Author: Ryan Ball

  • Superman Goes IMAX Day & Date

    Warner Bros.’ eagerly awaited Superman Returns will splash onto those enormous IMAX screens on June 30, 2006, the same day it rolls out in conventional theaters. Directed by Bryan Singer (X-Men, The Usual Suspects), the movie follows on the heels of fellow franchise reviver, Batman Begins, which was a resounding success at both IMAX and standard venues.

    Created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, the Superman character first appeared in the pages of DC Comics in 1939 and finally made the leap to the big screen in 1978. Christopher Reeve reprised the role of Clark Kent and his caped alter ego in three sequels before the franchise fizzled out and dropped off of Hollywood’s radar. The Superman Returns script, written by Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris, acknowledges this gap and has the Man of Steel (newcomer Brandon Routh) returning to Earth after a mysterious absence of several years. While Lex Luthor (Kevin Spacey) plots to do him in once and for all, our hero faces the heartbreaking realization that Lois Lane (Kate Bosworth) has moved on with her life and the human race he once protected has learned to survive without him. Faced again with the task of saving the world from cataclysmic destruction, Superman embarks on an epic journey of redemption that takes him from the depths of the ocean to the far reaches of outer space.

    The 35mm version Superman Returns will be digitally re-mastered with proprietary IMAX DMR (Digital Re-mastering) technology for the release. Distributed exclusively by Warner Bros. Pictures to IMAX theatres worldwide, the superhero flick will mark the studio’s tenth IMAX release, and will follow the May 12 deployment of its remake of The Poseidon Adventure. Next up is The Ant Bully, an animated feature produced by Tom Hanks’ Playtone Pictures, which Warner Bros. will distribute in IMAX 3D and conventional formats on August 4.

  • Iron Man Movie Back at Marvel

    The superhero movie news rolls on as Daily Variety reports that film rights to the Iron Man comic book franchise have reverted back to Marvel following an unsuccessful two-year development period at New Line Cinema. Company CEO Avi Arad tells the trade that Marvel may license the property to another studio or produce the pic itself and release it through partner Paramount.

    A lesser-known comic book staple created by Larry Lieber, Iron Man chronicles the adventures of Tony Stark, a driven inventor and enigmatic heir to the Stark Enterprises fortune. Like most Marvel characters, he leads a double life, commanding his empire by day and at night becoming Iron Man, the living embodiment of decades of defense spending and innovation. With billions of dollars worth of state-of-the-art armor and weaponry at his disposal, Stark fights crime, terrorism and corporate espionage.

    Actor Tom Cruise was at one time considering taking the starring role in the film adaptation but never committed to the project. Likewise, helmer Nick Cassavetes (The Notebook, She’s So Lovely) was attached to direct but has yet to ink a deal. Marvel will apparently throw out the baby with the bathwater, dismissing screenplay drafts by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar (Smallville) and David Hayter (X-Men) in favor of seeking another writer.

    Marvel Enterprises Inc., which recently changed its name to Marvel Entertainment Inc. to reflect its expansion into film production, will be producing ten features based on Captain America and nine other superhero comics including The Avengers, Nick Fury, Black Panther, Ant-Man, Cloak & Dagger, Dr. Strange, Hawkeye, Power Pack and Shang-Chi. Set on a two-per-year release schedule, the pics will be financed through a $525 million loan deal with Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. Since Iron Man was not part of that deal, Marvel may have to look at other funding options should it decide to keep the production at home with Arad and Angry Films’ Don Murphy producing.

    Marvel properties licensed to other studios are coming soon to a theater near in the form of X-Men 3, Ghost Rider, Spider-Man 3 and Iron Fist.

  • Animation Vet Max Howard On Igor, Exodus and More

    Halloween may have just passed us by, but for the folks at Venice, Calif.-based Exodus Film Group, secret laboratories in dark castles are still the order of the day as they toil away on Igor: Unholy Frijoles, a CG-animated short that will serve to launch a feature-length version in 2007. Since the big announcement that Christian Slater, Steve Buscemi, John Cleese and Jay Leno have signed onto the voice cast, the studio has been a bit secretive about what’s brewing down in their budding toon lab. In this interview, exec producer Max Howard of Melwood Pictures sheds some new light on the production and tells us how a theater guy came to trade the boards for the insanity of the animation world.

    Animation Magazine: How did you go from managing and directing plays in London to making animated films such as The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast?

    Max Howard: I used to work in the theatre with Peter Schneider, who many years ago was president of feature animation at Disney. I set up and ran the [U.K.] studio for them during the making of Who Framed Roger Rabbit, then came to America to open and run the Florida studio for Disney and was there for six years. Then I set up and ran Disney’s "Hat Building" [in Burbank, Calif.] before going to Warner Bros. as president of feature animation. I did three films there—The Iron Giant, Space Jam and Quest for Camelot. Then I went back to working with Jeffrey Katznberg at DreamWorks and [exec produced] Spirit, Stallion of the Cimarron, and then started my own company [Melwood Pictures], freelancing and doing projects such as this with Exodus.

