Smith Micro Software announced the sale of its product line of Moho 2D animation software to Lost Marble LLC. As part of the sale, Lost Marble (founded by Mike Clifton, the original creator of Moho, and Victor Paredes, animator from Cartoon Saloon and former product manager of Moho) has gained back ownership of both Moho Pro and Moho Debut from Smith Micro.
“We remain laser-focused on maximizing the profitability of our three solutions for wireless carriers – SafePath, CommSuite and ViewSpot,” says William W. Smith, Jr., President and CEO of Smith Micro Software, Inc. “Divesting the Moho product line to Lost Marble is a win for all parties involved as it enables us to devote 100% of our energy to our wireless portfolio and customers, while enabling the original creator of Moho to carry on the software’s legacy in the 2D animation space.”
Clifton originally created and released Moho back in 1999. The software was then bought by E Frontier in 2006, and its name was changed to Anime Studio. Smith Micro then took over the program in 2008 and hired a team of engineers to assist Clifton in developing it. The company changed the name back to Moho in 2016 to signal that the program could be used in more than just anime projects.
Lost Marble is acquiring the software with the support of multiple Oscar-nominated Irish studio, Cartoon Saloon, which used the animation tool to create part of its features Song of the Sea, The Breadwinner and Wolfwalkers. “We’ve always called Moho ‘our secret weapon,’” says Tomm Moore, co-director of Wolfwalkers and Secret of Kells. “We’ve been using it for years now and it’s really amazing. At the beginning, I was a purist thinking that whatever we did had to be hand drawn. But, after seeing Moho in action, I just wanted to use the software more and more.”
More information about Moho is available at mohoanimation.com.
Here’s an early look at the major U.S. studio animated releases of the year. All release dates are subject to change because of the unpredictability of theatrical openings worldwide:
The Addams Family 2. MGM’s 2019 feature about the popular and kooky family gets a fast sequel, with new voices Bill Hader and Javon “Wanna” Walton. Charlize Theron, Oscar Isaac, Chloe Grace Moretz, Nick Kroll, Bette Midler and Snoop Dogg resume their original roles. Greg Tiernan and Conrad Vernon also return as directors. MGM/UA, Oct. 8
Arlo the Alligator Boy. Ryan Crego’s 2D animated musical follows the adventures of an alligator-boy who heads to New York City in search of his long-lost father. Featuring the voices of Michael J. Woodard, Mary Lambert, Flea, Annie Potts and Tony Hale. Netflix/Titmouse
Back to the Outback. Directed by Clare Knight and Harry Cripps, this musical comedy follows the adventures of a ragtag group of Australia’s deadliest creatures which launch a daring escape from their zoo. With Isla Fisher, Tim Minchin, Eric Bana, Guy Pearce, Miranda Tapsell, Rachel House, Keith Urban, Jackie Weaver and Diesel Cash La Torraca. Netflix/Reel FX, Fall 2021
The Bad Guys. Directed by Pierre Perifel, this CG-animated adaptation of Aaron Blabey’s book centers on several reformed yet misunderstood villains (Mr. Wolf, Mr. Piranha, Mr. Snake, Mr. Shark and Ms. Tarantula) who decide to live their lives as forces of good! DreamWorks/Universal [Moved to 2022]
Bob’s Burgers: The Movie. Loren Bouchard brings his beloved Fox TV family to the big screen in this fun, musical comedy featuring the series’ main cast (H. Jon Benjamin, Dan Mintz, Eugene Mirman, Larry Murphy, John Roberts and Kristen Schaal) and some special guest voices as well. 20th Century/Bento Box, April 9
The Boss Baby: Family Business (DreamWorks Animation)
The Boss Baby: Family Business. Director Tom McGrath and original Boss Baby voice actor Alec Baldwin return to the world of the 2017 blockbuster. In the sequel, Tim (James Marsden) and Ted (Baldwin) are now grown up, and there’s a new Boss Baby in the house — baby Tina (Amy Sedaris), who is tasked with uncovering the evil plot by Dr. Erwin Armstrong (Jeff Goldblum), the principal of Tim’s daughter’s school. DreamWorks/Universal, September 17.
Connected (Sony Pictures Animation)
Connected. Produced by Chris Miller and Phil Lord and directed by Gravity Falls alum Mike Rianda, this clever new comedy-adventure follows a suburban family as they face a global takeover by hostile computers. Voiced by Maya Rudolph, Danny McBride, Olivia Colman, Abbi Jacobson and Eric Andre. Co-directed by Jeff Rowe. Sony Pictures Animation, Netflix, Late Spring
Encanto. The 60th animated feature from Walt Disney Animation Studios centers on a Colombian girl who lacks special powers, despite coming from a magical family. Directed by Byron Howard and Jared Bush (Zootopia) and co-directed by Charise Castro Smith, and produced by Clark Spencer, Yvett Merino Flores and Jennifer Lee. Disney, Nov. 24
Encanto (Walt Disney Animation Studios)
Hotel Transylvania 4. Count Dracula (Adam Sandler), his daughter Mavis (Selena Gomez) and regular human son-in-law Jonathan (Andy Samberg) continue their wild and wacky adventures in this fourth outing for the popular animated monster clan. Directed by Derek Dymon and Jennifer Kluska. Franchise maestro Genndy Tartakosvky writes and executive produces the latest entry. Sony Pictures Animation, August 6
Luca. Directed by Enrico Casarosa and produced by Andrea Warren, Pixar’s 24th feature is set on the beautiful Italian Riviera. Described as a coming-of-age story, the movie centers on a young boy’s unforgettable summer, filled with gelato, pasta, scooter rides and a sea monster from another world. Disney/Pixar, June 18
Luca (Pixar Animation Studios)
Minions: The Rise of Gru. Delayed from last year, this much-anticipated prequel centers on the origins of the evil mastermind Gru (Steve Carell) and is directed by Kyle Balda and co-directors Brad Ableson and Jonathan del Val. With the voices of Alan Arkin, Julie Andrews, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Taraji P. Henson, Danny Trejo, Lucy Lawless, Michelle Yeoh and Russell Brand! Universal/Illumination, July 2
Minions: The Rise of Gru
PAW Patrol: The Movie. Keith Chapman’s beloved animated canines are heading for the big screen in this eagerly awaited adventure, directed by Cal Brunker (The Nut Job 2). The plot finds Ryder and the pups in Adventure City to stop Mayor Humdinger from turning the bustling metropolis into a state of chaos. The very odd voice cast includes Iain Armitage, Kim Kardashian West, Jimmy Kimmel, Yara Shahidi, Jimmy Kimmel, Dax Shepard and Tyler Perry. Paramount/Spin Master/Mikros, August 20
Raya and the Last Dragon. Directed by Don Hall and Carlos López Estrada, this Disney fantasy epic is set in a magical world where humans coexist with dragons and draws from Southeast Asian cultures and mythology. Written By Adele Lim (Crazy Rich Asians) and Qui Nguyen. With the voices of Kelly Marie Tran (Raya) and Awkwafina (Sisu the Water Dragon). Disney, March 12
Raya and the Last Dragon (Walt Disney Animation Studios)
Ron’s Gone Wrong. Pixar story veteran Jean-Philippe Vine (Inside Out) and Sarah Smith (Arthur Christmas) direct U.K.-based Locksmith Animation’s first feature, which follows the adventures of a 12-year-old boy who ends up with a bot best friend who doesn’t quite work like all the others. Produced by Locksmith co-founder Julie Lockhart, with a script by Smith and Peter Baynham. Locksmith Animation/20th Century Studios, Oct. 22
Rumble. Directed by Hamish Grieve (head of story on Rise of the Guardians), this CG-animated pic is set in a world where monster wrestling is a global sport and follows teenager Winnie as she seeks to follow in her dad’s footsteps by coaching a lovable monster. Matt Lieberman (Scoob!, The Addams Family) penned the script. With the voices of Will Arnett, Ben Schwartz, Geraldine Viswanathan, Terry Crews, Becky Lynch and Charles Barkley. Paramount, May 14
Rumble (Paramount Animation)
Sing 2. The musically gifted animals of Illumination’s hit movie return in this holiday release, which finds them leaving Moon Theater for the lights of the big city. Writer/director Garth Jennings is back with voice stars Matthew McConaughey, Reese Witherspoon, Scarlett Johansson, Taron Egerton, Seth MacFarlane, John C. Reilly, Nick Kroll and Tori Kelly. Illumination/Universal, Dec. 22
Space Jam: A New Legacy. Malcolm D. Lee (Night School) directs this sequel to the popular 1996 live-action/animation hybrid sports comedy. The new outing features LeBron James, Don Cheadle, Sonequa Martin-Green, as well as Looney Tunes characters such as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Pepe Le Pew, Marvin the Martian and Lola Bunny. James is also producing the movie with Ryan Coogler (Creed, Black Panther), who co-wrote the script with Sev Ohanian (Fruitvale Station). Warner Animation Group, July 16
Spirit Untamed (DreamWorks Animation)
Spirit Untamed. Lucky Prescott’s life is changed forever when she moves from her home in the city to a small frontier town and befriends a wild mustang named Spirit in this feature outing of the popular animated show, developed by Aury Wallington. Directed by DreamWorks veterans Elaine Bogan (Trollhunters, Dragons: Race to the Edge) and Ennio Torresan (head of story on Abominable, The Boss Baby). DreamWorks/Universal, June 4
The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run. Our optimistic hero searches for his beloved snail Gary in this charming CG-animated spin on the two-decades-old 2D toon. Directed by Tim Hill, featuring the talents of Tom Kenny, Bill Fagerbakke, Rodger Bumpass, Clancy Brown, Mr. Lawrence, Jill Talley, Carolyn Lawrence, Awkwakina, Reggie Watts, Keanu Reeves and Snoop Dogg! Paramount/Nickelodeon/Mikro/CBS All Access, Early 2021
Tom and Jerry (Warner Animation Group)
Tom and Jerry. Tim Story (Ride Along 2, Shaft) directs this live-action/CG hybrid take on the classic Hanna-Barbera characters, which finds the cat and mouse duo causing trouble in a posh hotel in Manhattan. Stars Chloë Grace Moretz, Michael Peña, Ken Jeong, Rob Delaney, Pallavi Sharda and Colin Jost, and features the voices of Frank Welker and the late William Hanna, June Foray and Mel Blanc via archival footage. Warner Animation Group/HBO Max, March 5
Trollhunters: Rise of the Titans. This movie enterprise based on Guillermo del Toro’s Tales of Arcadia trilogy is directed by Johane Matte, Francisco Ruiz Velasco and Andrew L. Schmidt. It finds the heroes of Trollhunters, 3Below and Wizards fighting the Arcane Order for control over the magic that binds them all. With the voices of Emile Hirsch, Lexi Medrano, Charlie Saxton, Kelsey Grammer, Alfred Molina, Steven Yeun, Nick Frost, Diego Luna, Tatiana Maslany, Nick Offerman, Tom Kenny, Laraine Newman, Grey Griffin and Cheryl Hines. DreamWorks/Netflix
Vivo. Directed by Kirk DeMicco and co-directed by Brandon Jeffords, this colorful CG-animated feature is based on a screenplay by DeMicco and Quiara Alegría Hudes (In the Heights) with songs by Lin-Manuel Miranda. Described as an “incredible story about music and friendship,” the movie will take audiences on an epic adventure to gorgeous and vibrant locations never before seen in animation. Produced by Lisa Stewart, Rich Moore and Michelle Wong. Sony Pictures Animation, June 4
Wish Dragon. Penned and directed by Chris Applehans, this modern-day fairy tale centers on the moral challenges that emerge from the encounter between a young boy and a dragon who can make his wishes come true. Jackie Chan, who’s producing the movie, is also providing the voice of Pipa God. With Constance Wu, John Cho, Will Yun Lee, Jimmy Wong and Bobby Lee. Sony Pictures Animations/Base FX/Flagship Ent. Group
Also in 2021: The Adventures of Pil (TAT Productions, France 3 Cinema, SND) Batman: Soul of the Dragon (Warner Bros. Animation, DC Ent.) Batman: The Long Halloween (Warner Bros. Animation, DC Ent.) Bombay Rose (Cinestaan, Les Film d’Ici, Goldfinch, Netflix) Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary (Maybe Movies, Noerlum Studios, Shout! Factory) Clifford the Big Red Dog (Paramount, Scholastic, Walden) Detective Conan: The Scarlet Bullet (TMS) Demon Slayer the Movie: Mugen Train (Aniplex, Ufotable, Funimation) Earwig and the Witch (Studio Ghibli, GKIDS) Evangelion 3.0+1.0 Thrice Upon a Time (Khara) Hansel and Gretel (Wizart) Inu-Oh (Science Saru) Justice Society: World War II (Warner Bros. Animation, DC Ent.) Kill It and Leave This Town (Bombonierka, Gigant Films, Outsider Pictures) Las Leyendas: El Origen (Anima Estudios) My Friend Finnick (Riki Group) My Little Pony Movie Untitled (Paramount, Allspark, Entertainment One) Sailor Moon Eternal (Toei Animation)
Let’s face it, being on a “Best of 2020” list isn’t setting a very high bar for anyone. You could have invented a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup with double the amount of peanut butter and it would have been a win. Nevertheless, there have been several industry advances that can be celebrated — some because of the pandemic, and some despite it.
