currently airs on Nickelodeon in Germany, Jetix in the Netherlands, Canal + in Poland and Noga in Israel.

    Carl2 centers on a slacker teen named Carl Crashman, who accidentally generates his own clone after venting about his life in his online journal. Carl soon discovers that the miracle of cloning comes with a price as he scrambles to cover up the trail of chaos that his exuberant clone, C2, leaves in his wake.

    Australia’s ABC has picked up the 26 half-hours comprising the second and third seasons of Carl2, while ABC2 has acquired all three seasons for a total of 52 episodes. VRT, which bought the first season last year, renewed the series for a second season (13 x 30) and Canal + Cyfrowy has added seasons two and three to its roster.

    More information about Carl 2 can be found at www.carl2.com. Portfolio also produces and distributes the animated series RoboRoach, which elevates a lowly cockroach to superhero status.

  • Drawn Together Creators in Fox Stable

    Matt Silverstein and Dave Jeser, creators of Comedy Central’s hit animated series Drawn Together, have signed on to develop new comedies and work on existing shows for 20th Century Fox Television, according to Daily Variety. Through the two-year, seven-figure deal, Fox hopes to better serve the coveted male 18-34 demographic with the duo’s edgy, irreverent style of humor across animated and live-action programming.

    Drawn Together will go into its third season this summer but Comedy Central hasn’t yet announced plans to renew it for a fourth. Given its ratings success, it is likely the cable outlet will want to keep it going, which will mean a change of guard. Silverstein and Jeser will be handing over day-to-day responsibilities for the show after season three wraps.

    The duo said that the quality and originality of such shows as Family Guy and The Winner lured them to Fox, where they feel they can push the envelope creatively. Jeser and Silverstein worked for the network in the past on the critically lauded but short-lived comedies Andy Richter Controls the Universe and Greg the Bunny.

  • Turtles Vs. Spartans

    Turtle shells and Spartan shields clash in theaters this weekend as Warner Bros.’ TMNT arrives to challenge reigning box-office victor 300. The completely CG-animated effort to re-launch the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise has been receiving some mixed reviews but is getting a lot of support from long-time fans of the heroes on a half-shell. The true test of its earning potential will be whether or not it can reach beyond its built-in audience and bring in moviegoers who have not followed the adventures of the genetically mutated reptiles through comic books, Saturday morning cartoons and silly live-action features from the ’80s.

    TMNT pretty much picks up where the second live-action Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie left off and finds the crime-fighting terrapins disbanded and trying to find their own places in the world. When a new threat arises, rat sensei Splinter, voiced by the late Mako, must get the team back together and back in fighting shape. Sarah Michelle Gellar (The Grudge, Buffy The Vampire Slayer) voices the role of April, the human researcher who looks out for Leonardo, Michelangelo, Donatello and Raphael as they use their martial arts skills to take on evil forces. Chris Evans (Fantastic Four) provides the voice of Casey Jones, April’s love interest, while Patrick Stewart (X-Men: The Last Stand, Star Trek: The Next Generation) is heard as Max Winters, a tech industrialist who plots to take over the world with his army of ancient monsters. Rounding out the cast of name actors is Zhang Ziyi (Memoirs of a Geisha), who plays Karai, a villainess who commands a ruthless band of ninjas. Also listen for a cameo by Clerks director and comic-book enthusiast Kevin Smith, who recorded dialogue for a cook in a greasy spoon.

    The new movie is directed by animator/comic-book artist Kevin Munroe from a screenplay he wrote with help from Peter Laird, who co-created the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comic book with Kevin Eastman in 1984. Laird, who bought out Eastman’s stake in the property, also serves as an exec producer on the pic. Thomas K. Gray and Galen Walker produced the PG-rated toon, which was animated by Hong Kong studio Imagi. Currently in the pipeline at the animation house are big-screen adaptations of the anime favorites Gatchaman and Astro Boy, scheduled for release in late 2008 and early 2009, respectively. Read more about TMNT in the latest issue of Animation Magazine.

    Also opening in wide release today is New Line Cinema’s The Last Mimzy, a family-oriented sci-fi pic about a pair of young siblings begin to develop special talents after they find a mysterious box of toys. Directed by New Line co-chairman and co-CEO Robert Shaye, the movie is based on a short story by Lewis Padgett and features visual effects by Rising Sun Pictures, Eden FX, Giant Killer Robots, Tweak Films, RotoFactory, Technicolor, The Orphanage and Amalgamated Pixels.