    Did you study art in school or anything?

    No, not at all. Actually, I was a child actor. I was brought up in the theater–my parents and my parents parents were in the entertainment industry. In fact, it’s sort of an old cliché now, but I remember talking with Sandy Rabins, who was one of the people who originally hired me at Disney and is now one of the heads of feature animation at Sony, and she was telling me about this extraordinary process called animation. Having been hired by Disney, I was thinking, "What the hell am I doing? This sounds like the most complicated and ludicrous way to make a movie!" And she said something very astute. She said, "Well, you haven’t really met the people who actually make them yet, you haven’t met the artists." So I met them and realized that the very best of them are actually actors getting a performance. So, in a sense, the abilities of managing acting talent and artistic talent are not dissimilar. I think the best animators are the ones whose characters move the least and the bad ones overact. But it was a huge change for me to come from being pretty successful in the theater, but I wasn’t alone. I was part of that group that came out of the theatre and I suppose for a while we thought we were doing Broadway musicals at Disney with The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast and all that.

    So my passion for animation developed. I was out of work and Peter Schneider called me and asked, "What are you dong?" I told him I just got married and didn’t know what I was doing next. He said "Come talk with us about perhaps helping us manage this movie called Roger Rabbit." I thought, "Great, someone else to pay me!" But what I got later on out of animation is the timelessness of what we do. I remember taking my daughter, who at the time was maybe four years old, to the re-release of Disney’s 101 Dalmatians, and she sat there captivated by this film that was made in 1960. And that’s a film I remember my parents taking me to see. I suddenly realized that the films I’m making now, she might take her children to see. They wouldn’t be dragged to see Granddad’s movie, they would be going along to se an animated film that would genuinely entertain them.

    The other night I was watching TV and caught Wall Street, quite a good movie. I thought it was standing up pretty well and, suddenly, there’s this scene with Michael Douglas walking along the beach and it’s supposed to be showing how cool, affluent and on the cutting edge of technology he is, but he’s got a cell phone in his hand and it’s nearly as big as he is! That ripped me completely out of the movie. Then I looked at the channel to see how old the movie is and it’s not that old. It made me think about how quickly and rapidly we change in our society, and the fact that we can make these movies and they can be around to entertain multiple generations. I find that really, really exciting.

    Do you think the smaller animation studios such as Exodus and its partner, ElectroAge, will be able to compete with the Pixars, DreamWorks and Disneys of the world?

    Not necessarily, but I don’t think they should because their movies won’t cost as much and the [grosses] probably won’t be as much. But even if the upside was a fraction of what those big movies take, Exodus would probably have made more profit than those big movies. So there’s some interesting relativity going on. There are marvelous sides of working at DreamWorks, Disney and Warner Bros., and the infrastructure and richness of those companies in terms of the talent and everything is quite wonderful. But at the same time, they’re like great, big oil tankers and if you want to change direction or anything, it’s really tough. The movies cost a lot of money and the pressure to deliver is enormous because the costs are so high.

    I believe that Exodus will be very successful and perhaps one day itself become fat and like a great, big, old oil tanker.

    Is that the goal, to become the next Pixar?

    I think the goal here is to, one at a time, make some very good movies. Yeah, everyone would love to become a Pixar, but I think what’s inspiring everybody here, is the fact that you can, and five years ago you couldn’t. That’s the wonderful shift we’ve seen in our industry and I think its healthy for the industry. Just a few years ago we were buying SGIs for $200,000 a pop and you needed 60 or 70 of them to make a film. Do the math and it was way beyond a company like Exodus to even contemplate getting into the business. Of course, it’s still about talent and always will be, but because of the success of animation more and more people continue to come into the industry. We’re building a bigger and better talent pool and the technology’s not in the way because of the cost of acquiring it. Now the costs come down on a daily basis.

    I’m hoping that out of this world will also come refreshing, new and innovative films that will feel different and independent, and they’ll help grow a somewhat different audience.

    You mentioned that you weren’t into animation before you got into it, but now that you’re in the industry, what really inspires you?

    I’ll tell you what doesn’t inspire me. Though I’m a firm believer in making CG movies, I don’t believe in making CG movies because that’s the genre. What I like is the idea that because the way technology is going I can get any look I want. But what I’m passionate about is really, really good stories. Again, it’s a terribly old cliché but it’s true that you can be much more forgiving in the art if the story’s great and that’s what inspires me. Also, some of the great, classic Disney films and movies like Beauty and Beast. Some people say it’s not the most well-crafted of the Disney films of the early ’90s, but it’s certainly held up as probably one of the most beautifully structured animated films in my opinion. The Iron Giant I was close to The Iron Giant because Brad Bird and I did that film together over at Warners, but I’m a huge Brad Bird fan. The Incredibles., Finding Nemo– I think Pixar’s been absolutely staggering in terms of what they’ve made, but I don’t think they’ve been making an art form. I think they’ve been creating really good scripts that happen to be made in CG.