Working from Home. Ever since the visual effects and animation industry went digital, many have wondered why artists can’t work from home. This past year, technology and a global pandemic came together to press the issue. The hands of producers and studio overlords have been forced — and lo and behold, confounding all of their worst fears, they discovered that artists can and will work from home.
Since it has been supplying the industry with both hardware and software solutions for years, Teradici was ready for the year we all had to work from home. The technology is built around the idea of controlling workstations remotely with little to no lag. Large facilities like Industrial Light & Magic, Sony Imageworks and Scanline have been using it for years. Now, we all get to reap the rewards. (www.teradici.com)
LIDAR
Handheld Lidar. Both the new iPhone and iPad have Lidar in them now, presumably to help with depth algorithms and AR applications. But am I going to use it for that? Probably not, when there is a whole world to scan into 3D objects out there. The fidelity isn’t quite primo yet, there is a lot to clean up. But this is definitely an exciting path.
Virtual Production (Again!). Last year, The Mandalorian opened a whole can of virtual worms. Because of COVID restrictions, every production studio on Earth wanted some of those worms, because somehow we needed to start limiting the size of crews and not going around the world to shoot things in person.
Rosario Dawson as Ahsoka Tano in The Mandalorian S2
Unreal Fellowship. Who better to feed the studios with talent to work in virtual production than Epic. Committing time and resources, Epic reached out to all those experienced digital artists and supervisors out there who were now out of work and asked if they wanted to join a four- to six-week intensive bootcamp, walk away with an animated short and get paid. The response was, shall we say, epic. (www.unrealengine.com/en-US/fellowship)
Unreal 4.26 and Hair and Weta. Epic’s latest Unreal release offers impressive improvements in creation of realistic hair and fur. And just to prove a point, Weta Digital gave it to their insanely talented team of artists to make a short about a meerkat and an egg. It’s simply wonderful. To make the deal even sweeter, Weta released the assets into the ecosphere so that we could all benefit from it!
Meerkat, created by Weta Digital using Unreal Engine
Unreal 5 Preview. Even before its 4.26 release, Epic Games provides a taste of the future with a glimpse into Unreal 5. Lumen in the Land of Nanite shows off virtualized geometry and fully dynamic global illumination. No amount of written description can impart how jaw-dropping this is. Just do yourself a favor and check out the fantastic demo. (www.unrealengine.com)
Lumen in the Land of Nanite, made with Unreal 5
Indie trailblazer Foundry stepped up its valuable support of artists working from home with not only remote workflows, but also a pricing structure that allows independent artists to afford the use of the digital compositing and VFX app. (www.foundry.com/products/nuke)
Foundry’s Nuke Studio
SideFX Software (which recently gained Epic Games as a minority investor) released Houdini 18.5 with a toolset called KineFX. Rigging is a bit of alchemy that I generally leave to the alchemists. But I’m still impressed when lead turns to gold. Taking Houdini’s procedural workflow and building tools for non-destructive rigging, motion retargeting and motion editing is pretty close to magic. KineFX is only a small subset of Houdini 18.5’s features. (www.sidefx.com)
Rigging in Houdini’s KineFX by SideFX Software
A procedural and dynamic animation system — that renders in real time. I’m stepping a little out of my comfort zone of traditional render engines, but this is going into live performances where the animation is responding to the performers on stage. It’s very useful in a pandemic — as shown by the integrated LED screens for the 2020 Video Music Awards. But, it will be even greater when we can all go back to attending live performances, with a big crowd of people. Isn’t that weird to imagine? (www.notch.one)
Todd Sheridan Perry is an award-winning VFX supervisor and digital artist whose credits in- clude Black Panther, Avengers: Age of Ultron and The Christmas Chronicles. You can reach him at todd@teaspoonvfx.com.
***This article originally appeared in the February ’21 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 307)***
In recent years, we’ve witnessed a much-needed effort to have women and people of color play more prominent and influential roles as creative forces in animation. While change hasn’t come easily or overnight, a quick look at the types of shows being made and the artists who are making them are indications that a shift is finally happening.
Recent TV series such as Nickelodeon’s The Casagrandes and Disney Channel’s Mira, Royal Detective feature characters from diverse backgrounds, and the creatives behind the scenes are often just as diverse. When hiring, many shows seek out writers who can speak to a culture based on their own background or personal history. Other times, consultants are brought in to make sure the details included in a story are correct and reflect the authentic culture. Netflix has brought on animation powerhouses such as Chris Nee (Doc McStuffins) and Jorge Gutiérrez (Book of Life, El Tigre) to develop a slate of projects for the streamer. Cartoon Network, Amazon, Hulu, HBO Max, Disney +, Apple TV+ and much all the other streamers and cablers have several shows created by and featuring people of color in their pipelines in 2021.
L.A.-based animation veteran Elizabeth Ito has seen the animation industry become more inclusive in recent years. Over the last 15 years, Ito worked as a supervising director on Adventure Time and a feature storyboard artist on Hotel Transylvania, Astro Boy and The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water. She’s currently developing City of Ghosts, a much-anticipated hybrid documentary-style show about Angeleno ghosts for Netflix.
“There have definitely been some big changes,” says Ito. “There are women creating and running shows, and more women writing, storyboarding and directing in general. We’ve had more diverse characters on screen, in both design and substance. We’ve also seen more minority directors. Studios are finally being more conscious about who voices characters, and whether they could make better choices when casting.”
City of Ghosts
Real Representation
Another industry veteran, Sascha Paladino, believes there is greater awareness of the need for diversity and inclusion. Paladino is currently executive producer on Mira, Royal Detective, where aside from himself, there is an all-female writers room. The show’s cast is also made up of performers who are South Asian or of South Asian descent.
“I’ve been working in TV for 20 years and I feel like almost all of the shows that I’ve worked on, [diversity] has been top of mind for the creatives behind it,” says Paladino. “But in the last couple of years it’s definitely become a much more important topic, something that’s baked in. To me, it’s really the most important thing that shows are discussing these days. There’s such a movement in the culture toward better and more fair representation, and I think that is reflected in kids’ TV both in the content and by the people making it.
He adds, “For Mira, Royal Detective, we’re portraying South Asian culture, which is a first for Disney Junior so it’s a huge responsibility. It’s something that I, as executive producer of the show, think about and wrestle with a lot because we want to portray this culture in an authentic and thoughtful and sensitive way so that South Asian kids really see themselves on screen and so that non-South Asian kids learn about the culture in a way that makes them want to learn more.”
Mira Royal Detective
The Only POC in the Room?
While there has been concentrated effort to bring in voices that can authentically speak for a culture or perspective in some cases, it’s part of a long process. Jeff Trammell, head writer on Cartoon Network’s hit show Craig of the Creek and a voice actor, points out there’s still work to be done.
“I do believe that rooms have become slightly more inclusive and diverse, but I both hope and believe that in the coming years this will become more commonplace,” he notes. “I’ve been fortunate enough to work in a lot of writers’ rooms, but more often than not I’m the only POC in the room and I’d love to see that change going forward.”
Diego Molano is the creator/showrunner of Cartoon Network’s Victor and Valentino, which incorporates Mesoamerican folklore and culture into the show’s storytelling. Molano believes there are many benefits for audiences and studios alike when diverse stories are told.
“Animation is changing, but slowly,” says Molano. “I think companies are just now noticing that we have stories that are not only relevant and entertaining, but that there is a gigantic demand from audiences for it. And if they don’t change with the times, they’re leaving money on the table. It’s honestly encouraging to see more people of color get a chance to tell their stories. This is important, we need to hear those voices because it would be a shame for these stories that we can all learn so much from, be forgotten. Historically, it has been hard for people of color to get traction with anything that isn’t the same story, told in a way that companies are comfortable with. But now with so much demand for all sorts of different content, there is hope.”
Craig of the Creek
The Power of Reflection
Miguel Puga, co-executive producer on Nickelodeon’s The Casagrandes, also wants to tell authentic stories about his culture and hopes the children who watch the show — regardless of their background — will gain perspective.
