Author: Ryan Ball

  • Clone Wars Debuts on iTunes

    Lucasfilm Ltd. today announced that the first volume of Cartoon Network’s Emmy-winning animated series, Star Wars: Clone Wars, is available for download in the iTunes Music Store at www.itunes.com. Fans can purchase all 20 chapters of the action-packed show for $1.99 apiece, or get the full Volume 1 season for $10.99.

    Star Wars: Clone Wars Volume 1 picks up where the feature film Star Wars: Episode II’Attack of the Clones left off, depicting some of the epic battles that occur between that film and Episode III. The series of cartoon shorts was recognized with Emmy Awards for Outstanding Animated Program (one hour or more) in both 2004 and 2005.

    Produced by Cartoon Network Studios and Lucasfilm Ltd, Clone Wars is directed by Genndy Tartakovsky (Samurai Jack, Dexter’s Laboratory) with art direction by Paul Rudish. Tartakovsky has since left the Cartoon Network stable to focus on 3D features as president of creative at San Francisco-based Orphanage Animation Studio. The company is working with the Jim Henson Co. to produce CG elements for the sequel Power of the Dark Crystal, which Tartakovsky is directing.

    Each episode in the first volume of Clone Wars adventures runs one to five minutes long. Once downloaded from the iTunes Store, the installments can be viewed on a computer or on a Video iPod or similar handheld entertainment device.

  • French Trailer for Pixar’s Ratatouille Online

    There’s a new trend emerging where trailers for English-language films are debuting in foreign countries, complete with dubbed voices. James Bond fans recently got their first look at the upcoming Casino Royale on a French site, and now there’s another reason to brush up on your high school French or solicit the aid of a translator. French website cinoche.com has an advance look at Disney/Pixar’s next feature, Ratatouille.

    Directed by Brad Bird (The Incredibles, The Iron Giant), Ratatouille is the story of a skinny rodent who lives in a Paris eatery and fancies himself a gourmand. The pic was developed by Oscar-winning Pixar short director Jan Pinkava (Geri’s Game) and scripted by Emily Cook and Kathy Greenberg.

    Ratatouille is slated to hit theaters on June 29, 2007. To see the French trailer, go to www.cinoche.com/films/2382 and click on either the Quicktime logo or Windows Media icon.

  • Luxology Unleashes modo 201

    Luxology LLC today announced the immediate availability of modo 201, the latest incarnation of its 3D modeling, painting and rendering software designed to enhance productivity for 3D artists working in game development, film visual effects, video production, graphic arts and design visualization. The release is designed to fit easily into existing pipelines and is available for immediate download from Luxology at modo3d.com or can be purchased from selected resellers.

    ‘modo was developed to provide a fused workflow so that artists can spend less time focusing on the mechanics of 3D content creation and more time on realizing their artistic vision,’ comments Luxology president Brad Peebler. ‘modo 201 provides an enhanced 3D creation experience by combining modeling, painting and rendering technologies in a truly unique and complementary way.’

    New features in modo 201 include new Solid Sketch and Mesh Paint tools, as well as simplified UV map creation to augment the hybrid subdivision surface/polygon modeler. A fully integrated painting system lets artists apply effects like real-time bump mapping, while accelerated rendering/baking technology allows for modeling and painting changes to be seen almost immediately in a progressively rendered viewport.

    In the interest of accelerating workflow, modo 201 includes a new integrated learning system with more than 4GB of video tutorials and an expanded library of sample content. In addition, high-speed OpenGL navigation enables realistic views that feature per pixel shading, multi-texturing and real-time bump mapping. Using mouse and keyboard remapping options, users can even customize the interface to minic common 3D navigation controls and hotkeys found in companion 3D applications such as Autodesk’s 3ds Max and Maya.

    Available on both the Windows and Mac OSX platforms, modo 201 retails for $895. Current modo users can upgrade for $395. To purchase, learn more about modo 201 or see a gallery of images, go to www.modo3d.com.

  • Mainframe Animates MTV Movie Awards

    Canadian animation studio Mainframe Ent. has been tapped to create category introductions and other original animated segments for this year’s MTV Movie Awards, which air June 8 on MTV. The company, which is also doing the logo and branding for the show, will use a mix of 2D and 3D to create the pieces, which will include the broadcast’s opening and closing. The project marks Mainframe’s move into branding and commercials.

