Tag: featured

  • Showrunner Giles Pilbrow Gives Us a Frightfully Fun Tour of CBBC’s ‘Scream Street’

    Showrunner Giles Pilbrow Gives Us a Frightfully Fun Tour of CBBC’s ‘Scream Street’

    The children’s series Scream Street has offered an enjoyable mix of stop-motion madness and harmless frights since it debuted on CBBC five years ago. Created by Tommy Donvaband, the show focuses on the adventures of a young werewolf and his vampire and mummy buddies who live in a town inhabited by monsters. In October, the series begins its new season of 26 episodes, just in time for Halloween. We had a chance to catch up with the series’ brilliant showrunner Giles Pilbrow (Shaun the Sheep, 101 Dalmatian Street, Spitting Image, Horrible Histories) to find out how he and his team at the award-winning studio Factory prepared for this new round of out-of-this-world, madcap adventures. Here is what he shared with us:

    Giles Pilbrow
    Giles Pilbrow

    Animag: Congrats on the new season of the show. Can you tell us the inspiration for the show?

    Giles Pilbrow: The series is based on Tommy Donbavand’s brilliant novels. He wrote 13 books in the Scream Street series, and came up with the concept of the world, as well as the warped characters that are the beating heart of the TV series. It was a real challenge to turn his epic 13-part thriller into something that worked in stand-alone episodes whilst retaining all the horror and comedic sensibilities of the original books. I think we’re getting near to cracking it now we’re on episode 78!

    Scream Street
    Scream Street

    Where do you produce the animation?

    The animation is produced at Factory Create in Altrincham, a real hot bed of animation talent. The warehouse-style studios look pretty dull on the outside, but inside they’re alive with creative wonders and visual delights. It’s amazing what Factory can do with a few words on a page.

    Check out this behind-the-scenes CBBC video from 2015!

    What is the ballpark budget?

    The ballpark budget is, give or take, the same as for a ballpark. Don’t ask me – I’m only the showrunner. Which doesn’t just mean I make the tea, though I can do that as well. Milk, two sugars?

    What kind of tools do you use to create the stop motion animation?

    Please see the above answer. What wizardry they use to achieve the finished product is not for me to know.

    Scream Street
    Scream Street

    What do you love about the animation?

    There’s something uniquely charming about stop-frame. I think the brain subconsciously knows these are real objects, and that you could lean in and pick up the actual doll-like characters from the set – though you might get an earful from an irate animator who’s going to have to reset the whole thing. The appealing physical reality of stop-frame coupled with a CGI pass for any special effects gives us the best of both worlds. There’s no concept, however out-there, that we can’t achieve on Scream Street, which is very creatively liberating.

    What is your biggest challenge with this show?

    The biggest challenge for me is to keep the Scream Street stories fresh after so many episodes. We’ve introduced two new characters this series: a crazy scientist called Dr. F and her teenage monster Six, who have added a new dimension to the series. Throwing a new character into the main gang has enabled us to shake up the complex relationships between them and their dysfunctional families. Director Geoff Walker and his team at Factory are brilliant at finding achievable ways to realise the creative madness required to keep surprising and entrancing the audience.

    Scream Street
    Scream Street

    How have COVID era social distancing rules impacted the production?

    The writing team all tend to work from home a lot anyway and we were lucky enough to get the last writing meeting in for this new series just before lockdown. The voice records are now being done with the voice artist in the studio with the sound technician and voice director whilst the director and Coolabi / CBBC execs dial in on video conferencing software. Factory have worked hard to put in place all the necessary new COVID working practices and social distancing rules at the studio. It’s not been straightforward, but the show must go on!

    What are some of the most memorable reactions you have had to the show?

    There’s nothing nicer than finding out that the show is resonating with its target audience. A friend told me that her child had just found Scream Street on iPlayer the other day, loved it, watched all the episodes, and wanted more. Well more’s a-coming! Series 2 is even bigger and better.

    Catch all new episodes of Scream Street on CBBC this autumn.

    www.bbc.co.uk/cbbc/shows/scream-street

    Scream Street
    Scream Street
    Scream Street
    Scream Street
    Scream Street
    Scream Street
  • ‘Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous’ Roars Back for S2 in 2021

    ‘Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous’ Roars Back for S2 in 2021

    DreamWorks Animation announced a second season of Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous will debut globally on Netflix in 2021. The first season, inspired by the multi-billion-dollar franchise from Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment, was set against the same timeline of the 2015 blockbuster film Jurassic World. Season 2 will find the stranded campers struggling to survive on Isla Nublar as the series charges forward beyond the events of the Jurassic World film.

    Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous follows a group of six teenagers chosen for a once-in-a-lifetime experience at a new adventure camp on the opposite side of Isla Nublar. But when dinosaurs wreak havoc across the island, the campers are stranded. Unable to reach the outside world, they’ll need to go from strangers to friends to family if they’re going to survive.

    Scott Kreamer (Pinky Malinky) and Aaron Hammersley (Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness), serve as showrunners and executive producers. The series is executive produced by Steven Spielberg, Colin Trevorrow and Frank Marshall.

    The series features the voices of Paul-Mikél Williams (Westworld) as “Darius,” Jenna Ortega (You) as “Brooklynn,” Ryan Potter (Titans) as “Kenji,” Raini Rodriguez (Austin & Ally) as “Sammy,” Sean Giambrone (The Goldbergs) as “Ben” and Kausar Mohammed (Silicon Valley) as “Yaz.”

    For an inside look at season one be sure to check out the New York Comic Con x MCM Comic Con’s Metaverse Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous panel, live Friday at 2:40 p.m. EDT. Join executive producers Colin Trevorrow and Scott Kreamer, consulting producer Zack Stentz, story editor Josie Campbell and staff writers Sheela Shrinivas, Rick Williams and Bethany Armstrong Johnson as they take you inside the writers’ room.

    Read more about the series in Tom McLean’s story for Animation Magazine here.

    Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous Season 1 is now streaming on Netflix.

  • CAKE Launching New Pre-K Toon ‘Tish Tash’

    CAKE Launching New Pre-K Toon ‘Tish Tash’

    Leading kids’ entertainment specialist CAKE has signed an agreement to distribute brand new preschool 2D animated series Tish Tash.

    Aimed at 3- to 5-year olds, Tish Tash is being produced by South Korean animation shop Studio Gale, Singapore-based August Media Holdings, Philippines media group Synergy88 Entertainment and BAFTA- and Emmy Award-winning U.K. based Karrot Entertainment. CAKE will be introducing the title at MIPCOM, following the series’ recent premiere on EBS in Korea on September 28.

    Tish Tash has huge potential — a fresh take on what it’s like to have an imaginary friend, something most children have experienced and can relate to,” said Ed Galton, CCO & Managing Director, CAKE. “We are very excited to be working with Studio Gale, August, Synergy88 and Karrot; strong partners from around the world, whose collaboration has resulted in a truly global approach.”

    Tish Tash (52 x 5’) follows the adventures of a young bear called Tish, her bear family and her larger-than-life imaginary friend Tash, as they learn about the world around them. No matter what troubles they face — be it surviving long, boring car trips or helping Tish’s baby brother not to be too sad about losing his favourite toy — these special friends can create new worlds around themselves, embarking on fun adventures while inspiring imaginative play and problem solving in young children.

    Family life is at the core of the series. With sparky, kid-voiced performances and genuine warmth created by believable and funny family dynamics, both kids and parents will deeply identify with the stories.

    “We are thrilled to present Tish Tash to the world with CAKE, and alongside August, Synergy88 and Karrot, who is one of the most creative companies in the U.K.” said Studio Gale CEO Chang-Hwan Shin. “We believe young children around the same age as Tish and Tash may be having a hard time due to the current pandemic and we hope Tish Tash will encourage children to use their imagination to overcome this difficult time, while entertaining them with delightful adventures.”

    Jyotirmoy Saha, CEO at August Media Holdings, commented, “We are thrilled to have CAKE on board on this show. Given their history of success with preschool shows, we hope Tish Tash will become a household name around the world.”

  • NFB Releases ‘Shannon Amen’ Free for World Mental Health Day

    NFB Releases ‘Shannon Amen’ Free for World Mental Health Day

    Content warning: Subject matter in this article and the film described includes suicide and self harm.

    If you or someone you know needs support, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline or Crisis Services Canada.

    In recognition of World Mental Health Day (Saturday, October 10), the National Film Board of Canada is releasing its impactful mixed-media animated short Shannon Amen free to the public through NFB.ca, starting Friday, October 9.