    Other top contenders being released today are Paramount’s action thriller Shooter, starring Mark Wahlberg, Fox Atomic’s horror sequel The Hills Have Eyes 2, Columbia’s Adam Sandler/Don Cheadle drama Reign Over Me and Lionsgate’s Pride, which stars Terrence Howard and Bernie Mac as coaches of a swim team for troubled teens.

  • iFILM, spiketv.com Meld

    MTV Networks divisions iFilm and Spike TV are teaming to create a new web platform for men, which will bring together iFILM’s online viral video presence and Spike’s broadband and television assets. The integrated website will offer original broadband video series and user-generated content geared to the 18-34 male demographic, providing healthy doses of animation, gaming, humor, extreme sports, viral video, cars, gadgets, movies and babes.

    “This transition is an evolution, not a revolution,’ says Doug Herzog, president of MTVN Entertainment Group. ‘By aligning these two sites, we are drawing upon the best of both companies to accelerate our growth and profitability in the digital space.”

    MTVN is confident that the combined traffic of iFILM and spiketv.com will immediately give the site millions of impressions to sell advertising against. Other economic advantages include the consolidation of management, sales, marketing, technology and programming efforts.

    The newly created iFILM/spiketv.com group will report to Erik Flannigan, senior VP of digital media for MTVN Entertainment Group. Blair Harrison will step down as president and CEO of iFILM and is in talks with MTV Networks about other opportunities either inside or outside the company.

  • OurStage Calls for Entries

    OurStage, a new video website and competition, is seeking animated and live-action films to be judged by online voters for a chance to win $5,000. There will be 12 grand-prize winners per year in all categories and other high-ranking filmmakers will enjoy the benefits of exposure and additional accommodations. This competition is open to U.S. residents only.

    Filmmakers can go to www.ourstage.com/go/animationmag to create their accounts and upload their works. The films will then go head-to-head with other submissions as visitors to the site rank their favorites and decide which ones move on the monthly finals.

    Entries that rise high in the rankings qualify their makers to attend OurStage-organized industry conferences, gain entry into other film fests and earn recognition and other rewards from partners such as Paste Magazine, Gen Art, Noise Pop, The DV Show, the Independent Film Festival of Boston and Film Threat magazine.

  • Web Favorite ‘Odd’ Todd Rosenberg

    Before YouTube debuted with countless videos of dudes getting kicked in the coin purse, one of the hottest things on the Internet was Laid Off, a series of animated shorts about a guy in a blue bathrobe who reflects on his joblessness. The short webtoons were created by Todd Rosenberg, who was able to draw from personal experience when he was laid off from his business development job at AtomFilms in 2000. Turning adversity into lemon-flavored adversity, Todd used his time off to pursue his dream of becoming a cartoonist. He launched www.oddtodd.com and soon his comical, animated adventures in unemployment were being viewed by people everywhere. In 2003, Warner Books published The Odd Todd Handbook: Hard Times, Soft Couch, and a year later Comedy Central signed on make a half-hour series, which was eventually shelved. However, the network is keeping the character going by commissioning new shorts for its Motherload broadband outlet. Based out of New York City, Todd has also written a script for a live-action sit-com based on the property, which is in development at Paramount Television. On top of that, he’s creating animation for ABC News, and he’s doing it all without the aid of pants.

    Animation Magazine Online: Tell us more about the cartoons you’re making for ABC News.

    Todd Rosenberg: Every month or two on either World News Tonight or Nightline when they have a story that’s either kind of humorous or scientific or is kind of dry and takes a lot of explanation, I do a cartoon for it. It’s usually the thing at the end of the news like where Charlie Gibson says, ‘ Have you ever wondered this’?’ So that’s a freelance-type gig I do to pay the bills.

    AMO: How did you get hooked up with ABC? Did they see your shorts and contact you?

    TR: There’s one correspondent/producer guy over the named Robert Krulwich who saw one of my cartoons years ago. He’s the kind of guy who does more alternative news stories. He asked me what I was doing and we got together and started thinking about stuff. He was working on a piece about the price of gasoline, comparing a gallon of gasoline, which a the time cost about $3, to the price of a gallon of Starbucks coffee, which could be like $35. I animated along with that story and it worked out really well and the ABC people loved it. It’s been a very good, on-going relationship with him and I’ve done some other work for people at ABC as well. It’s sort of weird when you’re watching the news and then there’s something I made while I sat in my underwear.

    AMO: How will the live-action Paramount show differ from the animated shorts?

