Author: Ryan Ball

  • Ghibli to Distribute Foreign Toons

    After giving the world a bevy of animated gems, including the works of master Hayao Miyazaki, Studio Ghibli is reportedly bringing toons from other countrires to Japan. According to Daily Variety, the Ghibli Museum will exhibit animated art films from around the world at the Cinema Angelika in Tokyo’s bustling Shibuya district, and will also release imports on DVD with the assistance of Buena Vista Home Entertainment.

    First on Ghibli’s release shedule is The Awakening of Spring from Russian animator Alexander Petrov, who earned an Oscar in 1999 for his animated short The Old Man and the Sea, based on the classic novel by Ernest Hemingway. Designed to resemble oil painting on glass, The Awakening of Spring is slated to debut on March 17. The initial DVD release will be Paul Grimault’s 1980 feature, The King and Mockingbird (Le Roi et l’oiseau), which Miyazaki counts among his inspirations.

    Miyazaki is rumored to be working on a feature-length adaptation of a Chinese novella titled I Lost My Little Boy, about a young boy dying from heart disease. Studio Ghibli has not made any official statement regarding its next project, but is expected to make an announcement soon.

  • Smallville Animated for Phones

    A six-episode animated wireless series titled Smallville Legends: The Oliver Queen Chronicles premieres today, Jan. 18, through a partnership between The Warner Bros. Television Group, The CW Network and Sprint. Based on The CW’s hit television series Smallville, the series is created expressly for mobile phones and broadband platforms and is available exclusively on the Sprint TVSM mobile video service

    Smallville chronicles the adventures of a teenage Clark Kent, who will one day go on to become Superman. The series recently introduced the character of Oliver Queen, who arrives in Smallville to continue his covert quest for justice as the bow-and-arrow-toting superhero Green Arrow. Smallville Legends: The Oliver Queen Chronicles will explore the character’s back-story and his history with the villainous Lex Luthor.

    This is the first time Warner Bros. and The CW have created original animated content to help market Smallville. New episodes will launch each Thursday and will remain exclusive to Sprint for the six-week duration of the series. The installments will then be steamed online at www.CWTV.com starting on February 22.

    ‘Our goal at Warner Bros. Television is to look for unique, innovative ways to entertain and engage our fans, resulting in a deeper connection to our shows and providing value to our broadcast partners,’ says Lisa Gregorian, exec VP of worldwide marketing for Warner Bros. Television Group.

    ‘This is another example of how The CW is delivering on its promise to deliver original, new content to our young audience via multiple platforms,’ adds Rick Haskins, exec VP of marketing and brand strategy for The CW. ‘We will continue to work with our studio and sales partners to whet the appetite of our passionate fans for more CW programming.’

    Sprint Vision subscribers can watch the two- to four-minute animated episodes of Smallville Legends: The Oliver Queen Chronicles by texting GREEN to the number 7000 on their phone (standard text message and wireless data rates apply). The link provided will also connect fans to a bank of additional Smallville-related wireless content that includess downloadable images and show playlists from the Sprint Music Store.

  • Fox Animation Head Leaves for Universal

    Following its moderately successful dive into the feature animation biz with Curious George, Universal pictures is apparently amping up its efforts in the arena by stealing 20th Century Fox Animation CEO Chris Meledandri. According to Daily Variety. Melendandri will launch his own family entertainment shingle with Universal this spring, focusing on animated and live-action movies to be distributed by the studio.

    Meledandri’s exclusive, five-year agreement with Universal is expected to yield two to three movies a year starting in 2009. Universal will fund the start-up banner while outside investors will be sought to help cover production costs.

    Universal had hoped to inherit a feature animation unit when it made a bid to buy DreamWorks, which was instead sold to Paramount last year. Melendandri will have to enlist the aid of existing animation companies or build a pipeline from scratch. While he was with Fox, he oversaw the acquisition of Blue Sky Studios, which went on to make the very successful Ice Age movies and Robots. More recently, he has been overseeing work on Fox’s The Simpsons: The Movie, as well as pics in development including a feature adaptation of Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who, director Wes Anderson’s The Fantastic Mr. Fox and a third Ice Age installment.