    So let’s talk about Igor. Is the short coming out soon?

    We’re in production on the short. We’re just completing the storyboards and recorded all the actors. The quality of the cast [Slater, Buscemi, Cleese and Leno] said a lot to me personally about what a good property we have considering how quickly they all agreed to do this. In a way, we’re the little engine that could, so getting that lineup of people to come on board is fantastic. We’ve rigged most of the models and have animation tests running on all of the characters at the moment, so we’re real close to launching the animation part of it. Doing the short will help us promote the movie, but, being the first film out of the studio here, it’s a very good challenge for us. Although, everything we’re doing as far as rigging all the characters and all, is all work that of course would have needed to be done anyway for the feature. But it allows us that sense of achievement and the sense that the production pipeline will work for a feature film, and it helps amp up the artists to animate these characters. So I think it will all go towards making a more efficient feature film when we start there.

    Chris McKenna (FOX’s American Dad), who wrote the short, has also written a screenplay and we’ve just completed the third draft, which is excellent.

    Is there a release date for the short?

    We’re not putting a date on it, really. Once we get the story reel locked, and I think we’re closer to that now, then we’re going to sit down and work out a sensible release date. The idea would be to have it ready sometime next year, I suppose.

    And you hope to have it distributed theatrically along with some animated feature film?

    That would be terrific. What I personally suggested to [Exodus president and CEO John D. Eraklis], however, is that we wouldn’t release the short through somebody without having secured some sort of deal for the feature. You have to sort of time them together, so I think it would be a package, really. But certainly the short is a stand-alone piece. We wanted to do all these tests, so we thought why not turn it into something that could be effective on its own. So that’s been our strategy.

    Will all the animation for the feature be done at Exodus and ElectroAge, or will some of the work be farmed out?

    That’s not necessarily the goal of it, but I suppose given the economic time we’re in and the cost of it, we may be forced at some time. We’re just keeping all of our options open and are learning so much from producing the short that it will help inform us of what we need to do for the feature.

    Being the company’s flagship project, will the short also set the tone for what we can expect from Exodus in the future?

    To some extent, although I think there’s a feeling here to have a diversity. This is a slightly edgier picture we’re dealing with. We’re taking a tongue-in-cheek look at the horror genre, in particular Frankenstein stories but taken from Igor’s point of view. There’s sort of an underclass were you’re born an Igor and you can only aspire to be an Igor, but, of course, he has greater aspirations than that. It’s not supposed to be scary, but there’s a gross-out value, which we hope kids will really enjoy. We’re not making a soft, preschool property either.

    Speaking of aspirations, are there other things in the industry that you would like to do?

    Not really because I’ve enjoyed the past few years. With the help of Jeffrey Katzenberg, I set up Melwood Pictures and we developed a lot of properties and that’s basically what I’ve been doing. I suppose I haven’t been writing, but I have been developing and working with companies like Exodus, and that I find very fulfilling. I had roughly 15 years collectively with these big studios and to be on one’s own can be very rewarding and refreshing.

    What advice would you give someone who wants to get into animation?

    First of all, you need to look at animation as a method of filmmaking and not anything different. Study great movies regardless of whether they’re animated or live-action. Once we started moving the camera in animation, and that was done in the 2D world, the structure of the cutting and the composition follow all of the same rules as making a movie. So if you love animation, learn to love film and interpret your animation through film. Walt Disney was never rated a great artist, although that’s how people who are not in our business think of him. What he was is a fantastic storyteller and a great filmmaker who happened to use animation to tell those stories. He was thought of as the person who did the drawings, but he knew how to place those drawings in the frame and how to drive the story forward using those characters brought to live by the Nine Old Men under his leadership.

    In addition to Exodus film Group’s Igor, Max Howard has been working on an animated feature titled The Spirit Bear through his Melwood Pictures. The independently financed picture takes place in the wilds of the British Columbian rainforest and focuses on the endangered white-furred black bears that inhabit the region. Learn more about this and other Melwood projects at www.melwoodpictures.com. More information on Igor and other Exodus productions is available at www.exodusfilmgroup.com.

  • VES to Honor Lasseter

    Pixar Animation Studios founder John Lasseter will follow George Lucas and Robert Zemeckis as the third recipient of the Georges Melies Award for Artistic Excellence, a lifetime achievement kudo to be presented at this year’s Visual Effects Society (VES) awards ceremony. The fourth annual event will take place on Feb. 15 at the Hollywood Palladium.

    Lasseter directed Disney’s 1979 animated classic, Lady and the Tramp, before going on to create early Pixar CG shorts such as Luxo Jr., Knick Knack and the Oscar-winning Tiny Toy. He jumped back into the toy box to direct both Toy Story movies and A Bug’s Life, and is now at work on the eagerly awaited 2006 release, Cars. Other recent credits include exec producer on Finding Nemo, The Incredibles and the Pixar shorts Boundin’ and Jack-Jack Attack.