    TR: To be honest, it’s kind of a departure from the cartoons. It has the same sensibility in terms of what the overall tone of who the character is, but it’s not necessarily a blue-robed, unemployed character. It’s more just sort of a guy who is trying to find his way in the world, not sure what he wants to do in terms of getting serious with life and all that sort of stuff.

    AMO: What’s it like working with Comedy Central?

    TR: They’re actually really great. As disappointing as it was that the show didn’t make it to air, they were very cool about things in general. They’re really open minded in terms of saying ‘Do what you want.’ Now that I can embed Motherload cartoons on my own website, I’m more comfortable about it because the first time around it was like, ‘Hey, here’s my website! Now you have to go to Motherload to watch my cartoons.’ And the site was just launching, so there were some problems with it and it was a little frustrating, but I think they’ve hammered out the kinks.

    AMO: How long does it take you to do one of your animated shorts for Motherload?

    TR: The first round I think I did 11 cartoons for their launch and did them in I think it was 14 weeks. I usually don’t work that fast. Frankly, I’m lazy so that was the first time I really had to push myself to be working constantly to keep up. The fortunate thing is, in terms of my animation style, it’s basically simplistic because I’m limited skill wise. I like the way it looks and all that, but it actually makes things go a little bit quicker. The thing that takes the most time is I usually make the cartoons very long and then it’s cutting it back and cutting it back and then finally putting the voice-over on a tweaking it. The animation is actually the shortest part for me.

    AMO: The simplistic, kind of minimalist looks really adds to the popularity of the Odd Todd brand, doesn’t it?

    TR: Yeah, absolutely. I kind of go back and forth. The Laid Off cartoons are usually pretty simplistic, but when I do my Halloween cartoons ‘ this year’s was pretty animated because I can’t resist wanting to have monsters running around and stuff like that, and really get a scare in. I’m sort of learning how to animate, frankly, so I can’t resist wanting to make things look a little more animated. The cartoons I do for ABC are usually a bit more involved as well, in terms of more colors and things like flesh tones. Occasionally I’ll dabble in the dreaded lip synch, which I have yet to master at all.

    AMO: What software do you animate in?

    TR: Flash. For a while I was doing everything in Flash MX, which is an older version. The stuff that I use is maybe about 5% of what the whole program can do, so the more robust the program got, the more confusing it got for me, so I stopped upgrading. But I finally just gave in because I work with some other people on stuff sometimes and I just needed an updated version. I have succumbed to the latest version of Flash but I was trying to hold off because they were burying my favorite buttons.

    AMO: There’s a lot of emphasis on mobile these days. Everyone’s looking for content and it seems that you’re in a really good position to deliver on that end. How do you see that whole market?

    TR: It’s definitely a market. There’s so much content out there and so many people running at the same goal. It’s something I’m interested in but haven’t gotten into. A reason may be that I’m lazy. And it’s still just me running the show around here, so I’m just kind of happy to be paying my bills and stuff like that. But it’s interesting to think about what things are going to be like ten years from now. If you go back five or six years from now, people were laughing at the idea of watching video on the net because of the streaming and buffering. The way cell phones have their problems now, it’s going to be the same thing. As the younger people are growing up being comfortable with watching things on smaller screens, there’s going to be a real turning point when these kids start being able to buy these gadgets.

    AMO: Are you branching out from the Laid Off character and creating other properties?

    TR: Yeah. I have two desires and one of them is to develop a kids’ show that I have in mind and another is to develop a completely twisted horror-type animated thing. I guess it all depends on if I’m feeling good or bad. There’s a bunch of things I’m looking to do. Paying the bills sometimes gets in the way of what I’d like to focus on, but I’ve been happy to be able to try different things and keep the animation going. I think for a while now I’m going to be focusing on animation because when I get too far away from it I feel weird. In terms of how productive I am, it comes in waves. I think there’s going to be another wave coming toward the summer’most likely Motherload-sponsored stuff but there’s a game in development, too. One thing that’s really popular on my site is my Cook-ay Slots, which is a slot machine where you can win imaginary cookies and there are a lot of cartoons built into the game. I’m planning to build more games like that. A friend of mine, who does a site called ae4rv.com, he does the programming. I would really love to build a much, much bigger game, sort of like the Game of Life with the blue robe character, but when you have no budget, which is what I have, it’s kind of difficult to build the bigger games.

    I could be hoping that this works out or that works out or whatever, but the fact that I’m sitting here being able to make a living drawing cartoons’and right now I am actually in my underwear’is just great. I was one of those guys who was a salesman for like eight or ten years and doing cartoons when I got home, sending out newspaper strips and things like that and just getting all these rejection letters. So the Idea of being laid off leading to this, giving me the time to focus on it and figure out a path for it, is a good thing.