  • Animator Pete Kleinow Dies

    Accomplished animator, VFX artist and musician “Sneaky” Pete Kleinow has passed away at the age of 72. In addition to animating on the classic Art Clokey shows Gumby and Davey and Goliath, and George Pal’s The Puppetoon Movie, he created stop-motion effects for the 1974 series Land of the Lost and feature films including The Terminator, RoboCop 2 and Army of Darkness. More recently, he worked on 3D animation for the Disney movie Holes. He died Saturday, Jan. 6 at a Petaluma, Calif. convalescent home near the nursing facility where he had been living with Alzheimer’s disease.

    As a musician, Kleinow wrote and performed the theme music for Gumby, but many will remember him as one of the original members of the country-rock band Flying Burrito Brothers. The steel guitar prodigy formed the group with Chris Hillman and Gram Parsons of The Byrds in 1968 and wnet on to enjoy a musical career that spanned six decades, inspiring such groups as the Eagles, the Steve Miller Band and Poco. He also worked as a session musician for a number of years, recording with the likes of John Lennon, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, Joni Mitchell, the Bee Gees and Sly and the Family Stone. In 2000, he formed the band Burrito Express, which he fronted before being diagnosed with Alzheimer’s.

    Kleinow received an Emmy award in 1983 for his work on the miniseries The Winds of War. He is survived by his wife of 54 years, Ernestine, his daughters Anita and Tammy, and three sons, Martin, Aaron and Cosmo. Plans for a memorial service to be held in Joshua Tree later this month are pending.

  • Wrappy Polices MTV Latin America

    MTV Latin America has picked up Wrappy, Sex Police from Canadian animation production and distribution outfit Comet Ent. Inc. The animated series about a condom dedicated to busting sexual irresponsibility will premiere during the Animatosis block in different time slots throughout the region as MTV kicks off its ‘sex month.’

    The adult-oriented show centers on Wrappy, the most polemic condom on the Internet, who creates a team of special agents to solve the most bizarre cases in Temptation City. A series of 13 half-hour episodes are being co-produced by Comet and Spain’s Paneka Animaestudio.

    Wrappy started as series of Flash-animated web cartoons that attracted 45,000 visitors per day, according to Comet. The company is currently in production on Santa Vs. Claus, an animated feature film for HD television and home video distribution. More information on the company and its properties can be found at www.cometentertainment.com.

  • Broadcasters Flock to Aardman’s Shaun

    Following its successful MIPCOM debut a few months ago, Aardman Animations’ new animated series Shaun the Sheep has been sold to broadcasters in 60 countries. Licensing partners around the globe have also come aboard the clay-animated property, which is a spin-off of the Wallace and Gromit short A Close Shave.

    Shaun is a rebel who doesn’t follow the flock but instead leads his fellow sheep into all kinds of trouble and causes job-related stress for Bitzer the sheepdog. Other characters include the Naughty Pigs, Timmy the baby lamb and the enormous Shirley, a sheep who eats anything and everything. A series of 40 seven-minute stop-motion episodes has been commissioned by CBBC in the U.K. with Aardman’s Richard Goleszowski directing. The show is scheduled to make its broadcast debut later this year.

    Viewers in Germany will be able the catch Sean on WDR, a co-producer on the series, while others pick it up on ABC in Australia, TVNZ in New Zealand, RTBF in Belgium and TSR in Switzerland.

    In the latest round of sales, TF1 in France has acquired Shaun rights across all categories, including TV, home video and licensing and merchandising. Sony Creative Products has also picked up all rights and is currently negotiating a deal with a major broadcaster in the territory.

    Aardman has additionally signed a major pan-territory television partnership deal with Disney in Asia, France, Italy and Latin America, and has sold the show to Cartoon Network for broadcast in Central and Eastern Europe. HRT Croatia and Ceska Televize in the Czech Republic have also snagged television rights.

    In Asia, sales have been made to major broadcasters including TVB in Hong Kong, while Noga Communications in Israel makes room for the show on its Logi Channel. Nordisk Film has acquired home video rights for Scandinavia, where the series will air on DR, SVT, NRK and YLE. Licensing and merchandising rights for the territory have been secured by Alicom.

  • Animation Block Party Needs Films

    The Animation Block Party Summerfest in New York City is accepting submissions for this year’s event, taking place July 28-20 at venues all over Brooklyn. Filmmakers will be competing for close to $30,000 in prizes, including copies of software packages such as Adobe After Effects, Boinx I-Stop Motion, Toon Boom Studio and Autodesk Sketchbook, as well as designer bags from Crumpler, subscriptions to Animation Magazine and big student production grants.