    VES is currently accepting awards nominations in 21 categories, including feature film, television, commercials, music videos, video games and special venue projects. The deadline for submissions is Dec. 2.

  • Trollz Site Draws 1 Million Users

    DIC Ent. has announced that the web community for its new Trollz property recently registered its one millionth user. Launched in April, www.trollz.com also ranked among the top-10 kids’ entertainment sites for girls 6—14, and claimed the No.1 spot with girls 2—6 years old, according to DIC.

    Trollz.com employs an intuitive, map-driven interface that allows visitors to explore the world of Trollzopolis and the many activities and hidden "gems" within each location. Areas include the Trollzopolis Mall and Trollz Arcade, which features single-player games that earn players currency for use at Rock Candy Clothing, Trollzé’s Hair Salon and the Spell Shop. Trollz wallpapers, screensavers, and ringtones for cell phones can be purchased at Trollz Mobile, while the latest music, videos and cartoons play at the Trollz Amphitheater. In addition, visitors can meet all the Trollz and check out videos, Memory Book journals and biographies at Trollzopolis High.

    The Trollz brand is a contemporary version of the world-famous spiky-haired dolls originally created by Thomas Dam in Denmark more than 50 years ago. This new teenage lifestyle brand revolves around five fashion-conscious teenage best friends–Amethyst, Onyx, Sapphire, Topaz and Ruby–who each offers her own unique style and personality. Together, they form the “Magic of The Five,” to ward off bad spells and extol the virtues of friendship and forgiveness.

    The first two Trollz animated movies, Best Friends For Life and Magic of the Five, are available on DVD in the U.S. from Warner Home Video. The company also has rights to distribute the films on disc overseas, while Nickelodeon International holds exclusive cable, satellite and pay TV rights for DIC’s animated Trollz television series.

  • Helfant Gains Powers as Marvel Prez

    It didn’t take exposure to radioactive materials to make Michael Helfant one of the most powerful men at Marvel Ent. The industry veteran has been appointed president and chief operating officer of the company’s Beverly Hills, Calif.-based Marvel Studios division. In the role, he will oversee entertainment development and production activities as the company continues to aggressively exploit its library of more than 5,000 comic-book characters with live-action and animated film, television and home entertainment projects.

    Marvel, home to such enduring properties as Spider-Man, X-Men and The Incredible Hulk, recently completed a $525 million non-recourse debt financing for the production of up to ten films based on its franchises. Marvel Studios chairman and CEO Avi Arad is overseeing script development on a number of these projects and the first film is slated for release in 2008. In addition, the company is working with distributor Lions Gate to produce direct-to-DVD animated features films, the first of which is expected at retail in 2006.

    Helfant most recently served as COO of independent film production company Beacon Pictures, whose feature film releases include the Kevin Costner Western Open Range, the Kate Hudson comedy Raising Helen and the John Travolta firefighting drama Ladder 49. Prior to joining Beacon, Helfant was senior exec VP of former Miramax arm Dimension Films from 1999 to 2002.

  • Corpse Bride Animator Drops Science in St. Louis

    The science of animation becomes weird science when director/producer Tim Burton is involved. Now some lucky kids and other attendees will get the opportunity to see how his latest feat of black magic, Warner Bros.’ Corpse Bride, was accomplished as lead animator Brad Schiff haunts the St. Louis Science Center on Nov. 2 a 12 noon.

    A St. Louis native, Schiff is a longtime animator at LAIKA/house (formerly Vinton Studios), one of the biggest producers of animated commercials in the world. Schiff’s former teacher, Terri Latrello, will be bringing 140 kids from the Parkway West Middle School to learn the secrets behind the art of stop-motion animation and view clips from Schiff’s movie and television work, including the short-lived FOX series The PJs.

    Now celebrating its 20th anniversary, The St. Louis Science Center is located at 5050 Oakland Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110. More information on exhibits and events can be found online a www.slsc.org.

  • Aardman Mobilizes

    As Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit continues to dominate the overseas box office, U.K. production house Aardman Animations is reportedly bringing its unique brand of animation and storytelling to cell phones and other mobile devices. According to Daily Variety, the company has signed a number of deals to distribute video clips, wallpapers, screensavers, ringtones and other gadget goodies around the world.

    Minick has licensed Aardman properties for mobile content distribution in Latin America and north and east European territories, while similar arrangements were made with Starcut for Southeast Asia, Player X for Scandinavia and Buongiorno for France, Italy, Brazil, Greece, Morocco, Portugal, Australia and New Zealand. Aardman staples Angry Kid and Wallace & Gromit have also been licensed by 3 Australia and Telecom New Zealand.

    In addition to licensing its intellectual properties, Aardman plans to further exploit the rapidly expanding mobile market by building its own mobile production unit with help from London-based mobile content specialist edpic. Aardman is now in production on Flushed Away, a CG-animated action-comedy starring rats voiced by Hugh Jackman and Kate Winslet. DreamWorks plans to release the film in the fall of 2006. Other works in progress include a Creature Comforts series tailored for U.S. television.