    The MTV Movie Awards is a sort of Tee-shirt and jeans version of the Oscars, with categories ranging from Best Movie to Best Kiss. Mainframe previously collaborated with MTV on the 2003 awards ceremony, creating category intros and animating celebrities Justin Timberlake and Seann William Scott as caped crusaders for the superhero-themed event. MTV Movie Awards producer Rick Austin says this year’s concept is a 180-degree turn from the big CG environments built for that show.

    “It’s fantastic to work again with MTV in such a creative capacity,” says Mainframe CEO Rick Mischel. “The 2006 MTV Movie Awards are a great opportunity to demonstrate the phenomenal design, directorial, and artistic talent we have here at Mainframe, as well as the multiple branding and commercial animation services we offer.”

    As it ventures into new territory with its branding and commercial efforts, Mainframe continues to work on animated television and film projects. The studio recently announced a development agreement with The Weinstein Company for the animated feature film Escape from Planet Earth, and has an all-new animated feature starring skateboarding legend Tony Hawk due out this fall on DVD.

  • GarageGames Seeks Indie Game Idols

    GarageGames has announced plans to introduce the B.I.G. (Break Into Games) Competition, a sort of American Idol for independent video game developers. The contest will kick off on June 5 with an exhaustive, nationwide search for America’s best developers, who will vie for prizes including professional gaming hardware and publishing deals with GarageGames and its partners.

    Contestants will build their game prototypes from scratch using a free trial version of GarageGames’ the new Torque Game Builder (TGB). Additional support will come in the form of a step-by-step tutorial, Podcasts and white papers for reference and a fully developed online community that keeps designers in contact with technical experts from GarageGames and the gaming community at large.

    Prototype games are due on Aug. 25, and the Top-10 finalists will be simultaneously announced at the Penny Arcade Expo (PAX) in Bellevue, Wash., and at ShowDown in San Jose, Calif. on Aug. 26. From there, contestants will have just over a month to polish their final games before being flown out to compete at IndieGamesCon (IGC), GarageGames’ annual version of Sundance for indie game developers. That event will be held Oct. 6-8 in GarageGames’ hometown of Eugene, Oregon. Only five contestants will be chosen to compete in the final Player’s Choice Awards and be part of the B.I.G. ‘Indie Idol,’ a showcase judged by a panel of industry experts.

    “This is the best opportunity for up-and-coming videogame developers to break into the business and for established developers to show their skills,’ says Jay Moore, GarageGames’ director of business development. ‘We’ve made it totally free so that it’s possible for literally anyone to pursue the American dream. Furthermore, the support is there to make anyone a winner who has the passion for it.”

    More information onGarageGames, the B.I.G. Competition, the IndieGamesCon and the Torque Game Builder can be found on the web at www.garagegames.com.

  • Hatcher Joins Coraline Cast

    Desperate Housewives star Teri Hatcher has signed on to voice two roles in director Henry Selick’s upcoming stop-motion animated feature, Coraline, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The title role is being played by child star extraordinaire Dakota Fanning, who most recently starred with Tom Cruise in Steven Spielberg’s big-budget vfx extravaganza, War of the Worlds.

    Coraline is the flagship feature film for Laika Ent., the animation factory formerly known as Vinton Studio. Based on the best-selling 2002 novel by Neil Gaiman, the fantasy flick will tell the story of a young girl who moves with her family into a new home and discovers a door that leads to an alternate reality. Hatcher will voice the mother of Fanning’s character, as well as her mother that exists in a parallel universe.

    Selick, whose directorial credits include the Tim Burton-produced stop-motion features The Nightmare Before Christmas and James and the Giant Peach, is sharing helming duties on Coraline with Mike Cachuela, a storyboard and conceptual artist who worked with Selick on Nightmare and more receltly lent his talents to Pixar’s The Incredibles. Bill Mechanic of Pandemonium Films and Laika’s Mary Sandell are producing the film, which was recently picked up for distribution by Focus Features.

  • Grasshorse Mounts Web-Based Pipeline

    In creating a 5-minute animated short film, Grasshorse Animation Studio will solicit the help of emerging artists from around the world using an online production method. Mimicing big-studio production pipeline techniques, Grasshorse has established a virtual workshop setting and will take delivery of assignments and finished work through its web interface. The studio says it is especially keen on discovering new talent outside of the standard centers of production.