“It’s a window into the Latin culture and to normalize that and show their stories count,” says Puga. “Hopefully, I’m leaving the door open behind me so they can come into this industry. And I’m not the first one to do it. There have been so many before me, like Jorge Gutiérrez and Bill Melendez, that opened the door for me and showed that change is attainable and hard work and dedication pays off. Authenticity makes a great show because kids can tell when something isn’t authentic. It makes a better story, it makes a better cartoon, or a better show or movie. We create these characters so viewers can see themselves. The power of reflection is a huge issue for us.”
As the U.S. population changes, reflection takes on a new meaning and a new mandate. The viewing audience for animation is changing quickly.
“The truth is that 50 percent of kids under the age of 12 are not white,” says Ramsey Naito, president of Nickelodeon Animation. “This is a very, very diverse day and time in kids’ television, so the emergence [of diverse content] is quite natural, I think. We want our kids, our audience to watch our shows and see themselves and identify with our characters in an authentic way. Kids love to see themselves. They want to see themselves, and seeing themselves empowers them.”
Meredith Roberts, senior vice president/general manager of television animation for Disney Channels, sees their audience becoming more diverse, too.
“We know from monitoring census statistics that the population is changing and we want to change with it,” says Roberts. “In addition to our current slate, the future development also reflects the work to be much more inclusive and authentic with underrepresented writers and directors. We do a lot of work reaching out to historical black universities to identify new writing talent.”
Throughout the last few years, cultural movements have celebrated diversity and inclusion and that’s bound to impact how audiences see shows. This could be especially true for kids who are growing up in a more inclusive and sensitive culture.
The Casagrandes
An Inclusive Generation
“We are also looking at ourselves across the inclusion and equity spectrum — race/ethnicity, gender, socio-economic status, body type, disability and LGBTQIA+ — to evaluate projects in development, production and in the greenlight process to make sure that our content is truly reflective of the kids/families watching,” says Amy Friedman, head of programming for Cartoon Network and HBO Max Kids & Family.
There’s no doubt animation audiences have incredible access to past animated shows and that might even make the thirst for something new that gives a more real and respectful view of different cultures even stronger.
“With kids being exposed to entire catalogues of animation on streaming sites, I think they expect new animation to be more advanced and considerate in the way we tell our stories, and present them,” says Molano. “Kids are way more knowledgeable about animation than 15 years ago, and I think it’s really awesome that they’re demanding stories that reflect themselves. Historically, kids have only watched what has been presented to them, but now, it’s nice to know they’re taking part in creating what gets made.”
Ito believes audiences still want many of the same things — but with a caveat. “I think audiences are always genuinely looking for a compelling story they can relate to, and in that way, they haven’t changed at all,” says Ito. “The part that has changed is that audiences who have been underrepresented have made it clear how much it means to them when big studios take chances on projects that make them feel seen.”
Victor and Valentino
Karen Idelson is a journalist who loves writing about animation, VFX and technology. She lives in the South Bay Area of L.A. with her husband, daughter, a dog named Disco and a jalapeño plant that won’t die regardless of how much it is ignored.
***This article originally appeared in the February ’21 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 307)***
More than 14 years ago, self-taught Polish artist, writer and director Mariusz Wilczyński set out to make a deeply personal animated short. As the years went by, that highly original project evolved and grew into a 90-minute tapestry of memories, characters from his favorite literary works and a deeply moving meditation about honoring and living with the ghosts of the past. Last year, some fortunate festival-goers were finally able to see this labor of love, a project that was described by Indiewire as “a movie so lo-fi it makes Don Hertzfeldt look like Walt Disney!”
Wilczyński, who has been creating highly creative animated shorts since the mid-’90s, been the subject of retrospectives at various museums and shown his work at the National Gallery in London and the Berlinale, says his project became more ambitious after he decided to have the role of an old train passenger be voiced by actress Irena Kwiatkowska, who was a childhood hero of his. Her dramatic reading made him realize what a huge difference a talented actor can make in an animated feature. “Her acting made me realize what great impact an actor can have with all the mastery that she brought to my film,” he says. “I then created other characters, voiced by Andrzej Wajda and Gustaw Holoubek, and these characters also began to inspire me to create their identity and behavior in the film. I had their appearance, their words, I knew their manner of speaking, which helped me draw the characters precisely.”
Another huge catalyst was a 2017 retrospective of his work at the Mill Valley Film Festival. “During that time I was invited to visit Pixar Studio,” he recalls. “They were just finishing Coco and I was given a tour by the great animator Doug Frankel. He took me to places that they don’t usually show visitors. That’s how I found out that they first come up with the characters and their lines of dialog, and then an animator records those lines, the lip-synched version is drawn and finally the star adds their voice to the project. So I decided to also use great Polish actors to create the world of my imagination, sensitivity and values … My goal was to surround myself with these people because I learned my values from them.”
Mariusz Wilczyński
Loss Inspires Art
According to the artist, his parent’s deaths about 20 years ago shook him quite heavily and inspired him to bring his experiences and emotions to animated life. “They separated when I was three years old, but they both died within a very short time,” he tells us. “My mother was the first to go. I felt very guilty for neglecting them, for being abrasive towards them, for not expressing love, especially towards my mom. I never told her that I loved her. At the time when they were both old and they needed assistance, when they were in the hospital, I never had time for them. I was busy doing everyday tasks, making my films and indulging in my hobbies. I was constantly telling myself, ‘I’ll call my mom later,’ or ‘I’ll visit her soon, but I have so much to do right now.’”
It is quite painful for Wilczyński to look back at that time in his life. “You only need to do so little to bring joy to an elderly person — just a visit or a talk,” he admits. “But I couldn’t afford to do it — I was a self-centered egoist. I was always putting off visiting them or making a phone call. I would always say, ‘Tomorrow’ … and at some point, there were no more ‘tomorrows.’ I felt devastated and remorseful for not hugging my parents before they died, for not telling them that I loved them. I had deserted them.”
Kill It and Leave This Town
A special retrospective at MoMA gave him the encouragement to use his parents as a starting point for the movie. “I had to summon up the courage and reflect upon a part of my life and reconcile,” he notes. “I knew that I could build my ‘magic box,’ bring them back to life and make up for my mistakes. Then, a year into making the film, I lost my closest friend and the most important man in my life, Tadeusz Nalepa, whose music is the soundtrack of the film. He joined the land of ghosts in my film. The film was made for my mom, who supported me so much, but also for Tadeusz, who was my great friend. I am very pleased that I was able to use Tadeusz’s music in the movie since he didn’t get any airplay in Poland during his life, but is now acknowledged for his art. The point of making the film was to meet my mom, my dad and Tadeusz again, to have an honest conversation and tell them all that I love them.”
Reflecting on his childhood, Wilczyński, says he always loved drawing as a young boy. A favorite subject were Polish knights fighting with Teutonic Order cavaliers. “I actually got my first ‘Fs’ in school for my drawings,” he admits. “When I was seven, I used to spend holidays in the countryside with my mother, and I noticed that the male horses had big willies. So, when I drew the most famous knight, Zawisza Czarny, on top of a horse, I included a huge wiener. My mom was called to school because of that and I was pretty close to getting expelled. Luckily, she managed to talk the principal out of it.”
Kill It and Leave This Town
Finding a New World
Nevertheless, Wilczyński kept drawing and he ended up studying painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Łódź under the great painter Stanisław Fijałkowski. After graduation, he embarked on his own promising painting career. He drew many pictures for a celebration of the acclaimed poet and diplomat Czeslaw Milosz’s collection Road-side Dog for Polish television. “After I saw my drawings featured in the program, I went crazy,” he says. “I decided to leave my painting career, cross out everything that had happened before, and make the pictures come alive. I didn’t know how to do it, but I made one crucial decision: I would never look at what other animators are doing or read books to learn the technology. My goal was to experience it on my own, in my own way. At 35, I was beginning a new adventure — and like a child, I was discovering the world from the very basics. I felt like Columbus and had no idea where I would sail to!”
The artist decided to do all the backgrounds for Kill It and Leave This Town by hand. “The process of creating the environments was a bit like that of the film: I added up more and more elements of the story to finally get an hour and a half. The drawings emerged in a similar way — I drew a picture on a scrap of paper, but I lacked some space, so I glued it together with another piece of paper. Then, I felt like there wasn’t enough space, so I attached another picture, and that’s how it began to grow. You can see all these joints between pieces of paper in the film. I wanted to expose this, because it’s a very organic and natural matter of paper, of surface, and some creasing. Some pictures behaved in the same way — as the film was in the making for a dozen years, some of the first drawings started to look more pale, the ink changed in shade, and everything started living its own life.”
Kill It and Leave This Town
Wilczyński believed it was very important to keep the natural patina of the artwork throughout the movie. “I refused to clean it,” he says. “I wasn’t initially certain if I should leave it or not, but when I saw how it works together with the film and how it all lives organically, I loved that. We used all the effects manually. These were the neons, the lights, the lamps. Everything was photographed with a camera. We constructed these small neons by hand and so on. Raindrops, fog, city lights were manually put into the hand-drawn backgrounds. In the post-production stage, we used the most modern technologies and worked together with some young brilliant digital animation artists who assembled it all together.”
Most of the film’s sounds were also recorded manually. “We no longer have those old streetcars in Łódź, so we recorded the sound in Lisbon and in Prague,” explains the director. “The sounds of the trains were recorded in Vietnam, as those natural sounds are nowhere to be found in Poland anymore.”
The Personal Is Universal
The helmer is quite pleased that this hugely personal work has been getting positive reviews at festivals around the world. “It is very rewarding to hear other people saying that they will change their attitude toward their loved ones after watching the film,” he says. “But frankly speaking, I had no expectations from audiences whatsoever. I made the film for myself, my parents and my friend. I didn’t think that I was making a film that could help someone, that might give them something. I was a bit fearful that the film would not be understood outside of Poland, but also, I hoped that the audience would like it.”
Kill It and Leave This Town
He says he also thought that the movie would only appeal to those over 35, but after a screening of the movie in Lima, Peru, three young people told him that they were deeply affected by it. “They told me, ‘What are you even saying? Here in Peru, we’ve had a lockdown for three months. Every one of us has lost a loved one to COVID. Don’t say the film is for an older audience because we’re in our 20s and we can perfectly understand it.’ It might be that this film, especially at this time, has an additional impact.”