    Festival organizers welcome all genres and styles of animation. There are ten award categories, including original design, computer animation, narrative short, under minute movie, personal documentary and more. The Block Party is also offering to fund animators’ Public Service Announcement films for the entire festival season. For more information on Animation Block Party 2007 go to www.animationblock.com.

  • Gotham Group, Yahoo! Team for Animation

    Following Google’s acquisition of the popular viral video site YouTube, competing internet entity Yahoo! is raising its profile as a video content provider. The company’s Yahoo! Studios has joined forces with the Gotham Group, a management firm that represents animation and family entertainment talent and content, to produce and distribute original animated programming for the web. The productions will be made available across the Yahoo! Media Group properties, including Yahoo! Entertainment and Yahoo! TV.

    ‘We pride ourselves on finding new revenue streams for our content creators and Yahoo! provides a fresh and exciting opportunity for the world to interact with the great talent we represent,’ says Gotham Group CEO and founder Ellen Goldsmith-Vein.

    ‘We are always looking for opportunities to make dynamic and entertaining content available on Yahoo!,’ comments Yahoo! Studios general manager Drew Buckley. ‘We are thrilled to work with Gotham to create and program compelling animated content for our users.’

    Veteran entertainment industry exec Jon Vein initiated the deal and negotiated the agreement on behalf of The Gotham Group, which will draw upon the company’s base of pre-existing animated shorts while originating new content. The company currently represents more than 250 directors, writers, producers, illustrators and artists, as well as a number of book and comic book publishers. Gotham also serves as a producer on live action and animated films and television projects, and currently has a feature-length adaptation of Holly Black’s and Tony DiTerlizzi’s best-selling fantasy book series The Spiderwick Chronicles set up at Paramount with Nickelodeon Movies. The company is also an exec producer on the American version of Aardman Animations’ Creature Comforts, which will premiere on CBS in early 2007, and has direct to DVD deals in place with Lionsgate and Starz Media.

  • Globe Heads Marketing for DreamWorks Animation

    Anne Globe has been appointed DreamWorks Animation’s new head of worldwide marketing and consumer products. She takes over the post previously held by Terry Press, a longtime member of the DreamWorks executive team, who has announced plans to step down. Press will continue to work with the studio while also taking on other, non-competitive projects in the industry.

    Globe joined DreamWorks SKG’s promotion and merchandising team in 1996 and has served as head of worldwide consumer products and promotion at DreamWorks Animation since 2005. She is credited with spearheading a significant increase in the number and scope of DreamWorks promotional partnerships, as well as the scale of their support of DreamWorks Animation movies. In the last year, DreamWorks solidified new relationships with McDonald’s, Activision, AOL and Kellogg’s, while building upon its long-term strategic partnerships with technology leaders HP and AMD.

    ‘We’re at an exciting moment in our studio’s history,’ Globe comments. ‘For the first time since we’ve become a public company we’re looking at really building on our franchises and fully leveraging all our partnerships to enhance the DreamWorks brand. I’m excited by the opportunity, particularly knowing the enormous talent that exists with our marketing partners at Paramount, as well as the depth and breadth of support I have here at DreamWorks.’

    ‘I’m delighted that we have an executive of Anne Globe’s stature to lead our marketing efforts at an exciting time for our company,’ adds DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg. ‘In the next two years, our movie releases will continue to build upon our great Shrek and Madagascar franchises, as well introduce two new and unique films in Bee Movie and Kung Fu Panda. I have every confidence that Anne’s background and capacity to create innovative marketing campaigns will assure we put the very best marketing support behind everything we’re doing.’

    Globe and her team are no doubt hard at work on promotional efforts for Shrek the Third, the eagerly awaited CG-animated sequel scheduled to arrive in theaters on May 18.

  • Disney/Pixar Plucks Burroughs’ John Carter

    After being bounced around Hollywood for a number of years, Edgar Rice Burroughs’ John Carter of Mars sci-fi adventure stories may end up being animated by the Disney/Pixar toon machine. Citing anonymous sources, The Hollywood Reporter brings word that the studio is in final negotiations to acquire film rights to the Tarzan creator’s novels, which were first published in the early 1900s.

    The 11-volume John Carter saga follows the adventures of a Civil War officer who is transported to Mars, where he is captured by green men before emerging as a great warrior and marrying a princess. The first title, A Princess of Mars, was published in serial form in the periodical All-Story in 1912.