    “We’re looking to recruit artists from around the world who are new to the film and TV industry, and we’ve created a system which allows relatively inexperienced artists to learn and grow while making contributions to a project that they can be proud of,” says Grasshorse founder Stephen Jennings, a digital artist with more than 10 years experience in feature film visual effects. “The online response has been incredible and far beyond our expectations!”

    The production on Grasshorse’s plate is a 5-minute short titled The Shimmering, in which a decrepit, wounded Knight wanders the desert for an eternity, pursued by a mysterious, shape-shifting force that takes many seductive and frightening forms. After several violent confrontations, the Knight discovers that The Shimmering has not been attacking him, but trying to heal him and bring him renewed life.

    Artists who wish to work on the project must first register with the site and take a skill level certification. Once a task is assigned, the files are downloaded over the internet or sent to the artist on DVD. Assignment reviews, feedback and revisions are all conducted through the Grasshorse web interface.

    “This unique system allows artists to contribute from anywhere,” Jennings comments. “It used to be that if you dreamed of working on high-end projects you had to pack up and move to where the big studios are, and then spend years doing grunt-work before you could actually touch a shot in a film, but that’s no longer true.’

    The Grasshorse Studio can be found online at www.grasshorse.com and the ‘Grasshorse Animation Workshop’ podcast is available from the iTunes Music Store. For more information, email contact@grasshorse.com.

  • Nicktoons Fest Snags Judges

    The judges’ panel has been filled with some big names for this year’s Nicktoons Network Animation Festival. Produced in partnership with Frederator Studios and Kidscreen magazine, the event boasts the involvement of Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane, Disney animator Andreas Deja, indie animator Bill Plympton and comedians Shawn and Marlon Wayans, whose animated series, Thugaboo, is set to air on both Nicktoons Network and Nickelodeon in August. Entries will also be judged by JG Quintel, winner of the 2005 Nicktoons Network Animation Festival Producers Choice and Student Award.

    All six judges will screen the short animated films submitted for the festival and will rate them based on story, animation, design, entertainment value and fun factor. The top film will be awarded the $10,000 Grand Prize while other filmmakers walk off with the Producer’s Choice Award and Student Award and the newly added Diversity Award. In addition, the festival has partnered with Time For Kids magazine to host “Show Off Your Show,” a kids contest that will honor one lucky young winner with the festival’s first ever Greater Creator Award.

    The Nicktoons Network Animation Festival will kicks off with a two-day live event at the Nicktoons Studios in Burbank, Calif. on Saturday, Aug. 12 and Sunday, Aug.13. The multiplatform event will then screen submissions from around the world on Nicktoons Network and at the network’s website, www.nicktoonsnetwork.com. Submission entries will be accepted until May 31.

  • AtomFilms Studio Debuts First Films

    The first slate of films produced under the AtomFilms Studio program hit the web and mobile phones today, introducing four shorts funded and developed specifically for broadband audiences. Among the initial offerings is a new stop-motion homage to old-school video games titled Game Over, directed by AtomFilms favorite PES.

    Game Over is a one-minute piece that puts a comedic twist of such classic video games as Pac-Man and Frogger. In the past, PES has made such popular, stop-motion AtomFilms offerings as Roof Sex, The Making of Roof Sex and Pee-Nut.

    Also launching today is InSex, an effects-driven, live-action short from directors Efram Potelle and Kyle Rankin, who made The Battle of Shaker Heights as the season two winners of Project Greenlight. The other two shorts are Dog Years, Chapter 2, a sequel to an international award-winning comedy film by Sam Hearn and Richard Penfold, and New Boobs, a comedy about breast augmentation from Matthew Bonifacio.

    All filmmakers involved have been sighed to development deals under the AtomFilms Studio banner. Their films premiere simultaneously today on the AtomFilms website (www.atomfilms.com) and on mobile phones. AtomFilms Studio has several more original shorts and series in development, and is currently accepting pitches from qualified producers. For more information, go to http://atomfilms.com/submit.

  • Art Institute Gets Casual, Serious About Games

    Taking place Thursday, May 25, at the Art Institute of California’Los Angeles, the latest session of the Animation 21 Lecture Series is dedicated to two presentations covering Serious Games and Casual Games. Speakers lined up for the event are Justin Lloyd, director of business development at Infinite Monkey Factory LLC; Sarah Baisley, editor-in-chief of Animation World Magazine; and Christopher Harz, VP of strategic development for IPv6 Summit, a high-tech company promoting the New Internet as a medium for gaming, multimedia and mobile communications.