  • EA Gets The Simpsons for Next Gen

    Video game publisher Electronic Arts (EA) will be bringing the long-running FOX animated series The Simpsons into the next era of gaming evolution. The company has entered into a long-term deal with Twentieth Century Fox Television and Gracie Films to develop multiple videogame titles for next-generation consoles. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Through this first development deal between FOX and EA, the game maker will work closely with FOX’s licensing and merchandising division, Gracie Films and The Simpsons writers continue the adventures of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie. “This is something EA’s been interested in for years and now game development and technology is at a place where The Simpsons characters and world will really come alive in these games,” says Nick Earl, VP and general manager of EA Redwood Shores Studio.

    Simpsons exec producer James L. Brooks of Gracie Films comments, “I think this is a great opportunity for us, primarily because it brings with it the possibility of free EA games.”

    The new Simpsons games will be developed at EA’s Redwood Shores Studio, which has produced the recent hits From Russia With Love, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 06 and The Lord of The Rings: Tactics, as well as the Sims games and the upcoming The Godfather, based on the classic film by Francis Ford Coppola. No launch date for the first Simpsons release has been announced.

    Introduced in 1990, The Simpsons is the longest-running sitcom in television history. The series is currently in its 17th season with an 18th now in production.

  • Sith Happens on DVD

    George Lucas is about to get even richer as Star Wars: Episode III–The Revenge of the Sith leads off this week’s batch of home video releases. The third and presumably final chapter in the big-screen space saga greets eager franchise devotees at retail, along with the fourth season of Star Trek: Enterprise.

    Featuring roughly 90 minutes of digital imagery, Star Wars: Episode III–The Revenge of the Sith can almost qualify as an animated movie. In most scenes, the only live-action elements are the film’s stars, Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman, Hayden Christensen, Samuel L. Jackson, Christopher Lee and Jimmy Smits. Franchise stalwarts Frank Oz (voice of Yoda), Anthony Daniels (C3PO), Kenny Baker (R2D2) and Peter Mayhew (Chewbacca) also return to see the circle completed as young Anakin Skywalker turns the dark side and becomes the evil Darth Vader.

    The two-disc set from Fox Home Entertainment includes commentary by Lucas, producer Rick McCallum, animation director Rob Coleman and ILM visual effects supervisors John Knoll and Roger Guyett. Other bonus features include a new full-length documentary produced by Lucasfilm, a 15-part collection of Lucasfilm web documentaries, never-before-seen production photos and two new featurettes exploring the movie’s stunts and the prophecy of Anakin Skywalker as the Chosen One. For gamers, there’s also a demo of Star Wars Battlefront II for Xbox, a free DVD-ROM trial of Star Wars: Hyperspace and a trailer for the PC game Star Wars: Empire at War. All that adds up to a list price of $29.98.

    A good chunk of the Star Wars fan base should also gravitate to Star Trek: Enterprise–The Complete Fourth Season. This six-disc set features all 22 of the sereis’ final installments, along with more than three hours of bonus features. Extras include commentary on select episodes, deleted scenes, outtakes a photo gallery, Easter eggs, Enterprise secrets and the featurettes Star Trek: Enterprise Moments: Season 4, Inside the "Mirror" Episodes, That’s a Wrap! and Links to the Legacy. The Paramount Home Entertainment release sells for around $129.99. Star Trek: Enterprise–The Complete Series featuring all four seasons is also available today for the suggested retail price of $479.98.

  • Pinocchio 3K, 3 Wise Men Arrive

    With Star Wars: Episode III–Revenge of the Sith sure to dominate DVD sales this week and beyond, distributors Lions Gate Family Home Entertainment and Buena Vista Home Entertainment are hoping there are some consumer dollars left over for their respective direct-to-video animated releases, Pinocchio 3000 and The 3 Wise Men. There’s more fun in threes as a trio of Alvin and the Chipmunks holiday specials hit disc, along with episodes of anime favorite Duel masters.

    Produced by CinéGroupe, the CG-animated Pinocchio 3000 features the voices of Whoopi Goldberg, Howie Mandel and Malcolm McDowell in a futuristic retelling of the classic story of a puppet who longs to become a real boy. In this version, Pinocchio is a super robot who is tricked into helping the evil Scamboli (MacDowell) turn all children into automatons. With the help of friends Geppetto, Spencer (Mandel) and Cyberina (Goldberg), our hero must challenge Scamboli and learn valuable lessons about what it means to be real.

    Pinocchio 3000 is directed by Daniel Robichaud, a renowned animation director and digital artist whose credits include Titantic, The Fifth Element, Terminator 2: 3D and Apollo 13. The DVD lists for $19.98.