    Jeffrey Katzenberg, who is now CEO of DreamWorks Animation, planed to make an animated John Carter feature when he was with Disney back in the 1990s. In 2002, the Mouse House relinquished the film rights to Paramount Pictures, which has had several directors attached to the project. Robert Rodriguez had to bow out when he resigned from the Director’s Guild of America because they wouldn’t let him credit comic book creator Frank Miller as a co-director on Sin City. Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow helmer Kerry Conrad then threw his name in the hat before Paramount tapped Elf and Zathrua director Jon Favreau to do the job. Favreau then left the project to direct Iron Man, Paramount’s live-action feature based on Marvel’s comics. Paramount then let its option on Burroughs’ stories run out.

    With it’s recent People’s Choice Awards and Golden Globes wins for Cars, Dinsey’s Pixar is proving that its track record for producing animated features that resonate with critics and moviegoers remains untarnished. As evidenced by the 2004 superhero action-comedy The Incredibles and Walt Disney Feature Animation’s upcoming Meet the Robinsons, John Lasseter and crew are not afraid to experiment with genres, and a John Carter pic would be another departure from the fashionable talking-animal formula that most studios are adhering to.

  • Paltrow Drawn to Iron Man

    It appears that Marvel’s upcoming feature film adaptation of its Iron Man comic-book property has snagged another Oscar-caliber actor. Academy Award winner Gwyneth Paltrow (Proof, Shakespeare in Love) has joined Robert Downey Jr. (A Scanner Darkly, Chaplin) and Terrance Howard (Hustle & Flow, Crash) in the cast of the superhero tentpole.

    Iron Man is being directed by Jon Favreau (Elf, Zathura: A Space Adventure), who is an accomplished actor himself. The film is centers on billionaire industrialist and genius inventor Tony Stark (Downey), who creates an armored suit to help him battle villains.

    Paltrow will play Stark’s personal assistant Virginia “Pepper” Potts, a woman with an Iron-clad will of her own who has a thing for her employer and occasionally serves as his conscience. Howard will portray Jim “Rhodey” Rhodes, Stark’s best friend and a decorated military pilot whose skill set becomes a valuable asset to Stark as he takes on the role of superhero.

    Iron Man is Marvel’s first self-financed and produced feature film. The company is working on casting all other supporting roles and is set to begin filming in Los Angeles this February. The pic is being produced by Avi Arad and Kevin Feige. Exec producers are Michael Helfant, Ari Arad, Jon Favreau, Louis D’Esposito and Peter Billingsley. The big-budget actioner is scheduled for release by Paramount Pictures on May 2, 2008.

  • Animation Show Travels to DVD

    If you haven’t been fortunate enough to catch the traveling festival known as The Animation Show on one of its many stops around the nation, you can now pick up the DVD box set featuring some to the best animated shorts produced in recent years. The two-disc set features 20 shorts hand-picked by Beavis and Butt-Head and King of the Hill creator Mike Judge and Academy Award-nominated animator Don Hertzfeldt (Rejected, Billy’s Baloon).

    The Animation Show kicked off its national tour in the fall of 2003 and featured the Academy Award-nominated shorts Mt. Head from Koji Yamamura; Das Rad (The Rocks) by Chris Stenner, Arvid Uibel and Heidi Wittlinger; Strange Invaders from Cordell Barker; and Fifty Percent Grey by Ruairi Robinson, along with a host of other new and classic pieces. In addition, Judge and Hertzfeld premiered some of their own new works. The second edition debuted in 2005 with such featured shorts as l Plympton’s Guard Dog; Blur Studio’s 3D sci-fi actioner Rockfish, Tomek Baginski’s ark military fable Fallen Art, Amanda Forbis’ and Wendy Tilby’s rotoscoped When the Day Breaks, Jonathan Nix’s 2D story of analog love in a digital world titled Hello and Don Hertzfeldt’s own 12-minute Sundance Festival opus, The Meaning of Life.

    Hertzfeldt and fellow featured filmmakers Bill Plympton and Corky Quakenbush provide commentary on the DVD. Other extra features include a deleted pencil test by Judge; a Mt. Head concept art and character design gallery; motion tests, animatics and production art from Baginski’s The Cathedral; a Das Rad production photo albumn; a storyboard-to-scene comparison for La Course a L’abime; a featurette on animated shorts over the past 100 years; and making-of featurettes for Fallen Art, The Feds and Magda. There are also two bonus films: Chel White’s A Painful Glimpse into My Writing Process and Pes’ Kaboom and its accompanying behind-the-scenes look. The box set from Paramount Home Video retails for the suggested price of $26.99.