    The first session will begin at 6:30 p.m. with Lloyd will speaking about Casual Games, an industry that has reached nearly $1 billion in sales and is on track to out-sell the hardcore gaming market currently dominated by the males 18 to 34 demographic. He discuss what a casual game is, how much they cost to develop and where the market is currently headed. Other topics will include how cell phone games factor in and what the U.S. can expect in the next five years based on trends currently taking place in Japan and Europe. Lloyd specializes in cell phone games, casual games and advergaming development, and his 28-year career in software and hardware development includes 20 years of video game writing experience.

    Baisley and Harz will then talk about Serious Games and where the market is headed. A specialist in animation for 17 years, Baizley has served as publicity director for Film Roman, Hanna-Barbera Prods., The Taft Entertainment Co., Ruby-Spears Ent. and Southern Star Prods. Harz helped develop SIMNET (SIMulation NETwork), the $240 million DARPA project that was the world’s first MMOG. He also co-produced online games for major productions such as The Fifth Element, Lost in Space, Titanic, and Xena, Warrior Princess. In addition, he was a pioneer of early interactive war games for military think tank the RAND Corp., and is now finishing his doctoral degree at Pepperdine University in Malibu in Game-Based Learning for first responders in emergency situations.

    The Animation 21 Lecture Series session will take place in the Big Room at The Art Institute of California’Los Angeles, located at 2900 31st Street in Santa Monica, Calif. Immediately following the program, the IGDA LA Chapter will debate the future of the Games Developers Conference (GDC) during its monthly meeting at 7: 45 p.m., also in the Big Room. For more information about these events please contact Bijan Tehrani at (818) 613-4227 or btehrani@dljl.com.

  • Samurai Jack, X-Men Lead DVD Action

    Action is the order of the day as DVD Tuesday brings us the complete third seasons of the Cartoon Network original series Samurai Jack and the beloved animated Marvel series X-Men Evolution. Other favorites hitting shelves today include the recently aired special The Fairly OddParents: Fairy Idol, the 1987 movie Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Chipmunk Adventure, Berenstain Bears: Fun Family Adventures, Dragon Tales: Let’s Be Brave and Jim Henson’s The Storyteller: The Definitive Collection.

    Samurai Jack’Season 3 is a two-disc set featuring 13 episodes of the Emmy-winning series that wrapped up last year. The show centers on a Japanese samurai who tangles with an evil shae-shifting wizard named Aku and ends up being catapulted thousands of years into the future, a future ruled by Aku and his minions. Dubbing himself “Jack,” our hero sets out to right the wrongs done by his enemy and to find a way back to his own time. Extras include commentary by series creator Genndy Tartakovsky, a 15-minute featurette titled The Martial Arts of Samurai Jack 15-minute feature and Parts I and II of the “Birth of Evil” episode. Warner Home Video lists the release at $29.98.

    X-Men Evolution’The Complete Third Season is another two-discer with 13 episodes from the 2000 toon series. Here we find Wolverine, Cyclops, Jean Grey, Rogue Nightcrawler and a few other choice mutants as teenagers fighting for a world that fears and hates them. While they learn to harness their powers for good at Professor Charles Francis Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters, shape-shifter Mystique and other malevolent mutants are being trained by Magneto to be warriors in his battle against humans. Bonus materials include Mystique’s Trivia Challenge, Wolverine’s Trivial Challenge, Cerebro’s Mutant Files: The X-Men ‘ Heroes, Cerebro’s Mutant Files: The Acolytes ‘ Villains and feturettes titled Season 3 X-Posed and The Evolution of X-Men. The Warner Home Video release retails for $19.98.

    After pulling big ratings with its television debut on Friday, May 19, The Fairly OddParents: Fairy Idol is available on DVD. In this latest adventure, 10-year old Timmy Turner is in danger of losing Cosmo and Wanda as his Fairy Godparents and must travel to Fairy World to find them as their replacements are sought in a wide-scale talent search. The disc also includes the episodes ‘Truth or Consequences’ and ‘Timmy TV,’ as well as the Oh Yeah! Cartoons installments ‘Super Humor,’ ‘Scout’s Honor’ and ‘The Really Bad Day.’ Fans can pick up the Paramount Home Video title for the suggested retail price of $14.99

    Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Chipmunk Adventure has been digitally re-mastered from the original 35 mm negative for this latest home video release. Paramount has tacked on never-before-seen pencil sketches, storyboard panels, backgrounds and cels. It lists for $14.99.