    Available today exclusively at Wal-Mart stores is Disney’s The 3 Wise Men, a DVD premiere Christmas feature that employs 3D animation to tell the tale of the three wise men who followed the Star of Bethlehem to the birthplace of Jesus. Co-produced by Arenas Ent., Carrère Group and Tele Madrid, the family flick is directed by Antonio Navarro and animated at Mexico’s Animagicstudio by a crew led by Disney veterans who worked on Fantasia 2000, Hercules and Tarzan.

    Taking some liberties with the biblical story, The 3 Wise Men has Melchior, Gaspar and Balthazar set out on a journey across the dessert to retrieve the royal gifts designated for the King of Kings before tyrannical ruler Herod takes them for himself. Along the way, they meet up with a handsome soldier and a beautiful rebel warrior who help battle the deadly scorpions, vicious wolves and giant dragons conjured by Herod’s evil counselor, Belial. The 76-minute film screened at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004 and had a limited release in Europe last year.

    The film’s English-language voice track was recorded by Martin Sheen (TV’s The West Wing) and son Emilio Estevez (The War at Home). Other voices were provided by platinum recording artist Lupillo Rivera, Latin Grammy winning Christian recording artist Marcos Witt, Spanish-language TV star Jose Luis Rodriguez, Mexican TV star Kuno Becker, Christian recording artist Jaci Valesquez and popular Latino theatre troupe Culture Clash. The original Spanish-language track is also available on the disc, which can be purchased only at Wal-Mart for $19.99.

    Alvin and the Chipmunks: A Chipmunk Christmas includes three holiday episodes that originally aired in 1981, 1988 and 1989. In one of the adventures, Alvin gets into the giving spirit and offers his cherished harmonica to a sick little boy, unaware that Dave has booked him to perform a harmonica solo at Carnegie Hall. The Paramount Home Entertainment release carries a suggested retail price of $14.99.

    Also from Paramount comes Duel Masters: The Day the Duel Stood Still and Duel Masters: Frankly Shobu, I Don’t Give a Duel. These compilations of episodes from the hit anime TV series offer bonus adventures, demos of the Duel Masters trading card game and bloopers and outtakes from the show and list for $16.99 each on DVD.

  • Wolf Made President of MTV Networks

    Michael J. Wolf has been appointed president and chief operating officer of Viacom-owned MTV Networks, home to such cable outlets as Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, Spike TV and MTV. A former managing partner of McKinsey & Company’s global media, entertainment and information opperation, Wolf will lead MTV Networks’ business and technology operations including production, advertising sales, affiliate sales and marketing, business and strategy development, business and legal affairs, finance, information systems and technology.

    In this newly created senior exec position, Wolf will report directly to Judy McGrath, chairman and CEO of MTV Networks. His duties will include setting up and implementing the company’s evolving multi-platform strategy. “MTV Networks is the one company in the entertainment industry where the Internet meets television and television meets the Internet,” he comments. “It’s the nexus of the new and the old. It’s an exciting time to partner with these world-renowned brands that have always been global leaders in both driving and embracing change and innovation.”

    “I know that Michael’s compelling vision about the digital future of our industry will allow us take full advantage of new and emerging opportunities in today’s marketplace,” adds McGrath. “And as we continue to transform every aspect of our business, Michael will ensure that we’re running as agilely, effectively and strategically as possible.”

    During his tenure at McKinsey & Company, Wolf focused on helping senior management define the future of their companies while solving their most important and complex business problems, including issues surrounding operations, organization, strategy and marketing.

    Before joining McKinsey in 2001, Wolf was a senior partner with Booz Allen Hamilton, where he founded and led the Media and Entertainment Group and built it into one of the largest segments of the firm. He served on the firm’s board of directors and executive management committee and was also the chief marketing officer.

    For the past 16 years, Wolf has been the leading consultant to the CEOs and senior managers of many of the world’s leading media, information, and entertainment companies and has led a number of the major transactions, strategic alignments and innovations in these industries. He has also advised companies in the related areas of merchandising, direct marketing, themed retail, toys and consumer electronics.

  • Nodelman in New Soup

    After last week announcing his departure from Noodlesoup Prods., the animation studio he founded, Jeff Nodelman has landed a new gig. The award-winning director and animator has been hired on as creative director in charge of animation for New York City-based The Creative Group, a company that specializes in graphics packages for TV.

    At The Creative Croup, Nodelman will set up an animation division to develop, produce and market projects for film, television and home entertainment. Up first is Nate the Great, a half-hour PBS series scheduled to go into production next year. The Creative Group also gives Nodelman a venue to develop his own original properties.

    As president and creative director of Noodlesoup Prods., Nodelman served as supervising producer on Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim staple, The Venture Bros., and supervised animation sequences for the films Duplex (2003) and My Bay’s Daddy (2004). He said he left Noodlesoup to pursue his own creative endeavors, and is apparently leaving the door open to collaborate with his former studio on upcoming projects.

    Noodlesoup Prods. is currently at work on 13 half-hours comprising the second season of The Venture Bros., as well as four shorts for Cartoon Network’s new shorts program, Sunday Pants. The studio is also collaborating with MSN on “Music Man,” a new application that translates chat text into original live music played by an animated band in the activities window during a chat session.