    Shannon Amen
    Shannon Amen

    Written and directed by Chris Dainty (One Last Dream), the highly personal film is a loving elegy to a friend lost to suicide, and the passionate and pained artwork she left behind. Based on the art of Shannon Jamieson, Shannon Amen unearths the frantic, passionate, and pained expressions of a young woman overwhelmed by guilt and anxiety as she struggles to reconcile her sexual identity with her religious faith.

    The film is a multi-layered memoir that fuses archival footage and an array of animation techniques (including icemation) to reconstruct the complexity, instability, and sorrow that Shannon struggled with — issues that torment other LGBTQIA+ youth like her who face discrimination.

    “Her mom [Ellie Forbes] said to me that suicide did not define Shannon, and that really stuck with me,” Dainty said in an NFB interview. “It is a part of her story, but I think that her art is the crux of the story. I was so blown away by her art. I looked at this as my way of taking the audience by the hand and introducing them to Shannon and her art. Through her art and her voice, I hope that people will want to know more about her.”

    Shannon Amen
    Shannon Amen

    Shannon Amen is the 2020 winner of the Director – Non-Fiction award at Yorktown Film Festival, and was an official selection of the Ottawa International Animation Festival (2019), Calgary International Film Festival (2019), Festival du Nouveau Cinéma de Montréal (2019), and was a finalist for the Prix Écrans Canadiens (2020).

    Shannon Amen (Trailer 39 sec.) from NFB/marketing on Vimeo.

  • Watch: A Pop Goddess Shines in New ‘Over the Moon’ Track ‘Ultraluminary’

    Watch: A Pop Goddess Shines in New ‘Over the Moon’ Track ‘Ultraluminary’

    In case you weren’t feeling super hyped for Netflix’s new original animated feature Over the Moon, a new official lyric video has just dropped that is sure to energize fans! Following Fei Fei’s emotional lead single “Rocket to the Moon,” Chang’e gets her chance to shine in the newly released “Ultraluminary,” performed by Phillipa Soo.

    Over the Moon wasn’t originally intended to be a musical — but in the creative process we discovered the emotions of the characters ran so deep that there were often times where words simply weren’t enough. Singing felt like the purest way to capture our characters’ journeys!” said director Glen Keane. “Our songwriters Chris Curtis, Marjorie Duffield and Helen Park absolutely nailed the intention and spirit of Over the Moon, and I know our screenwriter Audrey Wells felt the same way. Steven Price’s gorgeous and uplifting score really made the film soar. We are lucky to have had the chance to collaborate with these talented musicians.”

    “The title ‘Ultraluminary’ describes a song that emanates light,” Keane continued. “We needed Helen, Chris and Margie to create the melody, rhythm and lyrics needed to capture the dizzying joy, energy and outrageous confidence of our goddess, Chang’e and her dazzling world of Lunaria… that’s all! No tall order! I’ll never forget the day in Peilin’s office where it all came together. It felt like a miracle happened that day. One could not help but dance to that amazing song!”

    The songwriters added: “Over the Moon has been such a deeply personal journey for the three of us. We each connected with the themes of healing, a longing to be seen and felt a real connection to Audrey’s magical words. We are so thankful that Glen had a vision to make the film a musical, and that we had the chance to work in such close collaboration with him and the whole team on a project we hope will touch the hearts and souls of anyone who sees it.”

    Composer Steven Price commented, “Having the opportunity to journey to the Moon and back with Glen Keane and his incredible team has been a wonderful experience. Every sequence in the movie is filled with so much imagination and heart that it was a constant joy to write music for, and I can’t wait for audiences to see the film. The process of working with Glen, talking about these characters and feeling the music and visuals evolve together as the film reached its final form was one of the great delights of my life, and I’m so proud and grateful to have been involved in this beautiful, emotional story.”

    Read more about Over the Moon in Ramin Zahed’s feature story here.

  • CEE Animation Forum 2020 Award Winners Announced

    CEE Animation Forum 2020 Award Winners Announced

    The CEE Animation Forum, the leading pitching, financing and co-production event focusing on the animation industry in Central & Eastern Europe, was held online October 6-8. International juries consisting of experienced film professionals followed 28 animated projects in four pitch competition categories, and the winners were announced during an online Award Ceremony on Thursday.