    The third Animation Show program kicks off today, Jan. 16, in Santa Barbara. Calif. at the Arlington Theater at 8 p.m. From there, the show will travel on to a host of other major cities across the U.S. Films to be screened include Hertzfeldt’s own latest short, Everything Will be Ok, as well as Run Wrake’s Rabbit, Shane Acker’s 9, PES’ Game Over, Gaelle Denis’ City Paradise, Max Hattler’s Collision, Joanna Quinn’s Dreams and Desires, Remi Chaye’s Eaux Forte and Overtime by Oury Atlan,Thibaut Berland and Damien Ferrie. For more information, including tour dates, go to www.animationshow.com.

  • Germany Fed Up With Game Violence

    Grand Theft Auto fans in Germany may want to consider moving if the country’s parliament passes a law banning violence in video games. According to Daily Variety, a bill has been drafted in response to public outcry over links between gaming and real-life acts of violence. If passed, the law could significantly hinder European distribution of top games from publishers around the world.

    The proposed law was spurred by a Columbine-like high-school shooting in Emsdetten, Germany, in which the 18-year-old assailant wounded 37 people before killing himself. Officials said the young man spent a lot of time playing Valve’s first-person shooter Counter-Strike. Shortly after that, another gamer posted a message on a video game forum detailing plans to murder schoolmates.

    A ban on violence in games would specifically target instances of violence against human characters, meaning all war games and other shooters are likely to end up on the black market rather than retail shelves. If successful, the movement could spread to other parts of Europe since the European Commission is already looking into the correlation between game bloodshed and violent behavior.

  • Fans Seal Fate of Lionsgate HABBO Movie

    On the heels of its theatrical toon debut with Happily N’Ever After, mini-major film studio Lionsgate is turning to Internet users to decide the course of its latest animated venture. The company has partnered with popular online teen community HABBO to host a short film competition that has ten different animated shorts based on the Habbo world vying for a shot at becoming a movie for DVD and online distribution.

    Registered Habbo users, who are known as “Habbos,” can now log on to Habbo.com and local Habbo sites around the world to view the animated shorts, which have been created by renowned animation houses around the world. The ‘Habbo-sodes’ will be available for 14 days, during which time viewers will be able to give feedback and vote on whether or not Lionsgate should extend one of them to feature length. The feedback will also determine the genre and animation style of the movie.

    ‘Through this unique partnership with HABBO, we are going directly to the online community and putting the power in their hands by allowing them to determine what movie they want to see,” says Michael Rathauser, VP of marketing for Lionsgate. “This partnership with Habbo will also provide us with valuable information and the opportunity to explore new and different targeted electronic distribution platforms for content that resonates within a very defined audience. It’s an exciting new world of opportunity.”

    Habbo was launched in 2000 by Sulake Corpo., an interactive entertainment company that specializes in developing, publishing and distributing multiplayer social networking communities and games. Teemu Huuhtanen, president of Sulake’s North American operations, says the company has been approached by several major studios but chose to work with Lionsgate because of its success in the teen film market. ‘The opportunity to now position Habbo as a leading distribution and promotional channel of all digital content from video to music is tremendous,’ he says.

    This is the second time Lionsgate and HABBO have teamed for animation. In July of 2006, HABBO.com hosted a virtual red-carpet premiere event for Lionsgate’s direct-to-DVD superhero sequel Ultimate Avengers 2, Tens of thousands of Habbos logged in to view 10 minutes of the animated pic before its release.

  • Taffy Goes Broadband with Kabillion

    Taffy Ent. today launched Kabillion, its new ad-supported, multi-platform kids’ programming service that is available as a broadband website (www.Kabillion.com), as well as a video on-demand channel. Developed in conjunction with New Jersey-based REMIX Entertainment Ventures, the service offers a mix of animated and live-action shows available in a variety of languages. The VOD platform is now available to digital cable subscribers nationwide on Comcast Cable systems, with additional systems expected to be added in the near future.

    The initial Kabillion lineup includes the Taffy-distributed series Pet Alien, produced by Mike Young Prods., and Mix Master: King of Cards, a fairly new anime series based on the trading card game craze. In addition, a comedic, live-action preview show titled Kabla will inform young viewers of available programming and other content choices.