The director also was quite touched when a young film critic in Poland praised his movie and wrote, “For the first time I am afraid I might lose someone very close to me — my grandparents. There’s a pandemic, I am worried about them, so I call every day to check if they’re okay. Kill It and Leave This Town is an antidote to my anxiety and fear.” Wilczyński concludes, “I might have expected that the film would be understood in Poland, but I never thought that it would be readable outside of my country. These dozens of reviews and the awards we received came as a surprise to me. What was the most surprising and important is the reception of the film. Even though it’s an art film, a kind of tale based on my emotions, not a documentary or a typical feature, it can still resonate with people and make them a little bit better. I find it incredible that some elderly people’s lives might also become brighter thanks to it.”
Kill It and Leave This Town won a Jury Distinction at Annecy and Best Animated Feature at Ottawa in 2020. The film will screen as part of the Vidiots Foundation Virtual Screening series on Feb. 3 and MoMA’s Contenders screening series Feb. 11-16. The film is distributed by Outsider Pictures and will expand in the first quarter of 2021.
***This article originally appeared in the February ’21 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 307)***
Bruce Timm’s love of Batman is well known — he has animated the character in TV series and movies for three decades. But it’s taken until now for his love of early 1970s kung fu and blaxploitation movies to come to the screen alongside the Dark Knight in the DC Universe animated feature Batman: Soul of the Dragon.
Tapping into the martial-arts corner of DC’s 80 years of comic-book storytelling, Batman: Soul of the Dragon finds Bruce Wayne reunited with martial arts legend O-Sensei’s elite students — Richard Dragon, Ben Turner (a.k.a. Bronze Tiger) and the deadly Lady Shiva — to save the world from a supernatural threat only they can stop.
Batman: Soul of the Dragon
Arriving Jan. 12 on digital and Jan. 26 on 4K and Blu-ray discs, Batman: Soul of the Dragon stars David Giuntoli, Mark Dacascos, Kelly Hu, Michael Jai White and James Hong. Directed by DC Universe veteran Sam Liu and written by Jeremy Adams, it is produced by Liu, Jim Krieg and Kimberly S. Moreau, with Timm, Sam Register and Michael Uslan as executive producers.
For Timm, Soul of the Dragon is a chance to evoke the magic he felt growing up in the early 1970s, when the Bruce Lee classic feature Enter the Dragon added a martial-arts movie craze to the era’s already heady mix of blaxploitation action pics, a wave of modern R&B classics on the radio and a steady stream of innovative comic-book storytelling.
Bruce Timm
Flashback to a Soulful Era
“It’s [a reflection of] my love of the early ’70s in general and it’s also specifically my fascination with kung fu movies and blaxploitation movies of that period,” Timm says. “Those genres were so huge back then, I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be fun to kind of mash the two together?’”
Timm’s off-the-cuff pitch in a regular meeting with DC and WB execs was met with instant enthusiasm and a green light. “Normally, you have to talk people into stuff, but that one kind of resonated with everybody,” Timm says. ”Some of my suggestions are kind of esoteric, but this one I think everyone liked the fun nature of it.”
Writer Jeremy Adams, whose previous tours of duty in DC animation included Green Lantern: The Animated Series, Justice League Action and DC Super Hero Girls, was primed and ready. ”I had been pitching to [producer] Jim [Krieg] and other people that we should do Enter the Dragon with Batman — ad nauseam,” he says. ”And then one day Jim comes in and goes, ’This is your lucky day!’”
Batman: Soul of the Dragon
The story immediately scooped up martial arts characters from 1970s DC comic books: Richard Dragon, who starred in his own short-lived series; the deadly Lady Shiva; Ben Turner, who later became Bronze Tiger; and wise master O-Sensei. Batman also had a martial-arts phase at the time, with memorable globetrotting stories drawn by comics legend Neal Adams. Most of the material was written by Denny O’Neil, to whom Soul of the Dragon is dedicated after he died in June 2020 at the age of 80.
Adams says he felt it was his job as the writer to serve Timm’s vision and create a story that would inspire the rest of the crew to bring their best talents to the table. For example, Adams drew on his own martial-arts experience to pack the script with fight sequences Timm originally said were too detailed. “I said, ‘Well, I just wanted to make sure the storyboard guys — who are geniuses in their own right — have a springboard,’” Adams says. ”They don’t have to use it, but they can definitely look at it and draw inspiration from it. And [Timm] really understood that.”
Batman: Soul of the Dragon
One of the most-fun elements for Timm was playing with the era’s fashions, hair styles, colors, cars and language. “The thing we wanted to do — and this applied to every aspect of the production — was that we wanted the design of the movie to evoke the ’70s but we didn’t want to make it a parody of the ’70s,” Timm says. ”There’s things about ’70s fashions that I think are genuinely cool, but there’s also tons of it that is just genuinely hideous.”
Timm curated these elements himself, frequently rejecting ideas that failed to fit his vision, like references to disco, which wasn’t yet a thing in the movie’s 1973-1974 time frame. ”I was trying to get him to do those old Shaw Brothers kind of sound effects, as far as punches and things like that,” adds director Sam Liu. “But he kind of wasn’t going for that.”
Sam Liu
Timm also wanted more of Bruce Wayne without the cape and cowl. DC had concerns, he says, but the sheer amount of Batman product out there and peppering Batman appearances throughout the movie overcame them. ”I thought this would be a good opportunity for showing Bruce Wayne doing action stuff himself while wearing a crushed velvet jacket and bell bottoms and with long sideburns,” Timm says. ”I thought it would be more ’70s.”
The other design focus was creating a Batman costume specific to Soul of the Dragon. Timm wanted to evoke the flowing, lean look 1970s artists like Neal Adams and Jim Aparo brought to Batman. “In the time we had, we just couldn’t crack that code,” Timm says. Working with Liu and lead character designer Aluir Amancio, Timm eventually decided on a look influenced by more modern artists like Cliff Chiang and Steve Rude.
Liu says he was hesitant to direct the movie at first, because period pieces that depict overseas cultures are vulnerable to criticisms of insensitivity, but the fun, action-packed nature of the story won him over. The scripts on DC animated features run about 90 pages, with each board artist taking about 10 pages, Liu says. About six board artists are on staff with a full load, while the remainder is spread among freelancers.
Batman: Soul of the DragonBatman: Soul of the DragonBatman: Soul of the Dragon
Less Time, More Ingenuity
Time is a huge factor, with movies like this being turned around in about six months, so Liu says they decided to emulate the 2D look established by Timm’s 1990s Batman work, which allowed for re-use of stock environments and background characters.
The most difficult aspect of directing on so tight a schedule is that there’s rarely time to change animation that comes back from an overseas studio partner if it’s not what you expected, Liu says. ”I feel like nowadays we’re getting it in a lot less time than we were maybe 10, 15 years ago,” he says. “So we have a tendency to board things a little more cautiously nowadays.”
Batman: Soul of the Dragon
Timm also credits composer Joachim Horsley for helping sell the 1970s style, adding in era-appropriate funk, R&B and brassy spy sounds.
The final result is one Timm says he was very excited to work on and anxious to share with an audience. He notes, “This is the kind of project that comes along every once in a while that gets me really excited, because we’re getting a chance to explore different versions of Batman or different aspects of his world that we don’t normally get to do.”
Warner Bros. Animation’s Batman: Soul of the Dragon premieres on digital on January 12 and on 4K and Blu-ray on January 26.
We are sad to report the passing of veteran animator, writer, storyboard artist, director and songwriter ‘Tuck’ Tucker at age 59 on Dec. 22nd. Born in Lynchburg, Virginia, Tucker fell in love with cartoons and the world of animation at an early age.His first job out of college was breakdown artist on Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night (1987), which led to work on the BraveStarr series and Disney’s feature The Little Mermaid. In the early 1990s, he worked as a layout artist on Rugrats, The Ren & Stimpy Show and The Simpsons. He soon became a storyboard artist and director on animated series such as Hey Arnold!, Aaahh! RealMonsters and Duckman.
Among the many other popular animated shows and movies Tucker worked on were SpongeBob SquarePants, The Fairly OddParents, Oh Yeah! Cartoons (“Planet Kate/Fat Head”), The Mighty B!, Camp Lazlo, as well as The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie. (Tucker’s daughter is one of the kids’ voices that heard in the SpongeBob SquarePants theme song.) He also won the 38th Annual Annie Award in 2011 for Best Music in a Television Production (along with Jeremy Wakefield, Sage Guyton, and Nick Carr.) for his work on SpongeBob.
His directing credits included The Fairly OddParents, Drawn Together, Hey Arnold!, Party Wagon and Hey Arnold! The Movie. His most recent credits were as sheet timer on Clarence and as storyboard revisionist on 2021’s upcoming Bob’s Burger: The Movie. Tucker also taught graphic and animation design at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. (Tucker also went by several aliases, including: Bily Tucker, Bill Tucker, William Tucker, Billy Bob Tucker and William ‘Tuck’ Tucker.)
On Thursday (Dec. 24), Hey Arnold! Creator Craig Bartlett paid tribute to the late artist on Facebook: “A great friend, a master draftsman, a tireless practical joker, a brilliant storyteller, the first one I reached out to when I began Hey Arnold! because he was the best board guy I had ever met. I’ll always remember him at his drawing board, arms blackened to the elbows with graphite, eraser shavings everywhere, bringing my characters to life. A killer work ethic, passionately into it. I’m so lucky I got to work with him for so many years. He gave and gave. I miss him already, my heart is broken. Rest in power, Tuck Tucker.”
Former SpongeBob storyboard artist Nick Lauer wrote: “Last night I found out my mentor from college, Tuck Tucker, passed away. He was a wonderful man with a great sense of humor. I learned so much from him. You might know him from Spongebob and Hey Arnold (he was a big reason why Helga turned out to be such a great character). I would not be where I am today without his guidance. I can’t get over the fact that I won’t be able to chat on the phone with him again. Don’t forget to tell the important people in your life how much they mean to you. One day it may be too late. Thanks for everything, Tuck.”
You can listen to a wonderful interview with Tucker here.
Fans of early Cartoon Network shows like Ed, Edd n Eddy and Courage the Cowardly Dog are in for a special New Years Treat as a raft of classic toon titles head to WarnerMedia’s HBO Max. Animated highlights for January also include new episodes of Dark Knight classics Batman the Animated Series and Batman Beyond, DC Universe Movies, brand-new Looney Tunes Cartoons, Adult Swim favorites, critically acclaimed features and more. Ghibli fans can also catch the documentary Never-Ending Man: Hayao Miyazaki.
Read on for all the new animation offerings coming this month; you can find a full list of HBO Max’s January highlights here.