    To enter the unique world of Odd Todd, go to www.oddtodd.com or watch the shorts at www.comedycentral.com/shows/odd_todd.

  • Starz Ent. Sues Disney

    Starz Ent. LLC today filed a copyright infringement and breach of contract lawsuit against Buena Vista Television (BVT), a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Co. Filed in the U.S District Court for the Central District of California, the claim alleges that BVT violated an exclusive licensing deal by selling films for Internet distribution.

    According to Starz, Disney is prohibited from selling its films for transmission over the Internet under the terms of the 1993 and 1999 Starz-BVT agreements, which were extended by BVT in 2005. Disney is accused of going behind the company’s back by selling movies online through such services as Apple’s iTunes and Walmart.com. “Such conduct,’ the suit states, ‘constitutes a blatant breach of the licensing agreements between BVT and Starz.’

    Papers filed indicate that Starz, over the life of the contract, has paid more than $1 billion dollars for periods of exclusive rights to the films in question. The company also says it has has invested millions of dollars to develop, launch and market its own Internet video service, Vongo, which delivers more than a thousand movies, including Disney releases, per month to subscribers via broadband Internet connections.

    “We want to encourage consumers to have every opportunity to access a wide array of films over the Internet,” comments Robert B. Clasen, chairman and CEO of Starz Ent. “But we cannot allow Disney to sell those rights to us on an exclusive basis and then sell the same rights to other parties.”

    Clasen adds, “Disney has been a great partner. We hope to continue our relationship. But our agreements clearly prohibit them from selling their movies by electronic download over the Internet while they are exclusive to Starz. If Disney is permitted to violate our contract in this manner, it will undermine the integrity of copyright in general which is a cornerstone of our industry.”

    Starz Ent. lays claim to being the exclusive subscription television and broadband provider of first-run films from leading Hollywood studios including Walt Disney Pictures, Pixar, Sony Pictures Ent., Overture Films, Revolution Studios, Miramax Films, Touchstone Pictures, Hollywood Pictures, TriStar, Screen Gems, Sony Classics and Warren Miller Films. Select first-run theatrical films from The Weinstein Co., IFC and Yari Film Group are also available for subscription television and broadband exclusively on Starz Ent. services.

    In addition to being premium movie service provider, Starz Ent. has become a producer of animated movies with last year’s purchase of IDT, which brought with it a number of animation houses including Film Roman in the U.S and Mainframe in Canada. The company’s latest toon release, Hellboy: Blood and Iron, debuted on Cartoon Network on Saturday, March 17, and will be available on DVD on June 12. The movie was animated by film Roman and Japanese studio Madhouse.

  • SCI FI Loads Battlestar Special

    The SCI FI Channel series Battlestar Galactica, which has won VES Awards and has garnered multiple Emmy nominations for its visual effects, will treat fans to a two-hour episode scripted to bridge the current third season and the upcoming season. SCI FI also announced that it has also picked up the last nine episodes of the fourth season, which kicks off in January.

    A re-imagining of the popular 1978 TV series, Battlestar Galactica centers on refugees from a besieged planet who journey through space in search of a new home. The special, long-form episode will reportedly feature the entire and will be filmed as the show goes back into production over the next few months. Following the on-air premiere, the production will be sold as a DVD movie.

    Last year, SCI FI greenlit a Battlestar spin-off series titled Caprica, which will go back half a century before the events depicted in the current series. The new show will show how the people of the Twelve Colonies had their peaceful lives disrupted by the emergence of the Cylons, and will focus on two families as they struggle with societal changes, corporate intrigue and sexual politics. Development is being spearheaded by Galactica exec producers Ronald D. Moore and David Eick, along with writer Remi Aubuchon (Fox’s 24).

  • Gears Turning for Game Pic

    As Microsoft continues to try and get its Halo movie made, the company will see New Line Cinema adapting its latest hit game franchise, Gears of War. According to Daily Variety, New Line put in the highest bid to the game’s developer, Epic Games, which holds all ancillary rights. Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl scribe Stuart Beattie is adapting the game for producers Marty Bowen and Wyck Godfrey of Temple Hill, who hope to have the movie ready for the 2009 summer frame.