    ‘Kabillion will transform how kids experience media, allowing them to engage in a more interactive and dynamic way, across a range of platforms,’ says Taffy Ent. CEO Bill Schultz. ‘Taffy Entertainment will supply first-class, award-winning programming through its global production pipelines at both Moonscoop and Mike Young Productions. Key acquisitions will also play an important role and we anticipate some important announcements to that effect very soon.’

    Taffy’s library of more than 3,000 half hours of animation includes the Emmy Award-winning CG kids’ show Jakers! The Adventures of Piggley Winks, as well as such other hit series as ToddWorld, Titeuf, Growing Up Creepie, Fantastic Four, Code Lyoko and Casper. The company also distributes to broadcasters in 160 countries around the world.

  • GD Multimedia Going Wild at NATPE

    Newly minted global distribution company GD Multimedia is making its NATPE debut this week with a new animated series titled Going Wild. Produced by Japan’s Tokyo Kids, the comedic adventure show is available to U.S. and international broadcasters as a package of 26 half hours. GD Multimedia is handling U.S. and European distribution for the show, and will also exercise first-look rights to future productions by Tokyo Kids.

    Intended for kids 6-11, Going Wild is an environmentally-friendly toon that follows a group of city kids who are suddenly transplanted to the country. where they meet an eclectic group of country kids who ultimately teach them about nature and themselves. In one episode, the local dentist/mad scientist invents a solar battery that flies and the kids all inadvertently trample a neighborhood garden in their efforts to capture the device. Forced to replant the garden, they come to appreciate the role fruits and vegetables play in their lives.

    Going Wild is the first of three new animated television series produced by Tokyo Kids. With a style that aims to incorporate of the best of Looney Tunes and anime, the show currently draws big ratings on Japan’s cable and satellite channel Kids Station, according to Tokyo Kids president Kengo Kimura.

    Based in Woodland Hills, Calif., GD Multimedia also represents animation studios in Korea, China and Singapore. The company is headed by CEO Gordon Smith, a former CFO of CBS Television (west coast). Smith also served as president of Goldhil Media International, where he oversaw distribution of FUNimation programs including Cabbage Patch Kids, Teenage Ninja Turtles, Dragon Ball Z and Yu-Gi-Oh. Chief Operating Officer Dong Chung oversees all of GD’s partnerships and acquisitions in Asia.

  • Buhaj Takes Programming Post at Jetix Europe

    Marc Buhaj has been appointed senior VP of programming for Jetix Europe and will officially join the team on April 2. Since September of 2004, Buhaj has served as VP of programming and scheduling at Cartoon Network and Boomerang in the U.S., where he directed all aspects of programming for both networks, including scheduling, on-air event planning, program operations, acquisitions and co-productions.

    Reporting to Jetix Europe CEO Paul Taylor, Buhaj will oversee all aspects of content for Jetix Europe, which is majority owned by The Walt Disney Company. Its 14 Jetix television channels reach more than 46 million households in 58 countries across Europe and the Middle East with content tailored to suit local markets. Jetix properties are also seen in more than 100 million households via branded Jetix blocks airing on terrestrial TV networks.

    ‘I am delighted that we have secured Marc to lead our content vision,’ Taylor comments. ‘Content is a core strategic asset to our business and Marc’s invaluable worldwide kids TV experience and skill set are perfect to deliver brand defining content across all Jetix media platforms. Marc’s experience in the U.S. will help us further develop our content creation partnership with the Walt Disney Co., which has already produced successful shows such as Yin Yang Yo!’

    Buhaj was part of the core team driving Cartoon Network’s multi-platform initiatives including the broadband networks CN Video and Toonami Jetstream. In addition, he was the exec in charge of production for Cartoon Network Japan Prods. He joined Turner Broadcasting’s Sydney office in March of 2001 and worked as exec director of programming and acquisitions for Turner Entertainment Networks Asia (TENA) in Hong Kong, where he led scheduling, commissioning and acquisitions for all Cartoon Network, Boomerang and Pogo feeds in Asia-Pacific. Pongo is and Indian kids he helped develop and launch in January of 2004.

  • Autodesk Introduces Maya 8.5

    Autodesk Inc. today announced this it is shipping Autodesk Maya 8.5, the latest version of its market-leading 3D animation, modeling and rendering software. The update promises enhanced creative control, enabling faster completion of complex animation and simulations for film, television, visual effects and video games. The company is also trumpeting the fact that the software supports Intel-based Macintosh computers.