Looney Tunes Cartoons
HBO Max Originals:
Looney Tunes Cartoons, Season 1C (Jan. 21)
In this latest batch, Taz stars in his first full-length Looney Tunes Cartoons short when he takes on Bugs Bunny in a Roman coliseum. If Bugs makes it out of the arena, there will be plenty of foes waiting to match wits with him including Elmer Fudd, a leprechaun and Cecil Turtle. Daffy and Porky continue their misadventures from skydiving to solving the mystery of Porky’s missing pants! Fan-favorites Sylvester and Tweety along with Wile E. Coyote and Road Runner also come along for the ride in these ten all-new animated episodes. It’s an all-new year with all-new Looney!
The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy
Cartoon Network:
Apple & Onion, Season 1B (Jan. 1)
Ben 10, Season 4A (Jan. 9)
Codename: Kids Next Door (Jan. 1)
Courage the Cowardly Dog (Jan. 1)
Craig of the Creek, Season 2 (Jan. 1)
Ed, Edd n Eddy (Jan. 1)
The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy (Jan. 1)
Mao Mao, Heroes of Pure Heart (Jan. 1)
Adult Swim:
12 oz. Mouse Seasons 1 & 2 (Jan. 1)
The Jellies (Jan. 1)
Tom Goes to the Mayor (Jan. 1)
Batman Beyond
DC Animated Universe:
Batman: Bad Blood (Jan. 1)
Batman: Death in the Family (Jan. 1)
Batman: Hush (Jan. 1)
Batman: The Animated Series (Jan. 1)
Green Lantern: The Animated Series (Jan. 1)
Justice League Dark: Apokolips War (Jan. 1)
Superman: Doomsday (Jan. 1)
Superman: Man of Tomorrow (Jan. 1)
Movies:
Alpha and Omega 5: Family Vacation (Jan. 12)
Alpha and Omega 6: Dino Dig (Jan. 12)
Happy Feet (Jan. 1)
Happily N’Ever After (Jan. 1)
Happily N’Ever After 2: Snow White (Jan. 1)
Hellboy: Blood and Iron (Jan. 12)
Hellboy: Sword of Storms (Jan. 12)
Hellboy: The Dark Below (Jan. 12)
Never-Ending Man: Hayao Miyazaki (Jan. 12)
Night Is Short, Walk on Girl (Jan. 12)
Norm of the North: King Sized Adventure (Jan. 12)
Pinocchio, Enzo d’Alo 2012 (Jan. 12)
Promare (Jan. 12)
Re:ZERO -Starting Life in Another World- Director’s Cut, Season 1 dub (Crunchyroll Collection, Jan. 15)
Ride Your Wave (Jan. 12)
TMNT, 2007 (Jan. 1)
When the first Christmas Chronicles movie premiered on Netflix two years ago, it was praised for its originality, great visual effects and a winning cast led by Kurt Russell as good old Santa. This year, Santa and Mrs. Claus (Goldie Hawn) are back in action in a sequel directed by veteran helmer Chris Columbus, best known for directing family classics such as Mrs. Doubtfire, two Home Alone movies and the first two Harry Potter outings, and for writing Gremlins and The Goonies. Since its debut on Netflix on Nov. 18, The Christmas Chronicles 2 has become one of the streamer’s biggest hits of the season.
One of the sequel’s secret weapons is its colorful and believable visual effects, which were crafted by a team of about 500 at Weta Digital led by VFX supervisor Martin Hill, animation supervisor Nick Stein, sequence VFX supervisor Phil Leonhardt and VFX supervisor Thrain Shadbolt. Hill, who won a Primetime Emmy for overseeing the VFX for the eighth season of Game of Thrones (2019), says he looked forward to something bright and family-oriented after working for a year and half on the darker world of Game of Thrones.
Martin Hill and Nick Stein
“This film had Santa Claus, elves, fantastic creatures and primary Christmas colors and lots of comedy, so it was a breath of fresh air,” says Hill. “I had a terrific meeting with Chris Columbus in April of 2019, and we had a lot of fun throwing ideas around. One of the great things about starting out early in the process was that our previs supervisor Marco Spitoni was able to start fleshing out the vfx shots. We prevised about 60 percent of the shots and they actually ended up being very close in timing to what we see in the final version of the movie.”
One of the first scenes Hill and his team worked on was the big sweeping shot of Santa Claus and his reindeer gliding over the forest as he chases Jola the Yule Cat. “This is our first reveal of Santa, and was one of the first things we presented to Chris,” says Hill. “We timed the scene to Led Zeppelin’s ‘Immigrant Song’ and it’s all set in this beautiful Arctic wilderness (shot in Vancouver). The camera comes down like a drone camera and then we see the shot from the point of view of the sleight, like a sleigh cam, and then Jola rushes into the frame. We didn’t end up using the song in the final version, but it worked perfectly. It was the first shot we showed everyone who came on board to work on the effects with us.”
“Sleigh Chase” sequence, in progress.“Sleigh Chase” sequence, final.
Warning! Manic Elves at Play
Hill brings up a madcap scene in which the elves have been infected with Elfbane, a substance that makes them maniacal. “One thing we had to figure out was how nuts do we make them,” he says. “It was interesting to see how cartoony we could make them without breaking away too much from reality, since these digital characters had to look as real and interacting with the environment as the human actors. We steadily were able to push it more and more into the Looney Tunes-real as the scene heightens. We even see their eyes rotate in opposite directions when they get whacked in the head!”
Stein points out that he and his team did a lot of testing on how to make the elves move. They did some trials on the motion-capture stage and tried keyframing since that’s one of the best ways to make smaller creatures move through. He notes, “We went for a combination of the two techniques because we wanted to have a more weighted feel to them, even though they are smaller in size.”
“We had a treasure trove of reference to go to from the first movie, but having said that we kind of wanted to step it up and put our own mark on it as well,” says Stein. “We wanted the audience to still relate to and not think that these characters are different from the first movie. We stayed within the realm of the first movie, but we wanted more weight and grounded feel for the 40-centimeter-tall (about 1.3 foot-tall) elves.”
The Christmas Chronicles 2
Among the 780 VFX shots Weta prepared for the movie, the party scene gave Weta the opportunity to really let their hair down and go crazy with the elves: “As we built the shots, we pulled out all the tricks to kind of meld the different styles together. The party scene was one that allowed us to go crazy and have fun,” Stein reveals.
Overall the Weta team created 621 unique elves for the Santa sequel. “Of course, you can see that they are siblings. They are quite similar. We gave them moustaches and hats, and our costume and texture shop did a really lovely job of giving us a whole of costume variants, which were also based on Christmas jumpers. They also have the fur and the hair variants.”
Stein points out that Forest Elves that appear in some flashbacks and are also seen in the scene where the Christmas star recharges are quite different. He explains, “They were the antithesis to the other elves … We took some of our hero elves and made them skinnier, gave their hair a slightly more earthy color. This gave us a lot of flexibility when we were thinking about coming up with the backstory for why Belsnickle hates humans so much, so we had these scenes where humans were chasing the elves in the forest — and we gave them these big, scared expressions.”
A Cool Yule Cat
Another fun digital character created for the movie was Jola the Yule Cat, which injures Dasher after he’s unleashed by elf-turned-human Belsnickel (portrayed by Hunt for the Wilder People‘s Julian Dennison) in the reindeer stable. Hill says a scene in which Jola appears behind Belsnickel and gives him a big lick on his face is one of his favorites in the movie.
To create that scene, the team used a big maquette of Jola’s head with two special effects puppeteers behind it who gave the actor a big shove, which he reacted to naturally. “We attached a big sponge to the model to act as a giant tongue, so they twisted it around to give him a lick in the face, and he looked really appalled by it,” recalls Hill. “Then, Speck, one of the elves, jumps off Jola and does a little dance on Julian’s shoulder. We also had another little puppet with two little legs that was just nudging around his epaulettes on his shoulder, it really helped him sweeten the integration into the shot.”
Yule Cat, before.Yule Cat, after.
Hill also mentions that most of the elves’ clothes and the animals’ fur were created by using Weta’s proprietary renderer, Manuka. “When you have these scenes where all these elves are wearing woolen knitted tops and each one of them has all these flyaway little fibers on the, and the renderer can take all of that and simply run with it,” says the supervisor. “Now, our experienced team of CG supervisors can optimize their scenes efficiently. They don’t have to worry about adding a few more elves or twice as many elves when needed.”
The Christmas Chronicles 2 is currently streaming on Netflix.
HBO Max has picked up the U.S. rights to the quirky new preschool adventure Love Monster, from Boat Rocker Studios. Episodes featuring the huggable and lovable monster are available now on the streamer.
The series follows the colorful and funny exploits of one-of-a-kind, huggable hero Love Monster as he navigates the challenges involved in being a bit funny looking in a world of cute fluffy things. Every day provides Love Monster the opportunity to embark on all kinds of big adventures with his friends in Fluffytown, where, together, they learn all kinds of little life lessons. Full of heart and helping preschoolers understand and manage different emotions, Love Monster showcases the importance of kindness, empathy, connection and instinct.
A huge hit since it premiered on CBeebies in the U.K. in late January, the animated series is based on the wonderfully warm and witty, award-winning preschool books of the same name by Rachel Bright. The #1 Publishers Weekly bestseller and USA Today bestseller is published in the U.S. by Macmillan subsidiary Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Other international broadcast partners include ABC Australia, CBC Canada, RTE Ireland, YLE Finland, TVNZ New Zealand, MBC Middle East, Canal Panda Spain and Viu TV Hong Kong. Love Monster is a collaboration between BBC Children’s In-House Productions, Boat Rocker Studios and UYoung (China).
That’s Joey
Following a successful virtual visit to ATF, Superights announces multiple series sales across Asia:
In China, distributor JY Animation has acquired the first two seasons of Clay Time (60 x 3′ + 60 x 1’30”), while distributor UYong has signed a deal to secure the first season of Koumi Animated Picture Book (52 x 5’).
In Australia, the public channel ABC acquired the first season of Koumi Animated Picture Book (52 x 5’).
In Hong Kong, Superights has struck a deal with the public channel RTHK for Puffin Rock (78 x 7’), while season one of both Pat the Dog (78 x 7’) and Kika & Bob (52 x 13’) were sold to the free channel Viu TV. Additionally, the first two seasons of Clay Time (60 x 3′ + 60 x 1’30”), as well as season one of Will (52 x 2’), Handico (12 x 3’) and Koumi Animated Picture Book (52 x 5’) were acquired by the platform Now TV.
Superights has likewise inked deals in South Korea with the pay channel Daekyo for both seasons of Clay Time (60 x 3′ + 60 x 1’30”), and with the public channel EBS for the premiere season of That’s Joey! (52 x 13’).
In Vietnam, Superights also landed a deal with the platform FPT for season one of the popular program Pat the Dog (78 x 7’).