    Berenstain Bears: Fun Family Adventures offers six animated adventures from the PBS series, while Dragon Tales: Let’s Be Brave features five installments and three sing-alongs from its PBS run. Both releases are distributed by Sony and each retails for $14.94.

    Last, but not least, Henson fans have been given Jim Henson’s The Storyteller: The Definitive Collection, This two-disc set offer 13 episodes of the fantasy television series that originally aired on HBO in 1987. In each installment, old storyteller and his sarcastic dog tell obscure European folk tales that utilize the skills of the Jim Henson Creature Shop. The Warner Home Video release is available for the list price of $19.94.

  • Lightwave Network Rendering made STUPID SIMPLE!

    Robbie Robfogel, president and visual effects supervisor for Ocean Visual FX (www.oceanvisualfx.com) in Huntington Beach, Calif., submitted to us this review of epicsoft’s MULE LightWave Network Rendering package.

    If you have ever used LightWave’s built in network render tool Screamer-Net, then you know what a big hassle it can be to set things up. Enter epicsoft’s MULE LightWave Network Rendering package that truly lives up to its slogan and really hauls ass.

    epicsoft has made MULE easy to use and affordable. Several different purchase options are available depending on the size of your network’s render-farm and the ease of setup and use is very refreshing. After installing the MULE server and clients, you need to set things up in order for LightWave and MULE to work together. The lead programmer of MULE, Ryan Moore, takes you step-by-step via an online tutorial.

    Once set up is completed, and it’s about as easy as it gets, MULE is a real pleasure to work with. In its main server interface, MULE is straight forward and to the point. To set up your renders, all that you need do is click ‘Add Scene’ and the scene is added to the queue. Add as many scenes as you like. MULE can handle it all. Once the scene is added, you select it and set up its camera options and render settings as you would in LightWave. You have the same ability to adjust for size and details as you would directly in LightWave. Once you have set the parameters up for each scene, you have the option to start that specific scene’s render task or all scenes in the queue. When you start your render, the frame manager opens and you can see how long each frame is taking, and which processor on your network is rendering what. MULE allows for multiple processors and you have the ability to designate how many processors per client station.

    Once you start rendering with MULE, it’s a huge pleasure to see just how fast rendering happens. Here at Ocean Visual FX, we use all next generation x64 BOXX workstations and render-farms. MULE screams through our renders with ease. No more 30-minute coffee breaks, things get done fast and with superb quality. You can render frames in a variety of formats; one of the highlights of MULE is the ‘MULE Viewer.’ This tool allows you to see how things look as soon as they are rendered. It also will compile all of your frames and export them as an .avi. One thing I personally have been pushing for with epicsoft’s development team is a QuickTime export tool. Hopefully we will see that soon, as MULE 2.0 is now in the works.

    MULE also has a slew of other features that make this product a definite buy for LightWave users with a network at their disposal. One of these is ‘Scene Drop,’ which allows you to drag and drop a scene on a client workstation and add it to the queue in an instant.

    ‘SmartGroups’ allow you to categorize your available render clients into groupings that are best suited for specific types of render tasks. More powerful systems can be designated for higher-res images or scenes that require intensive calculation, while your moderately equipped machines can be reserved for less taxing work that won’t choke the overall render process.

    For those extremely hi-res or processor-intensive renderings, MULE’s Framesplitter Pro will allow you to slice the full area of your target image into manageable parcels for distribution and rendering by separate network clients. It then will re-assemble them for you into one frame. epicsoft has really covered all bases with its first offering of MULE.

    On a final note, let me say that having used all sorts of network rendering tools for LightWave, MULE is by far the easiest to set up and use. Its interface and power are unmatched in any other product available, and is on par with those proprietary applications used in some of Hollywood’s biggest studios. Every MULE user that I have talked to swears by this package. It just can’t be beat. If you use LightWave for making your living, you need MULE. As we say in the MULE community”Happy Hauling!’

    Robfogel has worked as a visual effects technical director for Foundation Imaging, O-Entertainment and Transconituity Studios, and has been as a professor of 3D animation and visual effects at Chapman University and the American Film Institute. Past vfx credits include the animated series Roughnecks: Starship Trooper Chronicles and Max Steel.