    Gears of War is a third-person tactical action/horror game that has players take on the role of Marcus Fenix, a soldier at war against the immense Locust Horde, a mass of nightmarish creatures that threatens human existence. Most remarkable for its sophisticated next-generation graphics, the game has sold more than three million units to become the best-selling game for Xbox 360 and the most popular Xbox Live title. The game also took Game of the Year at the Game Developers Choice Awards, held earlier this month in conjunction with the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco.

    Epic Games developed Gears of War as a multi-platform entertainment franchise and had already crafted story elements beyond those presented in the game to prepare for film and publishing opportunities. Cliff ‘CliffyB’ Bleszinski, who served as lead designer on the game, will serve as exec producer on the film.

    Beattie, who wrote a 21-page treatment for Gears before starting on the screenplay, also wrote a screen adaptation of Midway Games’ SpyHunter for Universal and star Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson. Other credits under the busy writer’s belt include the script for Columbia Pictures’ feature film based on the Dark Horse horror comic series 30 Days of Night by Steve Niles.

  • Doc Details Solo Feature Effort

    If you’ve ever wondered what it takes to make a feature film all by yourself, you can check out an online documentary series titled Details: Making a Movie Called Minushi, in which filmmaker Tyler Gibb shares insights on how he made his film. Gibb has spent the last four years working on the movie and has released segments as web serials that have been viewed by thousands of fans. Likewise, the series of eight, 5- to 10-minute making-of shorts are being released online in chapters.

    Completed in January, the Flash-animated Minushi is the story of a young woman named Trixie, who sets out in search of her brother, who was drafted to fight the Giants, massive robots that have come to earth on a mission of destruction. Joined by her faint-hearted best-friend, Khal, she leaves a city under martial law to find a war zone fraught with menacing bandits, lumbering automatons and an army bent on capturing her dead or alive.

    Montreal native Gibb started making irreverent short animations that were licensed by AtomFilms, Vivendi’s Uproar.com, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and Carsey-Werner Prods. for ABC Television. his flagship website, Boneland.com, partnered with National Lampoon in 2006 to launch the National Lampoon Humor Network.

    The first three installments of Details: Making a Movie Called Minushi are currently available for viewing at the official Minushi website, Minushi.com and will also be released to popular web-video portals including Revver.com and YouTube.com.

  • Create Awards Accepting Entries

    Create Magazine is now accepting submissions for the second annual Create Awards, a competition that honors achievements by professionals and students in advertising, film and video, motion graphics, graphic communication, photography, printing, interactive media and copywriting.

    This year, the Best of Show award will come with a $30,000 ‘dream studio prize package.’ The loot will include products from Adobe, Hewlett-Packard, Kodak, NEC Display Solutions, Alienware Computers, Wacom Technologies, Digital Tutors, Softimage, Iomega, Wiredrive, Microtek, Inovartis, LensBabies, E-Frontier, Spam Cube, AutoFX, Corel, Pantone, Tivity Software and Extensis.

    Also new for 2007 are prize packages for all eight Best of Industry winners (advertising/art direction, film/video, motion graphics, graphic communication, photography, interactive, copywriting/words, and self promotion) and one Best of Student prize package worth more than $2,000. In addition, the winner for the paper/printing/packaging Industry, sponsored by NewPage, will have their logo on a NASCAR car along with race day tickets.

    The first deadline for entries is June 1. To enter the competition or receive more information, go to www.thecreateawards.com or pick up a copy of the March/April issue of Create Magazine.

  • Venice to Lionize Burton

    Tim Burton, the creative juggernaut behind such animated favorites as The Nightmare Before Christmas, James and the Giant Peach and Corpse Bride will be awarded the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 64th Venice International Film Festival. This year’s event takes place Aug. 29 through Sept. 8, and the award will be bestowed on Wednesday, Sept. 5, during a special ‘Tim Burton Day.’

    This is the second consecutive year that the Venice Film Festival has honored an American filmmaker with the prestigious Golden Lion. Last year’s recipient was David Lynch, director of the cult classics Eraserhead and Blue Velvet, as well as the more recent Mulholland Drive and Inland Empire. Lynch is also an animation fan and makes his own animated shorts for his website, www.davidlynch.com.

    ‘Tim Burton is a cinematic genius, the most imaginative child of the new age of cinema,’ says Venice Film Festival director Marco M’ller. ‘He has a unique talent of being able to imbue his fantasies with emotional depth. More insolently pop than most of the contemporary new directors, and less eager for approval than most of the older ones, there is not a bankable Hollywood director with a flintier sense of cinema than him.’