Taiwanese distributor Muse has also picked up digital rights of season one of Pat the Dog (78 x 7’), and distributor Horng en Culture has bought digital rights of the series Ralph and the Dinosaurs (26 x 5’).
The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss
Genius Brands International has licensed streaming and select video-on-demand rights to the hit family series, The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss (20 x 22’), from The Jim Henson Company for Genius Brands’ Kartoon Channel! The series features the fun, music and adventures of some of the favorite characters created by celebrated children’s author Theodore Geisel (a.k.a. Dr. Seuss). These whimsical tales and well-known characters come to life using a mix of masterful puppets built by Jim Henson’s Creature Shop and CG animation, helping children understand valuable lessons about friendship, imagination and much more.
The new slate of content now available on Kartoon Channel! also includes the preschool series Hi Opie! (13 x 20′), Elias: Rescue Team Adventures (26 x 22′) and children’s series including The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin (65 x 22′) and The Jim Henson Company’s Construction Site (52 x 11′).
Space Doctor Cat
Joy Media Beijing has snagged broadcast rights to season 2 of Space Doctor Cat from Red Carpet Studio Kids, and will bring the new musical 2D/puppet adventures to Chinese audiences next spring via the country’s biggest streaming platforms. Kids in China have been enjoying season 1 on iQIYI, Xiaomi, Huahong, Huawei, Hongmofang, Watermelon, TVJOY and Fujian Provincial Cable thanks to a prior deal with Joy Media inked earlier this year.
Season Two comprises 10 episodes packed with funny and educational songs and simple dance moves easy to follow for kids of any age. The songs relate the basics of a healthy lifestyle, the importance of following the rules of hygiene and doing your morning exercises. They also help youngsters to sleep with a tender lullaby.
Peter and Wolf
SMF Studio (Soyuzmultfilm) has loaded a collection of 82 artistic animated shorts produced in the last 10 years onto one of China’s largets OTT platforms, Xiaomi, in a deal made through SMF’s exclusive distributor Beijing Joy CUlture Media.
“The Chinese audience traditionally favors Russian animation, and we are very grateful for such attention and intend to develop a partnership with companies from the PRC,” said Yuliana Slascheva, Chairman of the Board, SMF Studio. “Besides, it is of the utmost importance that the first introduction of the Studio’s new content will begin with the artistic short films, which will indeed demonstrate the significant creative potential of our animation. These are the films which are very different both in genre and techniques, and each of them, without a doubt, will make a great impression.”
SMF Studio and Beijing Joy Culture Media recently signed a deal for an exclusive license for three new animated series: Mr Theo, Cat and Dog, Claymotions and The Adventures of Peter and Wolf. Beijing Joy Culture Media will distribute the series on the territory of China on TV channels, VOD and OTT platforms and other digital media broadcasters.
Beyblade Burst Turbo
The much-awaited Season 3 of Beyblade Burst has debuted on Marvel HQ in India. The series follows the epic adventures of Aiger Akabane as he sets his sights on becoming an invincible Blader with the help of his Turbo Bey, Z Achilles, and claiming the title of World Champion. The 51-episode season premiered on Indian TV for the first time on Marvel HQ on Dec. 7 and will air Monday to Friday, available to watch in Hindi, Tamil and Telegu.
Originating in Japan in 1999, the Beyblade brand is currently in its third generation, with five animated seasons produced to date. The series has gained popular acclaim in India through multiple generations with beloved themes of friendship and competition that fans have formed a deep affinity with. Beyblade Burst premiered in India on Marvel HQ in 2018 and has been very well-received across many demographics, garnering fans old and new.
Dream Theatre will represent the brand for content syndication and merchandise rights, having partnered with ADK Emotions NY Inc., which manages the brand globally (ex. Asia). Much more excitement is coming in 2021 for the 20th anniversary of the first generation of the animated series!
Playground TV
Captain Migol, Lookout Popodom and Engineer Drod are ready to entertain children of all ages and nationalities with their wacky travels through space, as the first two seasons (36 episodes) of Space Yoghurt from Atem Entertainment are now available to stream on Playground TV.
The series follows the three friends on their interstellar journeys as they bump into unusual problems and solve every obstacle they meet in a fun and kid-friendly way. Playground is a dedicated multilingual streaming service that provides kids access to video content in their native language safely and easily.
Leo and Tig
Maurizio Distefano Licensing announced that Russian animated series Leo & Tig is now available on the Italian pay-TV children’s channel DeA Junior. It began broadcasting on December 13, guaranteeing young viewers a feast of fun and adventure right through the Christmas holidays. DeA Junior, part of major Italian publishing house De Agostini, is also available for Italian-speaking preschool viewers in Switzerland, Malta, Monte Carlo, San Marino and the Vatican.
Leo & Tig is created by Parovoz Studio for Digital Television Russia. The first season (26 x 11′) has already appeared daily throughout the summer on Rai YoYo as well as on Rai Play. Children have responded enthusiastically to the adventures of the curious and brave leopard cub Leo and his cautious friend Tig, a Siberian tiger, in the beautiful Far Eastern forest they call home. The show’s winning combination of fun with a message of respect and care for the world around us is not only popular with kids but has inspired a number of licensing deals – with more on the way – in a wide range of categories including toys, plush, apps, stationery, publishing and much more.
Your Family Entertainment AG announced the addition of its linear TV channels RiC TV and RiC International to Vision247 ONEHUBTV´s selection of 24-hour family-friendly offerings to customers in the U.K. RiC the Raven, born in Ravensburg, Germany, is not only an iconic animated series but also the broadcaster’s hilarious mascot for the family of TV networks worldwide. The launch of RiC on ONEHUBTV is a great new chapter in the channel’s internationalisation as it follows the recent successful launch of sister channel RiK in Slovakia.
ONEHUBTV (www.onehubtv.com) offers its viewers over 80 linear TV channels as well as VOD content and aims to carry over 300 linear channels internationally within the next 12 months. RiC channels offer award-winning English and German content for kids and the whole family alike, both entertaining and educational. The high-quality English and German scripts have been carefully put together in collaboration with the show’s creators over several years and most of its classic stories are based on popular children’s books and novels.
Quintet Pictures was launched today as a cross-platform production company focusing on the development of family based film and TV content including a live-action film of beloved children’s favorite Ivor the Engine. The new venture was founded by writer, illustrator and producer Daniel Postgate; writer, producer and columnist Justin Pollard; and music-industry veterans Jessica Gerry and Alex Kennedy.
Postgate is an award-winning writer and illustrator, with more than 50 children’s books to his credit. He started his career as a cartoonist for U.K. national newspaper The Sunday Times and weekly magazine Radio Times, later expanding into TV production and scriptwriting. In 2015, he won a BAFTA for his work on the new version of the iconic children’s series, The Clangers.
Daniel Postgate
Pollard is a TV and film producer whose credits include Elizabeth, Atonement, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, Pirates of the Caribbean, Mary Poppins Returns and Disney’s Mulan. His TV work includes associate-producer roles on Time Team and Vikings, and historical consultancy on all four seasons of The Tudors. He also consults on Peaky Blinders and has written for 16 seasons of QI for the BBC. He is the author of 11 books and is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.
Gerry founded Brissett Music in 2011; a collective of world class recording artists, record producers and composers, producing records for international recording artists such as The Who, Manic Street Preachers, Plan B and Bruno Mars. Kennedy’s varied career includes founding start-ups and senior corporate roles. He manages the hip hop artist Ben Bailey Smith (a.k.a. Doc Brown) and co-created the TV series Sky Arts Sessions during his time at Sky TV.
Quintet launches with a collection of audio stories based on the 61-year-old animation classic Ivor The Engine. Entitled Ivor The Engine and Friends, the audiobook is voiced by a cast of global stars, including Eddie Izzard, Rhys Ifans and Rob Brydon, and is the first production of the Ivor stories since the1970s.
Rhys Ifans
All the proceeds from the sale of Ivor the Engine and Friends will go to LATCH, a charity that supports the children and their families who are being treated at the oncology unit of the Children’s Hospital of Wales. The audiobook is available to stream & download on the major audio platforms, including Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube and Amazon, from 18 December.
“Set in the hills and valleys of Wales, it will be gently humorous family fare to take us all off to the charming and eccentric world of Jones the Steam, Dai Station, Mrs. Porty, Mr. Dinwiddy, Idris the dragon and, of course, Ivor himself. Telling the tale of how Ivor got his musical pipes, it will showcase the abundance of top-notch acting talent Wales has to offer and the breathtaking beauty of Wales itself,” said Postgate. “In these dark times we are presently going through I think we all deserve something to cheer us up, and what better than to drift back to a simpler time to enjoy the goings on of a well-loved sentient locomotive who has been part of British culture for over 60 years.”
Quinet is developing content in association with Smallfilms, the production company established by U.K. animation legends Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin, who created Ivor The Engine, The Clangers, Noggin The Nog and Bagpuss. In addition to the Ivor the Engine film, other upcoming Quintet projects include musical children’s TV series Animal Fantastical, 18th century country-house drama Burnt Norton, radio project I Don’t Like Cricket, a WWI children’s drama project and a Dark Ages collaboration project with Kevin Crossley-Holland.
Postgate added, “Quintet’s ethos is to build on the classic storytelling of my father, Oliver Postgate, and his partner Peter Firmin, but supercharged with the skills, resources, contacts and technical knowledge of the Quintet team. Ivor is already beloved by generations of British children, so we are working with our partners to bring him back in a live-action format that will ensure he appeals to many more generations to come. Our new slate of projects is based on the same philosophy — timeless tales viewed through a contemporary lens. We are poised and excited to bring our stories to families around the world.”
Toei Animation Inc. has announced the eagerly awaited second season of World Trigger will stream on the leading platforms Crunchyroll and Anime Digital Network in France. Leveraging their collective presence, World Trigger S2 will be accessible to anime fans around the globe.
In addition, Season 2 will launch as a simultaneous premiere with Japan on Saturday, January 9, 2021, on several streaming services with a shared simulcast window. All subtitled episodes will stream day and date with the TV broadcast in Japan. Adding to the anticipation for the upcoming season premiere, this past weekend Toei Animation in Japan surprised fans with confirmation that it will be producing an exciting third season of the sci-fi action series.
“We’re excited to partner with Crunchyroll and Anime Digital Network to bring World Trigger Season 2 to fans on their streaming services,” said Masayuki Endo, President & CEO Toei Animation Inc. “We’re thrilled the new season is accessible to fans around the world and look forward to the simultaneous premiere of Season 2 together with Japan on January 9.”