  • Corgi Replicates Wallace and Gromit

    Chicago-based Corgi, a leading manufacturer of die-cast scale models, has secured a license to produce exclusive replicas of characters from DreamWorks Animation’s and Aardman Animations’ hit clay-animated movie, Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit. The three-year deal covers the U.S., the U.K. and Ireland.

    Corgi will release a die-cast model of the film’s Anti-Pesto van, along with Wallace and Gromit figures in S.W.A.T outfits and a scaled-down replica of the Bun-Vac 6000, Wallace’s humane pest control device.

    Demand for Wallace and Gromit merchandising is sure to grow as the film continues its worldwide box office success and brings new fans to the property. The movie has exceeded projections, earning more than $100 million and eclipsing U.K. ticket sales of previous DreamWorks releases Shark Tale and Madagascar. In North America, the pic is holding strong in the top five after four weeks.

    Since 1956, Corgi USA has been a worldwide pioneer in the field of collectible die-cast models and replicas. More information about the company and its line of products can be found at www.corgi-usa.com.

  • Dora Full of Hot Air?

    The title tyke in Nickelodeon’s hit animated preschool series Dora the Explorer will be the first Latina character to appear as a giant helium balloon in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. The 79th annual holiday staple will feature a 54-foot-tall Dora looming over the streets of New York City on Thursday, Nov. 24, as more than 2.5 million live spectators and millions more TV viewers look on.

    Filled with approximately 15,000 cubic feet of helium, Dora will travel from Central Park to Herald Square on Thanksgiving Day, joining a growing list of Nickelodeon favorites to grace the parade in past years. Past participants include The Rugrats, Blue from Blue’s Clues and SpongeBob SquarePants. In 2002, the title character from the Bill Cosby-created Nick series Little Bill became the first African American to greet viewers in balloon form at the Macy’s event.

    “Dora has emerged as an icon in the Hispanic community and has become a favorite among all preschoolers,” says Cyma Zarghami, president of Nickelodeon Television. “We are thrilled that she will be joining the list of great characters who have participated in the wonderful tradition of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.”

    Dora the Explorer is a play-along adventure format starring a seven-year-old heroine whose adventures take place in an imaginative, tropical world filled with jungles, beaches and rainforests. The top-rated preschool show on commercial television airs at 9 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. weekdays on Nick Jr. and weekends on CBS.

  • Ringling School Merges with Sarasota Museum of Art

    Ringling School of Art and Design, a respected incubator for animation talent, is merging with the Sarasota Museum of Art [SOMA]. SOMA will operate as a division of the college and its 15-member board of directors will serve as an advisory board to the school’s president, Dr. Larry R. Thompson.

    Ringling and SOMA first joined forces a year ago to propose a renovation of the historic Sarasota Highschool as the Visual Arts Education Center. The museum will be housed on the first floor with Ringling classrooms and studio space occupying the second level of the 1926 Collegiate Gothic-style building.

    "The establishment of this partnership furthers our institutional mission, which focuses on transformational and innovative arts education," says Thompson. "This collaboration provides an opportunity for this community to see exhibitions of the highest quality contemporary and modern art while also providing a venue for the education about, and creation of, such art."

    Located on the Gulf Coast of Florida, Ringling School of Art and Design is a fully accredited, private, not-for-profit college offering Bachelor of Fine Arts degrees in computer animation, fine arts, graphic/interactive communication, illustration, interior design and photography/digital imaging. The addition of the visual Arts Education Center, the institution will increase its space by 60,000 square feet. More information on the school can be found at www.ringling.edu.

  • Channel Frederator to Podcast Toons

    Following the unveiling of Apple’s video iPod, Frederator Studios founder Fred Seibert has announced the launch of Channel Frederator, a video podcast that will distribute animated content on portable video devices such as the iPod and Sony’s PlayStation Portable (PSP). Released weekly, the ten- to 15-minute episodes will contain original and vintage cartoons submitted by producers from around the world.

    The first Channel Frederator episode features four submitted cartoons beginning with Barrista, a 2D student film by Pendelton Ward, who is in the process of completing his first Nickelodeon animated short. Also included are Blur Studio’s CG short In the Rough, Independent filmmaker Eileen Brennan’s Flash production Go Spy Go and Wild Brain’s Flash film Mantelope, from former SCTV player Dave Thomas (Strange Brew).

    Seibert, who serves as president of Channel Seibert, is the exec producer of six hit Nickelodeon series including The Fairly Oddparents. Prior to forming Frederator Studios, he served as president of Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, where he produced more than 100 shorts that spawned such series as Dexter’s Laboratory, Johnny Bravo, The PowerPuff Girls and Courage the Cowardly Dog.

    "Every venture at our studio begins with the talent and the film, and video podcasting is their next evolution: cartoons on demand for free, ready for viewing anywhere you take them," says Seibert. Eric Homan, Channel Frederator’s president of programming, adds, "It’s always been our goal to showcase some of today’s funniest and most original talent. Podcasting is a fantastic way to get cartoons from some of the most spectacular filmmakers on earth in your pocket."