    Burton chose the Venice fest to present international premiere of The Nightmare Before Christmas in 1994 and the world premiere of Corpse Bride in 2005. He is currently in production on a big-screen adaptation of Stephen Sondheim’s award-winning musical thriller Sweeney Todd, a co-production of Warner Bros. Pictures and DreamWorks Pictures, and is also producing a feature-length, CG-animated extension of Shane Acker’s Oscar-nominated short film, 9.

  • V-Me Eats Up Vitaminix

    V-Me, a new 24-hour Spanish-language public network in the U.S., has acquired the educational animated series Vitaminix from Spain’s Icon Animation. Launched earlier this month, V-Me is digital network carried by public television stations, basic digital cable and satellite systems collectively available in more than 24 million U.S. households in major cities including L.A., Miami, Houston, Chicago and San Antonio.

    Vitaminix uses animation to teach children about the nutritional value of food, minerals and vitamins. Each episode features one animal associated with a type of food to convey the life-long benefits of healthy eating.

    The show made its U.S. debut on premium cable outlet Animania HD and is aired in more than 20 languages worldwide. Major broadcast deals have been signed with Nickelodeon Europe (Germany, Holland, Belgium, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark) Nickelodeon Spain, Nickelodeon Latin America, Disney Channel in Italy and TPS Jeunesse in France. In Asia, the show airs on the Disney Channel, Hong Kong Cable, Infiniss and EBS in Korea and EBC Taiwan.

    Icon Animation has in place a Vitaminix licensing program, which includes educational games and puzzles, clothing and school supplies. More information on the property can be fould at www.vitaminix.tv.

  • Vintage Superman, Batman on Tap

    Warner Home Video announced that it will release the animated series The New Adventures of Superman (1966) and The New Adventures of Batman (1977) as two separate two-disc collector sets on June 26. Each release will feature all episodes of the Filmation shows, plus retrospective documentaries.

    The New Adventures of Superman will offer 36 installments of the CBS cartoon series that introduced to the screen intrepid reporter Jimmy Olsen and such iconic villains as Lex Luthor and Brainiac. The 6-minute vignettes will be accompanied by a featurette titled Superman in 66, which explores how the ’60s era influenced the character of Superman and how Filmation brought that out on screen.

    The New Adventures of Batman features the voices of Adam West and Burt Ward, who starred in the 1966 live-action series. The show has Batman, Robin and Batgirl battling various villains in Gotham City with the occasional help of Batmite, a dimensional imp. All 16 episodes are included, along with a doc titled Dark Versus Light’Filmation and the Batman. Through interviews with the president and publisher of DC Comics, the president of Warner Bros. Animation and others, the extra feature looks at the legacy of Filmation, its animation style and how the studio provided a lighter, more comical version of the brooding character introduced in the pages of Detective Comics. In addition, Filmation historian Michael Swanigan and Filmation founder Lou Schiemer will provide commentary on two of the episodes. Each disc set will retail for $26.99.

  • Midway Makes Aqua Teen Game

    As fans await next month’s release of the feature film based on the [adult swim] series Aqua Teen Hunger Force, Midway Games announced plans to develop a video game that revolves around the hit staple of Cartoon Network’s late-night programming block. Aqua Teen Hunger Force Zombie Ninja Pro-Am is scheduled to be available for PlayStation2 this fall.

    Aqua Teen Hunger Force Zombie Ninja Pro-Am is described as an epic, action-adventure combat golf-cart racing game that gives fans an opportunity to interact with the character from the show about three talking fast-food items who share a rental home in New Jersey. When Frylock is admitted to the prestigious Jersey Pines Golf Club, Master Shake decides to show the uppity members that he also deserves the benefits of membership. Meatwad is, of course, persuaded to join in and the three end up using golf clubs and a variety of other weapons in ways not intended as they battle numerous villains and fan-favorite characters from the show.

    Midway is working closely with Aqua Teen creators Matt Maiellaro and Dave Willis to bring the tone of the TV show and movie to the game. ‘This golden chalice represents a new age in gaming, the likes of which has never before been seen on this planet,’ Maiellaro and Willis quip. ‘The weak will tremble at the awesomeness of our full color, hand-made graphics!’

    Aqua Teen Hunger Force debuted with the September 2001 launch of [adult swim] and consists of more than 60 15-minute episodes. The show’s following has no doubt grown since the property was thrust into the national spotlight when Boston authorities recently mistook marketing materials for explosive devices. Turner is hoping the $2 million it paid the city for damages pays off when The Aqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for Theaters opens on more than 800 screens nationwide on April 13.