In addition to the premiere, Toei Animation is planning a special livestream event for fans which will be announced in detail at a later date. Fans are encouraged to catch up on the complete first season of World Trigger, which is available on Crunchyroll now at crunchyroll.com/world-trigger in Japanese with English sub and English dub.
World Trigger is based on the sci-fi action manga series of the same name launched in 2013 and written by Daisuke Ashihara. With 21 volumes in print, World Trigger was initially serialized by Shueisha in Weekly Shōnen Jump before moving to Jump Square in late 2018, where it continues to be published today. Toei Animation produced the original 73-episode series, which aired from 2014 to 2016 in Japan.
For Season 2, Toei Animation brought together a new series director, Morio Hatano (Dragon Ball Super “Future Trunks” saga), with key members of the original staff as well as the original voice cast. Original staff members include Hiroyuki Yoshino (series composition writer for Eps 1-48), Kenji Kawai (music composer) and Toshihisa Kaiya (character designer).
Reprising their voice roles are Tomo Muranaka as Yūma Kuga, Yuki Kaji as Osamu Mikumo, Nao Tamura as Chika Amatori, Yūichi Nakamura as Yūichi Jin, Nobunaga Shimazaki as Hyuse, Hisao Egawa as Gatlin, Toshiyuki Toyonaga as Ratarikov, Mie Sonozaki as Wen Sō, Kenjiro Tsuda as Koskero, Ayumu Murase as Reghindetz, and Ryoko Shiraishi as Yomi.
Warner Bros. Pictures announced a trio of feature releases set for 2023, including Warner Animation Group’s latest big screen revamp of a cartoon classic: Coyote vs. Acme, based on the Wile E. Coyote character and his go-to gadget co. from the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies misadventures.
Set to rocket into theaters on July 21, 2023, Coyote vs. Acme is being directed by Dave Green (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows, Earth to Echo) from a screenplay by James Gunn (Guardians of the Galaxy franchise), Jeremy Slater (The Umbrella Academy), Jon Silberman & Josh Silberman (Bordertown) and Samy Burch. Producers are animation veteran Chris deFaria of Keylight, and James Gunn of Two Monkeys, A Goat and Another, Dead, Monkey.
In addition to the classic cartoons, the movie’s story is based on Ian Frazier’s fictional article for New Yorker, “Coyote v. Acme.”
Created by Chuck Jones and Michael Maltese, Wile E. Coyote first appeared in September of 1949 in the Looney Tunes short Fast and Furryous, the first of 49 cartoons in which the desperate carnivore tries to snag Road Runner with elaborate traps and weaponry ordered from Acme. Both characters were most recently voiced by Eric Bauza (Looney Tunes: World of Mayhem game) and J.P. Karliak (New Looney Tunes series).
WB also dated George Miller’s Furiosa prequel for June 23, 2023, and director Blitz Bazawule’s (Black Is King) take on The Color Purple musical for December 20, 2023.
As a result of an ongoing strategic exercise, Studio 100 and Josh Selig and Sharon Gomes, CEO and COO of Little Airplane Productions, have mutually agreed to part ways. Little Airplane Productions was acquired by Studio 100 in 2017 and has allowed Studio 100 to expand its activities into both the U.S.A. and China.
Hans Bourlon, founding shareholder and CEO of Studio 100 comments: “Due to the impact of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic on Studio 100’s business, we have decided to further integrate the activities of our Studio 100 International business unit under the leadership of Barbara Stephen and Martin Krieger in order to create a more streamlined organization. I want to sincerely thank Josh and Sharon for their hard work and commitment to Little Airplane and Studio 100 over the last three years and wish them all the best in their future endeavors.”
Josh Selig comments: “While our collaboration has come to an end, I have every faith in the team at Little Airplane and Studio 100 to continue delivering the kind of high-quality preschool shows that Little Airplane is renowned for. I wish them all the very best! As for me, I will be announcing a new China/U.S. initiative in the coming year and I will continue to create and produce meaningful children’s content for the global market.”
Barbara Stephen and Martin Krieger, Co-CEOs of Studio 100 International, will work with the team at Little Airplane to ensure continuity on the great projects that are in the New York studio’s pipeline.
Six days remain in the Kickstarter campaign to launch Art of Change, a book project from animation talent & recruitment execs Dawn Yamazi and Deb Stone, which brings together like-minded artists working in animation, illustration, games and fine arts to “tell the story of Black lives through art.” The campaign is seeking $50,000 to publish 500 copies, and hopes to reach a stretch goal which will fund direct compensation for the contributing artists.
Yamazi and Stone were already working on a collaborative book concept early in the year as a way to explain the pandemic and the state of the world to kids. When the video of police officers suffocating George Floyd to death shook the world on May 25, the creators and artists on board decided to shift the book’s focus to support Black lives.
Illustration for Art of Change by Leo Matsuda
To create the book, the collaborators came up with 15 words that reflected the past, present and future — words like “injustice” and “brutality,” but also “change,” “heroes” and “hope.” Each artist received a randomly selected word and worked with the group to develop their concepts.
The 75 contributors to Art of Change: Black Lives include animation artists Rod Douglas, Jerry J. Gaylord, PengPeng, Aaron Spurgeon, Bryan Turner, Leo Matsuda, Aliki Theofilopoulos, Brad Ableson, John Musker and more.
Follow the Art of Change project on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @artofchange2020.
In a year that has delivered so many momentous headlines, it has been an interesting perspective from over here at Animation Magazine HQ (i.e., our various home offices, couches and bedrooms).
The COVID-19 pandemic created some upheaval and uncertainty in the global animation/VFX scene early in the year as studios quickly pivoted to work-from-home models. Then, the relative ease of adaptation for this biz, combined with filming halts and homebound audiences, spurred an absolute flood of demand for animated content on broadcast, VOD and streaming platforms. We even saw live-action series turning to animation to continue their stories.
While several of these new project announcements and updates inevitably turned up in our most-viewed stories of 2020 wrap-up, sadly, we also said goodbye to many brilliant creative contributors to our favorite artform this year. The passings of influential artists and voice actors are also memorialized on this list (as well as Animag‘s In Memoriam page here and in the February issue). With the great prevalence of animation and growing diversity of its content and distribution, we also saw human interest stories create a stir — for good or ill.
We look forward to 2021 with cautious optimism, curiosity and the intent to bring as much information to you, our readers, as we can. And now, in order of page visits…
Crunchyroll has announced more than 30 series as a part of the winter anime season streaming in early 2021, including the highly-anticipated Dr. STONE Stone Wars, That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 2 and Crunchyroll Original series So I’m A Spider, So What?. Other brand-new series coming this season include Re:ZERO Season 2, Laid-Back Camp Season 2, and the release of GIVEN The Movie.
Fans can also expect to catch ongoing favorites including the smash-hit JUJUTSU KAISEN, which is available exclusively on Crunchyroll, alongside Attack on Titan Final Season and Black Clover.
Highly anticipated simulcast series streaming on Crunchyroll for the winter season include:
Dr. STONE – Senku and the Kingdom of Science prepare for the upcoming fight of Science vs. Force in Dr. STONE!
Re:ZERO -Starting Life in Another World- Season 2 (Cour 2) – After learning more behind the Death Loop and Witches of Sin, Subaru vows to save Emilia and his friends from further doom.
So I’m a Spider, So What? – In this Crunchyroll Original series, one high school girl is reborn into an itsy bitsy spider and uses her positivity to survive as one of the lowest-ranked beasts!
JUJUTSU KAISEN – Don’t miss out on continuing episodes of JUJUTSU KAISEN, the next Shonen Jump hit only on Crunchyroll!
Attack on Titan Final Season – The colossal final season of Attack on Titan continues as the survey corps members find out what awaits them across the sea. This series will continue premiering new episodes on Crunchyroll every Sunday at 12:45 p.m. PST.
Laid-Back Camp Season 2 – Get ready for another comfy camping season with Nadeshiko, Rin and the Outdoor Activities Club!
Crunchyroll’s latest slate for the winter anime season includes:
Anime AzurLane: Slow Ahead!
Dr. Ramune -Mysterious Disease Specialist – In this Crunchyroll Original series, you wont want to miss your check-up with Dr. Ramune, a specialist in mysterious diseases that live in people’s hearts.
EX-ARM – In 2030, a policewoman and her android partner activate the AI superweapon EX-ARM, and find out what’s truly behind the technology!
GIVEN The Movie – In this direct continuation from the TV series, the Given band members must balance their feelings of current and past relationships.
Heaven’s Design Team – Follow the top designers at Heaven’s Animal Design Department as they try to close the deal with their biggest client: GOD.
The Hidden Dungeon Only I Can Enter – The son of an impoverished noble family finds a hidden dungeon that allows him to improve his skills … at a price!
The Quintessential Quintuplets S2 – High school student Futaro Uesugi and the Nakano Quintuplets continue their studies in Season 2, with love and marriage right on the horizon!
That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 2 – Rimuru returns to protect his friends and the Jura Tempest Federation in That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime Season 2, premiering January 12 on Crunchyroll.
Tropical-Rouge Pretty Cure! – A brand new PreCure series is coming exclusively to Crunchyroll, and now it’s time to get tropical!
True Cooking Master Boy – Mao’s culinary adventures in 19th century China continue with the threat of the Underground Cooking Society looming closer!
Umamusume Season 2 – On your mark. Get set. GO (watch the brand new season of Umamusume: Pretty Derby)!
World Trigger S2 – New enemies draw near as the Border agents prepare for the fight in the second season of World Trigger!
Yamishibai 8
Returning favorites include:
Anime Kapibarasan – Snuggle up with this adorable series featuring Kapibarasan and their animal friends!
Black Clover – Asta and the Black Bulls begin to uncover the secrets behind the devils and curse magic across the kingdoms!
BORUTO: NARUTO NEXT GENERATIONS – Boruto continues his adventures to become the ultimate ninja with Team 7 and all your favorite ninja from the Hidden Leaf Village!
Case Closed – Ace teen detective Shinichi Kudo solves cases after becoming trapped in the body of a ten year old.
Digimon Adventure – A brand new Digimon adventure continues with the classic DigiDestined cast!
Dragon Quest: The Adventure of Dai – Based on the classic Dragon Quest series, follow Dai and his party in their grand adventure to defeat the demon lord Hadlar!
Healin’ Good Pretty Cure – Three girls come together to form the Healin’ Good Pretty Cure team and defend The Healing Garden, a secret world inside Earth!
Mr. Osomatsu 3rd Season – Those wild and goofy sextuplets are at it again with the third season of Mr. Osomatsu!
Oh, Suddenly Egyptian God – Join the ancient Egyptian gods (in an adorable form) in their everyday free and laid-back lives!