    For more information on Mule, and to download a free 30-day trial, go to www.epicsoft.net/products/mule.

  • Decode Merges with Halifax Film

    Decode Ent. is going public by teaming with independent Canadian entertainment company The Halifax Film Co. to launch DHX Media. While both companies will retain their individual identities and brands, DHX Media will merge their respective catalogs of children’s and family programming. Shares of the new entity will begin trading on both AIM in London and the Toronto stock exchange (TSX) on 19 May 2006.

    Decode will handle international sales of the combined libraries, which represent more than 1,150 half hours of programming, including Decode’s animated series Franny’s Feet, Planet Sketch, Angela Anaconda and Naturally Sadie, and Halifax’s Poko, Bo on the Go and Mighty Jungle. Halifax also co-produces the stop-motion preschool show Lunar Jim with Canadian producer Alliance Atlantis.

    Halifax’s Michael Donovan will serve as chairman and CEO of DHX, and will be a key shareholder along with Charles Bishop and Decode’s Neil Court, Steven DeNure, Beth Stevenson and John Delmage. Bishop, Court and DeNure will also sit on the DHX Media board.

    ‘This is an exciting time for us to go public under the DHX Media banner,’ says Court, president of Decode Ent. ‘The Decode and Halifax businesses are highly complementary and our combined program catalogues create a strong proposition for television sales, licensing and new media. We are looking forward to taking both our new and existing properties to the international marketplace, and to pursuing new business opportunities.’

  • Hedge Edged Out By Code

    DreamWorks’ animated Over the Hedge earned a tidy sum at the North American box office over the weekend, but more moviegoers were intrigued by a fictional mystery surrounding the works of Leonardo Da Vinci. Sony’s The DaVinci Code raked in an estimated $77 million to Hedge‘s $37.2 million to easily win the top spot.

    Directed by Tim Johnson (Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas, Antz) and scribe Karey Kirkpatrick (James and the Giant Peach, Chicken Run), Over the Hedge is based on the comic strip of the same name by Michael Fry and T. Lewis. Despite the tough competition, the toon adaptation did more than double the domestic business of DreamWorks Animation’s last release, Aardman’s clay-animated Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, which opened last September with just north of $16 million. However, Hedge fell short of matching the $47 million opening weekend enjoyed by last summer’s Madagascar, which had the benefit of a Memorial Day debut. So far, the toon to beat this year is Fox Animation’s and Blue Sky Studios’ Ice Age: The Meltdown, which earned a whopping $68 right out of the gate.

    Paramount’s Mission Impossible III continues to do respectable business in its third week. The Tom Cruise action vehicle took in another $11 million to put it over the $100 million mark, while Warner Bros.’ vfx-driven Poseidon sunk down the chart to No. 4 with around $9.2 million. Made for around $160 million, the disaster remake has only made approximately $36.7 million in two weeks. Sony’s Robin Williams comedy, RV, drove off with a fifth-place finish with around $5.1 million.

    Since it’s based on the most popular book of the decade, Ron Howard’s filmed adaptation of Dan Bown’s The Da Vinci Code offers few surprises and is expected to lose a good chunk of its audience next week. Meanwhile, CG-animated movies are known for having long legs and DreamWorks’ latest may just get enough positive word of mouth to propel it to No. 1 during the week. Next weekend sees the arrival of more stiff competition in the form of 20th Century Fox’s X-Men: The Last Stand.

  • Ubisoft Takes Up Lost Cause

    Video game publisher Ubisoft has entered into a long-term, worldwide licensing agreement with Touchstone Television and will develop and publish a video game based on the Emmy Award-winning ABC television series Lost. The title is being developed by Ubisoft’s Montr’al studio and is expected to be available for consoles, portable platforms and PC sometime in 2007.

    For the uninitiated, Lost follows the continuing adventures of a diverse group of plane crash survivors stranded on a mysterious island. In addition to combating the elements, supernatural forces and a malevolent tribe living on the other side of the island, each castaway must deal with treacherous elements among their own ranks. Created by J.J. Abrams and Damon Lindelof, the show is now in its second season and has already been licensed in more than 210 territories worldwide, making it is the fastest-selling TV series in Buena Vista International Television’s history. Lost is currently seen in such countries as Australia, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Indonesia, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Singapore, Sweden, the U.K. and Russia.