    “Autodesk is committed to making Maya the foundation for modern production

    pipelines,’ says Marc Petit, VP of Autodesk’s Media & Entertainment unit. ‘Maya 8.5 supports industry-standard Python scripting, offering improved workflows and development productivity. As well, the software features innovative new capabilities for character animation; the new Maya Nucleus unified

    simulation framework enables interactive simulations while keeping artists

    in full control of the animation.”

    Maya Nucleus features technology developed by Autodesk’s Academy Award-winning principal research scientist Jos Stam. The unified simulation framework allows artists to create elements that interact, in 3D animation, with other dynamic objects such as fluids, cloth and rigid bodies.

    Maya 8.5 features Maya nCloth, the first module of Maya Nucleus. Maya nCloth is designed to allow artists to quickly direct and control a range of

    simulations, including cloth, plastic, metal and other materials. According to the company, the application simplifies the creation of believable cloth-on-cloth simulations with complex cloth collisions, such as a cape over a jacket. In addition, a unique air-pressure model enables artists to use any geometry’ whether a closed, sealed volume such as an inner tube, or an open volume such as a balloon’to create an inflatable object with internal and external pressure.

    Another new feature of Maya 8.5 is Python scripting. This popular open-source

    programming language helps accelerate facility-specific custom script

    development and plug-in prototyping, extending and automating Maya

    production pipelines. Described as a powerful alternative to Maya software’s native scripting language, MEL, Python scripting gives scriptwriters the ability to efficiently manipulate, customize and automate the software.

    Maya 8.5 is available as a Universal application release for Intel- and

    PowerPC-based Macintosh computers, as well as the Microsoft Windows and Linux platforms. For a complete list of features in Maya 8.5, go to www.autodesk.com/maya.

  • VFX Shown and Told at VES Event

    One of the highlights of award season each year is The Visual Effects Society’s Show and Tell event because it offers effects artist a unique opportunity to show voters and members of the general public exactly what went into some of the most impressive shots in feature films, television productions, commercials and video games. Held over this past weekend at the Skirball Center in Los Angeles, the day-long event featured presentations by most of the studios nominated for the 5th Annual VES Awards, taking place on Feb. 11 at the Kodak Grand Ballroom in Hollywood.

    This year’s Show and Tell proved to be showcase for the impressive work being done in films that would generally not be considered effects-driven films, including Universal’s futuristic drama Children of Men and DreamWorks’ and Warner Bros.’ war pic Flags of Our Fathers. The average moviegoer would be shocked to learn just how many shots in director Clint Eastwood’s WWII drama were digitally manipulated. With Iceland standing in for Japan, mountains and other terrain elements had to be created in the computer and composited into the shots. ‘Anything that looks like Japanese soil is probably CG,’ says visual effects producer Julian Levi.

    Digital compositer Bryan Grill notes that Eastwood’s reputation for being ‘One Take Clint’ posed some challenges for the effects team, especially for shots that required a lot of tracking. He recalls how they used poles placed on top of a hill for tracking during one particular shot. ‘After the first take, we see all these guys start to pull the poles out and we’re like, ‘what are you doing?’ And they said ‘We’re getting ready to shoot up here.”

    Now that the days of obvious matte painting are over, moviegoers are also unaware of the fact that many seemingly physical environments in movies are completely computer generated. Case in point is Paramount’s Mission: Impossible III. For the signature sequence where Tom Cruise’s character leaps off a tall building in Shanghai, the actors were all shot against green screens in the Curious George parking lot at Universal Studios so the digital artists could ‘redesign the ultimate version of Shanghai,’ as ILM’s sequence supervisor Richard Bluff puts it. Buildings were moved around and automobile traffic was imported from plates shot in both Shanghai and Los Angeles. Bluff says there were 120 shots involved and almost ever one was mostly CG.

    Also up for Outstanding Created Environment in a Live-Action Motion Picture is Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest. Digital Matte supervisor Susumu Yukuhiro notes that nearly 75% of all background elements shot in Dominica for the ‘Cannibal Island’ sequence were digitally re-created. He showed one particular shot involving a primitive wooden suspension bridge where everything to the left and right of the structure had to be rotoscoped in to make it look like it was spanning a deep gorge. ‘I personally thought this was the roto of the year, but after seeing the Flags of out Fathers reel, I don’t know,’ Yukuhiro joked.