One Piece – Luffy and the Straw Hats continue their adventures in Wano and fight against the powerful Emperors!
Onyx Equinox – Catch EVERY episode of Izel’s journey as humanity’s champion and the war between gods in Onyx Equinox, all available now!
Shadowverse – A young boy fights in intense card battles based on the digital smartphone game “Shadowverse”!
With a Dog AND a Cat, Every Day Is Fun – The series for those who can’t choose between cats or dogs, Inu-kun and Neko-sama fill their owner’s day with laughter and love.
Yashahime: Princess Half-Demon – Towa, Setsuna, and Moroha continue their feudal fairy tale adventures in the Inuyasha sequel series!
Ring in the new year with a winter flurry of new animated series and episode premieres across Disney Channel and Disney Junior next month! In addition to the premiere of new original Dino Ranch on January 18 and a “ginormous” second season of Gigantosaurus premiering January 4 (new episodes every Monday morning), audiences can tune into special New Year episodes of Big City Greens and Puppy Dog Pals, plus more Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures and Mira, Royal Detective.
Peppered throughout these episode premieres are guest voice appearances from the likes of Paul Scheer, Andy Richter, Richard Kind, Madison Pettis, Amy Hill, Keone Young, Brian George and Booboo Stewart.
Disney TV animation highlights for January:
Friday, Jan. 1
8:30-9:00 a.m. EST (Disney Junior) Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures “There Goes Our Fun!/Don’t Wake the Baby!” – Mickey invites everyone to join him for Mickey Day at the amusement park. / The Happy Helpers babysit the Matisses’ new baby boy, Ollie.
Monday, Jan. 4
8:55 a.m. EST (Disney Junior) Season 2 Premiere Gigantosaurus– S2 brings dino-mite all-new adventures to life featuring the young dinosaur best friends Rocky, Bill, Tiny and Mazu. It also introduces new characters, including extra-adorable baby dinos(!) and a new “baddy,” and takes the team to exciting never-before-seen locations.
Friday, Jan. 8
7:30-8:00 p.m. EST (Disney Junior) Mira, Royal Detective “The Case of the Missing Library Book/A Double Dosa Mystery” – Mira must find the missing library book that everyone wants to read. / When Sandeep’s dosa goes missing, Mira goes on a stakeout to discover who took it.
Monday, Jan. 18
12:30-12:55 p.m. EST (Disney Junior) Series Premiere Dino Ranch “Big Jon Big Trouble/Min’s Quest” – Jon’s enthusiasm gets the best of him when he tries to tame a rambunctious little dinosaur by himself. / When Min overcomes adversity to find an elusive flower, she helps cure an ailing mother brontosaurus.
12:55-1:20 p.m. EST (Disney Junior) Dino Ranch “Stop that Spinosaurus!/The Spookasaurus” – A rampaging dinosaur threatens to cause havoc. / When Jon gets spooked by a campfire story about a legendary dinosaur, he doesn’t want to admit it to Miguel and Min.
Friday, Jan. 15
10:30-11:00 a.m. EST (Disney Channel) Puppy Dog Pals “New Year, New Bob/All for Show” – While in Hong Kong for the Chinese New Year, Bob’s homemade lantern for the Lantern Festival accidentally floats out his hotel window. / Lollie is eager to win the top prize in the local dog show, so Bingo and Rolly go on a mission to help her complete her obstacle course training.
Saturday, Jan. 16
9:00-9:30 a.m. EST (Disney Channel) Big City Greens “Chipocalypse Now” – Chip Whistler tears down the buildings around the Greens’ house to build a new Wholesome Foods store. Paul Scheer (Star Trek: Lower Decks) and Andy Richter (Conan) guest star as Chip Whistler and Mayor Hansock, respectively.
Friday, Jan. 22
6:00-6:30 p.m. EST (Disney Junior) Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures “Donald’s Dilemma/The Royal-ympics!” – Donald’s day of doing chores is derailed when his Uncle Manny pays him a surprise visit. Richard Kind (Curb Your Enthusiasm) guest stars as Uncle Manny. / Princess Olivia of Royalandia asks the Happy Helpers for help with the Royal-ympics. Madison Pettis (Five Points) guest stars as Princess Olivia.
Saturday, Jan. 23
9:00-9:30 a.m. EST (Disney Channel) Big City Greens “‘Rent Control/Pool’s Gold” – When Gloria’s parents visit, she ropes the Greens into escalating lies about her success. Amy Hill (Magnum P.I.) and Keone Young (Star Wars Rebels) guest star as Mr. and Mrs. Sato. / Cricket goes on a quest to find the best pool in Big City.
Friday, Jan. 29
10:30-11:00 a.m. EST (Disney Channel) Puppy Dog Pals “My Bobby Valentine/Musical Mission Mishap” – Ana is excited to give Bob his favorite candy for Valentine’s Day, but when every store is sold out, Bingo and Rolly must track down the special holiday treat. / Bob surprises Ana by winning a walk-on role in “Pups: The Musical!”
7:30-8:00 p.m. EST (Disney Junior) Mira, Royal Detective “Mira’s Birthday Mystery/The Great Art Mystery” – On Mira’s birthday, Queen Shanti asks her to solve a strange mystery. / When an anonymous painting appears, Mira searches for the artist so it can be entered in Priya’s art show. Brian George (The Big Bang Theory) guest stars as the art shop owner, Mr. Burman.
Saturday, Jan. 30
9:00-9:30 a.m. EST (Disney Channel) Big City Greens “Big Resolution/Winter Greens” – On New Year’s Eve, Cricket insists on helping Gloria complete her resolution of approaching her longtime crush, Kevin. Booboo Stewart (Descendants franchise) guest stars as Kevin. / Cricket and Remy challenge Vasquez to a snowball fight, while Tilly creates a snowperson.
Following an informal effort on the part of Big Bad Boo Studios to hire a diverse crew in their animation productions, the Vancouver- and New York-based prodco is launching a formal Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) Workshop Series, sponsored in part by the Canadian Media Fund.
This need to foster emerging talent in several areas of the production pipeline became apparent nearly three years ago when Big Bad Boo went on a search to create a diverse writers’ room for their series 16 Hudson.
“I remember looking specifically for experienced kids’ writers that were of Indian and Chinese descent, so we could have them write for the characters of Amala and Sam respectively and in particular for culturally relevant episodes like Diwali and Lunar New Year. Every place we looked, we came up short,” recalls studio Co-Founder & President Shabnam Rezaei, creator of 16 Hudson.
At the time, story editors John May and Suzanne Bolch reached out to drama series writer Nathalie Younglai and emerging talent Jay Vaidya. The two joined the 16 Hudson writers room and the rest is history.
“This need for BIPOC talent became so painfully clear through our entire pipeline at Big Bad Boo. I started to look around our other departments and we had an imbalance both in terms of gender and heritage, so I set out to change that,” Rezaei continues.
She approached the Canadian Media Fund (CMF) as well as instructors from around Vancouver to assist in setting up the three different workshops in the areas of Creative Writing, Storyboarding and Animation. The goal of the workshops is to train new talent in order to encourage people with a diverse background in these areas. In 2020, CMF provided some funding to make this plan a reality.
The free workshops will be held February 16-18 online and will be led by experienced, industry veterans Eddie Soriano (director and storyboard supervisor, The Bravest Knight) and John May (co-founder, Heroic Television), among others. The applications are here with a deadline of January 16, 2021.
Big Bad Boo Studios is dedicated to producing quality family programming that is entertaining and educational. Its shows include Hulu’s The Bravest Knight, 16 Hudson, Lili & Lola, Mixed Nutz and 1001 Nights, which was nominated for 14 LEO awards with five wins. Big Bad Boo is currently producing ABC with Kenny G with TVO and developing Galapagos X, as well as a series of digital games and apps. The company’s streaming channel Oznoz provides cartoons in 10+ languages, including classics such as Thomas and Friends, Bob the Builder, Babar and more.
FOX is announcing changes to its Sunday, January 3 lineup following the NFL on Fox Doubleheader – new animated comedy The Great North will now have a special preview at 8:30-9:00 p.m. ET/PT, following the series premiere of the new live-action Mayim Bialik comedy Call Me Kat at 8 p.m. The ninth and final season premiere of Last Man Standing will now air at 9:30 p.m., following an all-new episode of The Simpsons at a special time: 9:00-9:30 p.m.
The Great North special preview on Jan. 3 precedes its series premiere on Sunday, Feb. 14 (8:30 p.m.), as part of the Animation Domination lineup.
The new animated comedy follows the Alaskan adventures of the Tobin family, as a single dad, Beef (Nick Offerman), does his best to keep his bunch of kids close – especially his only daughter, Judy (Jenny Slate), whose artistic dreams lead her away from the family fishing boat and into the glamorous world of the local mall. Rounding out the family are Judy’s older brother, Wolf (Will Forte), and his fiancé, Honeybee (Dulcé Sloan); middle brother, Ham (Paul Rust); and 10-year-old-going-on-50 little brother, Moon (Aparna Nancherla). While the children’s mother is not in the picture, Judy seeks guidance from her new boss, Alyson (Megan Mullally), and her imaginary friend, Alanis Morissette (guest-voicing as herself), who appears to her in the Northern Lights.
The series, which already has been renewed for a second season, was created, written and executive-produced by Bob’s Burgers writers and executive producers Wendy Molyneux and Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin, as well as writer Minty Lewis (Regular Show). The Molyneux sisters serve as showrunners. Bob’s Burgers creator Loren Bouchard is also an executive producer. The Great North is a 20th Television production, and animation is produced through Bento Box Entertainment.
The Simpsons
On an all-new The Simpsons airing at a special time (9 p.m.) on Jan.3, Dan Aykroyd (Ghostbusters) and Bob Balaban (The Politician) guest-voice in the “The Dad-Feelings Limited” episode, in which the awesome origin story of Comic Book Guy (Hank Azaria) is revealed, as he and his wife, Kumiko (Jenny Yokobori), debate having a baby.
The longest-running primetime scripted show in television history, The Simpsons has made instantly identifiable TV icons of Homer (Dan Castellaneta), Marge (Julie Kavner), Bart (Nancy Cartwright), Lisa (Yeardley Smith) and Maggie — as well as many beloved Springfield residents, including tavern proprietor Moe Szyslak (Azaria) and nuclear power plant owner Mr. Burns (Harry Shearer). The Emmy, Annie and Peabody Award-winning animated comedy will celebrate a landmark 700 episodes this spring.
The Simpsons is a Gracie Films Production in association with 20th Television. James L. Brooks, Matt Groening and Al Jean are the executive producers. The Gracie Films Worldwide Brand Division develops and produces the licensed content for the series.