    ‘The creative appeal of Lost transcends borders with its character-driven stories and addictive mysterious mythology,’ says Julia Franz, exec VP of Touchstone Television. ‘It’s not enough for fans worldwide to just watch Lost, the game is a wonderful opportunity to organically extend this creative phenomenon into an interactive consumer experience.’

    “Many of us on Lost have been hardcore gamers for years, and the chance to work with Ubisoft, a company behind some of our favorite titles, has excited us to no end,” adds series exec producer Bryan Burk. “With the ability to tell new interactive stories within the Lost universe, we’re giddy to be developing a game that, once completed, will be as engaging and fun to play as it is to create.”

    Ubisoft’s Montreal studio should have trouble creating the lush, tropical environments for the Lost game since it recently made a trip to another strange island with the award-winning Peter Jackson’s King Kong: The Official Game of the Movie. But while that title focused mainly on action, the interactive Lost experience promises to be a bit more cerebral with various problem-solving tasks and mysteries to unravel.

  • Disaster! Finds Relief in Cannes

    Dream Ent.’s Disaster!, a stop-motion animated spoof of various nature-gone-wrong movies, was picked up by Screen Media Films for distribution in North America. The deal was made at the recent Cannes Film Festival and will see a wide theatrical debut in October, followed by a February home video release through the Screen Media’s partnership with Universal Studios Home Entertainment.

    Directed by Roy Wood (Celebrity Deathmatch), Disaster! employs a combination of clay and wire armature animation to spoof the new generation of big-budget Hollywood disaster movies characterized by such titles as Armageddon, Twister and Deep Impact. As a giant planetoid hurdles toward Earth, vulcanoligist Harry Bottoms is enlisted by the government to assemble a team to go into space and eliminate the threat. Joined by his estranged daughter, Sandy Mellons, Bottoms must save the day with the help of specialists V.D. Johnson, Hanukah Jonze and Donkey Dixon. Members of the rock band Motley Crue also lend their voices and likenesses to adult-oriented comedy.

    Disaster! was written by Paul Benson (X-Men Unlimited) and Matt Sullivan (The God and Devil Show), and features animation by artists who previously worked with Wood on Deathmatch, and pushed puppets for New Line Cinema’s Elf and Will Vinton productions such as The P.J.s and Gary & Mike. The production was entirely self-financed by former Dream Ent. CEO Ehud Bleiberg and Dream Ent. president Yitzhak Ginsberg. Bleiberg left the company last year to form Bleiberg Ent., but maintains 405 ownership of Disaster! and other Dream titles.

    More information and animated clips from Disaster! can be found at www.disasterthemovie.com.

  • Besson to Make Arthur Sequels

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, French Director Luc Besson (The Fifth Element, La Femme Nikita) plans to make two sequels to his upcoming CG/live-action feature, Arthur and the Minimoys, which will be released this December. The film trilogy is based on Besson’s series of children’s books about a 10-year-old boy who stumbles into a secret world populated by tiny people.

    With a budget of around $80 million, Arthur and the Minimoys will be the most expensive European animated feature to date. Produced by Besson’s EuropaCorp, the film will chronicle Arthur’s attempts to save his grandmother’s home from being demolished by seeking his grandfather’s treasure, which is hidden in the land of the Minimoys. With the help of Princess Selenia and her brother, Betameche, Arthur encounters a string of adventures on his way to the forbidden city ruled by the evil M the Malicious. The voice cast features Madonna, Snoop Dogg, Mia Farrow, Freddie Highmore and David Bowie.

    The Weinstein Co. will handle distribution of the first film in English-speaking territories, and has an option to pick up the sequels as well. The second and third installments are slated to begin production this fall. Atari is developing a video game based on Minimoys and will release it in conjunction with the movie’s North American release.

  • AMC Theaters to Offer Free Toons

    As part of its “Summer MovieCamp” community service program, AMC Theatres will screen major animated releases free of charge on Wednesday mornings in 40 cities from June 21 through Aug. 9. The lineup of G- and PG-rated Hollywood movies will include Ice Age, Shark Tale, Madagascar, The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit and Shrek 2.

    AMC’s Summer MovieCamp screenings will be held every Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. Doors will open at 9:30 a.m., and participating theatres will offer pre-show presentations of Cartoon Network shows such as Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends and other surprises. Live-action features to play during the summer include Racing Stripes, Because of Winn-Dixie, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Dreamer, Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed and March of the Penguins.