    The Pirates Sequel is one of three films in the running for Outstanding Visual Effects in an Effects-Driven Film. Visual Effects supervisor John Knoll says the toughest challenge was getting working with the tight five-month schedule. In addition to the extensive digital matte work, the crew at ILM had to do a lot of set extensions, including adding masts to the two full-sized ships used for filming. Further adding to the workload were 19 completely aniated characters, including baddie Davey Jones. On the previous Pirates pic, the mo-capture for the skeletal sailors was performed in a studio. This time around, however, animation supervisor Hal Hickle says they resolved to doing all the data capture on set, which he insists greatly improved the performances. When shots of actors performing in mo-cap gear are projected side-by side with the finished product, it’s easy to appreciate the amount of work that went into creating these characters.

    Also up for the top film category is Paramount’s Charlotte’s Web. ‘E.B. White imagined a film version of his book existing in a real world, unlike the also much beloved animated version,’ says visual effects supervisor John Andrew Berton Jr. Berton gives a lot of credit to the Rhythm & Hues team that did more than 300 digital mouth replacements to make animals talk in the film, which employs a mix of real critters and completely animated creations. One entirely digital character is Charlotte, the title spider. John Dietz, visual effects producer for Rising Sun Pictures, says a lot of research and development went into making Charlotte look right because she had to be scary in the beginning but become beautiful by the end of the film. ‘We ended up with about 50 designs as time went on,’ he remarks. ‘Finding exactly the right Charlotte was key to the success of the film.’

    The third candidate for Outstanding Visual Effects in an Effects-Driven film is Warner Bros.’ largely overlooked visual feast, The Fountain. Effects producers/designers Jeremy Dawson and Mark Soper note that the project is very different from most of the other films in contention because director Darren Aronofsky wanted to use as little CG as possible. Practical effects such miniatures were used whenever possible and the arresting depiction of deep space was created using microscopic photography performed by Peter Parks. Chemical reactions and fluid dynamics in petri dishes were shot on 35mm film and composited in layers to form the base of the space backgrounds, which the digital artists then augmented to get the desired effect.

    ‘We tried to explain to Darren that CG would give us more to work with, but we had this mandate to work with practical elements, which made it a lot more challenging,’ says Dawson.

    Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest is likely to walk away with the most awards this year beacuse of all the digital eye-candy packed into its running time, but the VES Show and Tell reminds us of the tremendous role that visual effects plays in nearly every featrue film made today, and that sometimes the most clever effects are the ones you don’t even notice.

    A complete list of all the nominees for this year’s VES Awards is available on the VES website at www.visualeffectssociety.com.

  • Globes Go to Cars, Happy Feet

    Anthropomorphized automobiles and penguins got some love Monday night as the Hollywood Foreign Press Association presented the 64th Golden Globe Awards. Disney/Pixar’s Cars rolled off with the very first Globe for Best Animated Feature while Warner Bros./Village Roadshow’s Happy Feet danced away with Best Original Song for ‘Song of the Heart’ (music and lyrics by pop star Prince). The kudos were handed out at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills.

    Cars took the top toon award over Happy Feet and Sony/Columbia Picture’s Monster House. Director John Lasseter accepted the award, thanking the Hollywood Foreign Press for creating a category for animated features. ‘Animation is awesome!,’ he enthused. ‘It’s my life, I’ve lived it and it’s so exciting to have its own category.’ He went on to thank the association for giving the award to Cars. ‘It’s been six years of a passion of mine for this movie. This movie is about a very important lesson that we’ve all experienced, which is life is about the journey and not the destination. I learned that from my wife, Nancy, and my five boys.’

    The decision to recognize animation with its own category came after members voted on the matter in Decmber of 2005. “Animated features have become an important component of the studio lineup so there was an overwhelming consensus that this new category be created,” Hollywood Foreign Press Association president Philip Berk said at the time. Since there was no dedicated animation category in 2004, Pixar’s The Incredibles was lumped in with a field of live-action films in the category Best Motion Picture (musical or comedy). That particular award went to Martin Scorsese’s The Aviator.

    In the Best Song category, the Happy Feet tune was up against entries from the live-action features Dreamgirls, The Pursuit of Happyness, Bobby and Home of the Brave. Prince was not on hand to receive the award, so presenter Justin Timberlake accepted on his behalf, crouching below the microphone to poke fun at Prince’s diminutive stature.

    A full list of 2007 Golden Globe winners can be found at www.hfpa.org.