    Taking top honors were Georgian feature IGI from 20 Steps Productions, Czech TV project No Happily Ever After from Helium Film, Hungarian short film The Garden of Heart from CUB Animation, and Lithuanian interactive pitch Paperback VR. Read on for the full list of 2020 winners and special mentions.

    The CEE Animation Forum is usually held annually in the Czech Republic parallel to the International Festival of Animated Films Anifim. Due to the ongoing global situation, the event was postponed until October and finally took place online. The public could follow the program via Facebook Live or following a free registration on the online B2B platform. The pitching sessions streamed on Facebook had more than 3,000 viewers, and on the MeetToMatch platform more than 700 views from 40 different countries.

    The event also focuses on networking, and particular emphasis was placed on 1:1 industry meetings. The organizers registered more than 350 decision-makers (producers, directors, broadcasters, distributors, sales agents, investors, representatives of festivals, film funds or national associations). In the course of the three-day program, almost 300 online meetings were realized.

    Part of the program was dedicated to young, debuting creators. A selection of six short films made by promising young filmmakers from the CEE region was officially introduced. The compilation, called CEE Animation Talents, is made by festival directors from the CEE region each year and presented together at numerous animated film festivals around the world.

    2020 CEE Animation Forum Award Winners:

    Feature Films (1,000 eur prize): IGI | p. Vladimer Katcharava, 20 Steps Productions, d. Natia Nikolashvili (Georgia)

    Jury statement: “IGI is at the same time a personal, universal and promising project with a strong visual style led by a talented director. We hope that further development of the project will benefit from the award.”

    Feature Film jury: Annemie Degryse (Lunanime / Lumiere Group, Co-owner & Producer, Belgium), Jakub Karwowski (LETKO, Producer, Poland), Esben Toft Jakobsen (Animation Director & Writer, Denmark).

    No Happily Ever After
    No Happily Ever After

    TV Series and Specials (1,000 eur): No Happily Ever After | p. Mária Móťovská, Helium film, d. Gabriela Plačková, Alžběta Göbelová (Czech Republic)

    Jury statement: “The winner in the TV Series and Specials category presented a clear format that had lots of humor and energy. The creators showed great knowledge of its target group, and they had developed a visual concept that the jury found playful, clever, and original. The jury was especially impressed with how the format tied together the old, mythological world with today’s modern society, and how seemingly irrelevant fairy-tale creatures can tell an important story to the kids today.”

    Special Mention: Betti and Lola | p. Drasko Ivezic, Adriatic Animation, d. Hana Tintor (Croatia)

    Jury statement: “As well as the winner, the jury is convinced of the project that delivers brief charming and funny day-by-day adventures of a young woman and her dog. Once combined with a strong digital concept, the stories have great potential and unfold their charm and magic. The jury therefore especially CEE Animation Forum 2020: Awards and Winners wants to emphasize and honor Betti and Lola from Adriatic Animation, Croatia, with a special mention.”

    TV Series and Specials jury: Stefan Pfaffle (KiKA, Deputy Head of Fiction & Co-Production, Germany), Michaela Sabolcakova (RTVS, Program Editor & Buyer, Slovakia), Nils Stokke (Spark, Producer & CEO, Norway).

    The Garden of Heart
    The Garden of Heart

    Short Films (1,000 eur): The Garden of Heart | p. Balint Gelley, CUB Animation, d. Oliver Hegyi (Hungary)

    Jury statement: “The winning project’s pitch accurately set the mood and the tone of the film, revealing the persona of the director and the main character, as well as the motivation and dedication of the production team in the wings. The filmmaker made it easy to relate to the themes tackled in this story, and left us waiting for a luscious graphic spectacle in… The Garden of the Heart.”

    Special Mention: The Pet Named Stress | p. Drasko Ivezic, Adriatic Animation, d. Laura Martinovic (Croatia)

    Jury statement: “Emotions can be overwhelming, so to put them on a leash and learn to tame them seems like a good idea. Combined with very appealing character design, it certainly makes a charming concept for a film targeting children but also relevant to all of us. The jury wants to give an honorable mention to first time director Laura Martinović and her project The Pet Named Stress.”

    Short Films jury: Wendy Griffiths (Dark Prince, CEO & Producer, U.K.), Karsten Matern (Balance Film GmbH, Production Manager, Germany), Anna Zača (Latvian Animation Association, Riga International Film Festival).