    Sponsored by Suave and GoodNites Underpants, AMC Summer MovieCamp 2006 will come to theaters in Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Charlotte (N.C.), Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Hartford (Conn.), Houston, Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, Milwaukee, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New Orleans, New York City, Norfolk (Va.), Oklahoma City, Omaha (Neb.), Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco/Oakland, San Jose, Seattle, St. Louis, Tallahassee, Tampa Bay/St. Petersburg, Tulsa (Okla.), Vero Beach (Fla.) and Washington, D.C. Tickets are available up to a week in advance at each location. For more information and a complete schedule of movies coming to your local AMC Theatre, go to www.amctheatres.com.

  • Henson, Weinsteins Team for Toons

    The Jim Henson Co. and The Weinstein Co. have joined forces to introduce a series of CG-animated, direct-to-video features, according to Daily Variety. Co-produced by Flame Ventures and Prana Studios, the Unstable Fables line of releases will offer twisted takes on fairy tales, much like the Weinsteins’ hit toon feature, Hoodwinked.

    Henson, Flame and Prana plan to begin production in September, tackling first the enduring tales of Goldilocks, The Three Little Pigs and Three Billy Goats Gruff. Scripts are being overseen by Shrek writer Robert S.H. Schulman.

    Animation will be completed at Prana’s studio in India with Lisa Henson and Tony Krantz producing. Eric Robinson will oversee the projects for The Weinstein Co., which will distribute the DVDs through its Genius Products.

  • IDT Gets Sheepish

    IDT Ent. has announced that its West Coast headquarters in Burbank, Calif. has begun production on a new CG-animated feature film titled Sheepish. Putting a comic twist on the old ‘wolf in sheep’s clothing’ concept, the movie will be animated at IDT Ent.’s toon studio in Toronto and distributed by 20th Century Fox. The news follows this week’s announcement that IDT Ent. is being acquired by Liberty Media, which will use the company to produce animated content for its Starz Entertainment Group.

    Sheepish will revolve around a wolf named Logan, who pays the ultimate price when he violates an age-old covenant that protects a particular flock of sheep. Logan is himself transformed into a sheep and has to learn to get along with his natural prey, who in turn teach him to be a better wolf.

    The team of Saul Blinkoff and Elliott Bour (Disney’s Kronk’s New Groove, Winnie the Pooh in Springtime With Roo) are directing the film from an original idea and script by Bart Coughlin, a character technical director whose credits include the DreamWorks toon features Antz, Shrek, Shark Tale and the upcoming Flushed Away and Bee Movie. In addition to directing the animated MTV series Spy Groove, Blinkoff and Bour worked as animators on the Disney classics Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, The Lion King, Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Mulan and Tarzan. IDT Ent.’s Morris Berger, Stephen R. Brown, Janet Healy and Jerry Davis are exec producers.

    IDT Ent. has several animated films in production at their animation facilities in Burbank, Toronto, and Vancouver. The Toronto crew is finishing Everyone’s Hero, the film that actor Christopher Reeve was directing at the time of his death. Dan St. Pierre and Colin Brady have taken over directing duties on the tale of an ordinary boy who takes a chance and decides to take heroic actions, despite overwhelming odds. He is accompanied by a feisty little girl and an eclectic group of sidekicks in his cross-county journey to restore his family’s honor and discover the hero within. Rob Reiner, Whoopi Goldberg, Brian Dennehy, Raven Symone, William H. Macy, Mandy Patinkin, Robert Wagner, Richard Kind, New York Yankees Manager Joe Torre, Jake T. Austin and the late Dana Reeve lend their voices to the pic, which is produced by Ron Tippe and Igor Khait, and exec produced by Christopher and Dana Reeve, Stephen R. Brown, Morris Berger, Jerry Davis and Janet Healy. Twentieth Century Fox will release the film nationwide on Sept. 15.

    Also in the works is the CG-animated feature film Space Chimps. An IDT Ent. presentation of a Vanguard Animation film, the comedy that follows the galactic misadventures of a hapless descendant of the first chimps in space. The family flick is being put together in Vancouver with Vanguard founder and producer John Williams (Shrek, Valiant) producing. Morris Berger, Stephen R. Brown, Janet Healy, Jerry Davis, Eric Bennett and Neil Braun are exec producers.