    Channel Frederator was conceived by David Karp, and designed by Annie Chiu, principals of interactive developer Davidville. Cartoon producers from around the world are invited to submit short films for inclusion in weekly episodes. Free subscriptions to the podcast service can be obtained by searching for Channel Frederator in the iTunes podcast directory at www.apple.com or by visiting www.channelfrederator.com.

  • Futurama Zips to Comedy Central

    Toons South Park and Drawn Together will be joined in the Comedy Central lineup by Matt Groening’s erstwhile FOX series, Futurama. According to Daily Variety, the network has acquired exclusive cable TV rights for five years starting January 2008, and is shelling out a whopping $400,000 for each episode. Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim has Futurama until December of 2007.

    The Emmy Award-winning Futurama follows the adventures of Philip J. Fry, a pizza delivery boy who was accidentally frozen in 1999 and thawed out 1000 years later. A lot of the humor comes from his struggle to adapt to a very different world populated by peculiar species, robots, space ships and omnipresent advertising. Created by Groening (The Simpsons) and David X. Cohen, the show aired in primetime on FOX from 1999 to 2003.

    Comedy Central will reportedly use Futurama and other pickups such as ABC’s Scrubs to attract more male viewers in the 18 to 24 age range and support its original series such as the aforementioned South Park, Drawn Together, Reno 911 and The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Meanwhile, 20th Century Fox Television will be able sell the series in syndication to network affiliates.

  • Boll Going Postal for Game Flick

    Running With Scissors, developer of the cult hit video game Postal, tells us that director Uwe Boll (House of the Dead, Alone in the Dark) has signed on to direct and produce a feature film version of the violent and darkly comedic interactive franchise that sparked controversy with its 1997 debut. The pic is scheduled to begin shooting in 2006 for a 2007 release to coincide with the game’s 10th anniversary.

    German filmmaker Boll has carved out a niche for himself in the realm of game-to-film adaptations. In addition to Sega’s zombie thriller House of the Dead and Atari’s Alone in the Dark, he recently completed his take on Majesco’s BloodRayne and has Eido’s Fear Effect, Vivendi Universal Games’ Hunter: The Reckoning and Ubisoft’s Far Cry in the pipeline. Currently on his plate is a feature film based on Microsoft’s role-playing franchise Dungeon Siege. The $60 million, three-hour fantasy epic starring Ray Liotta (Goodfellas, Narc) is currently being shot in Vancouver and is slated for a late-summer 2006 release.

    “Uwe Boll is the perfect producer-director to make Postal, comments Running With Scissors CEO Vince Desi. “He understands the subject matter and has an appreciation and affinity for controversy and political incorrectness. POSTAL has always been about reason and insanity, violence and motivation. Boll is simply the right guy to bring that vision to the screen.”

    Boll, who is reportedly a huge fan of the Postal game, remarks, “I see it like a mirror for our society–funny, violent and absurd! So then the movie must be powerful, strange and so full of the game’s politically incorrect outrageousness that if we do it correctly, we will all probably end up in jail!”

    The Postal game as spawned a successful sequel, Postal 2, as well as several add-ons including the multi-player Share the Pain and the recently released Apocalypse Weekend. More information on the franchise can be fond at www.gopostal.com.

  • Happy Elf Comes to NBC in December

    The Happy Elf, a new CG-animated holiday special boasting the vocal talents of Grammy and Emmy winner Harry Connick Jr., will air on NBC on Dec. 2 at 8 p.m. ET. The one-hour family film is produced by IDT Ent. in association with HC Prods.

    Featuring narration and all-new original holiday songs by Connick, The Happy Elf is the story of Eubie, one of Santa’s helpers, whose overly optimistic outlook is put to the test when he tries to bring Christmas joy to the sad little town of Bluesville. The voice cast also includes screen icon Mickey Rooney (The Fox and the Hound), Carol Kane (Scrooged!), Lewis Black (The Daily Show with Jon Stewart) and Rob Paulsen (Coconut Fred’s Fruit Salad Island).

    Based on Connick’s original children’s song of the same name from his 2003 album, Harry for the Holidays, the special was written by Andrew Fishman (Harry for the Holidays TV Special) from a story by Fishman and Scott Landis. Landis is a partner in HC Prods., along with Connick and Ann Marie Wilkins.

    Following the world premiere broadcast on NBC, The Happy Elf will be released on DVD by IDT Ent.’s Anchor Bay Ent. on Dec. 6. The disc will come in a push-button-activated package with blinking lights and a speaker that plays a short snippet of the title song.

    More information about the special can be found at www.thehappyelf.com, which also offers holiday activities and games for kids, sneak previews, a promotional trailer and chances to win $500 every week from Oct. 31st through Dec. 25. One Grand Prize winner will have the opportunity to meet Connick at a live performance.