    “We were struck by the quality of each and every project because of the current relevance of the subject matter and the sheer inventiveness of the proposal. All the presented projects had a strong basis to become a successful film. Even in this strange period when we all feel so remote and slightly displaced from one another, we are excited at the prospect of rediscovering each and every one of these projects in the next year’s film festival circuit.” — Short Films Jury

    Paperback VR
    Paperback VR

    XR (1,000 eur): Paperback VR | p. Giedre Burokaite, Meno avilys, d. Robertas Nevecka (Lithuania)

    Jury statement: “A project that was most grounded in the world of virtual reality, pitched in a convincing and engaging way. As the jury, we felt the authors had a clear vision of how this project will be presented in virtual reality using tools and story-telling techniques unique to this medium. We give the award to the project Paperback VR.”

    XR jury: Milivoj Popovic (Prime Render Studios, Director & Producer, Croatia), Veljko Popovic (Prime Render Studios, Director & Owner, Croatia), Manu Weiss (Freelance, XR Producer & Curator, Switzerland).

    Baldies
    Baldies

    Audience Award (1,000 eur): Baldies | p. Jiri Sadek, COFILM, scriptwriter: Eliska Podzimkova (Czech Republic) — Animated Series

    CEE Animation Workshop Scholarship: King Wray | p. Ana Maria Parvan, Studioset (Romania), d. Anton Groves, Damian Groves (U.K.)

    Animation Sans Frontieres Scholarship: Face Recognition | p. Martinus Klemet, Animartinus, d. Martinus Klemet (Estonia)

    Cartoon Forum 2020 Direct Selection*:

    • Baldies | p. Jiri Sadek, COFILM, scriptwriter: Eliska Podzimkova (Czech Republic)
    • Daisy and Dot | p. Géza M. Tóth, KEDD Animation Studio, d. István Heim (Hungary)

    *Both projects have already attended Cartoon Forum 2020

    Daisy and Dot
    Daisy and Dot

    Cartoon Movie 2021 Direct Selection: IGI| p. Vladimer Katcharava, 20 Steps Productions, d. Natia Nikolashvili (Georgia)

    Animarkt Stop Motion Forum Accreditation: In Her Face | p. Ana Paula Catarino, BRO Cinema, d. Margarida Madeira (Portugal)

    Kids Kino Industry Accreditation: No Happily Ever After | p. Mária Móťovská, Helium film, d. Gabriela Plačková, Alžběta Göbelová (Czech Republic)

    CEE Animation is supported by the Creative Europe – MEDIA Programme of the European Union and co-funded by state funds and foundations and professional organisations from Slovenia (DSAF, Slovene Animated Film Association), Czech Republic (ASAF, Association of Czech Animation), Hungary (HAPA, Hungarian Animation Producers Association), Poland (SPPA, Polish Animation Producers Association) and Slovakia (APAF, Slovak Association of Animated Film Producers).

    ceeanimation.eu

  • Exclusive: ‘Big City Greens’ Spoofs China Anne McClain in ‘Broken Karaoke’

    Exclusive: ‘Big City Greens’ Spoofs China Anne McClain in ‘Broken Karaoke’

    Pop in your vampire teeth, give your werewolf a flea bath and settle in for the latest, festive installment of Broken Karaoke!

    The short-form series spotlights beloved Disney Channel characters singing parodies of popular songs. Just in time for Halloween, the new toe-tapping toon “Where Are All the Monsters” features Cricket Green from Emmy-nominated series Big City Greens singing a parody of China Anne McClain’s “Calling All the Monsters” from Disney’s A.N.T. Farm.

    It’s a happening mashup, as McClain’s song currently has over 38 million views on YouTube, and the last Broken Karaoke short featuring the Green Family on the mic, “Stuck at Home” — rejiggering “Flesh & Bone” from hit Disney Channel Original Movie ZOMBIES 2 — currently has over 12 million views.

    Without further a-boo, here we go!

  • MIPCOM 2020 Spotlights the Best in Korean Animation

    MIPCOM 2020 Spotlights the Best in Korean Animation

    The Korean Content Agency is promoting 38 of Korea’s Top Animation companies at the virtual MIPCOM 2020 market. These studio’s animated content will be featured on the online showcase in two categories: K-Animation: Global Stars of Today—promoting new shows in development from established companies, and K-Animation: Stars of a Digital Tomorrow—with upcoming series from new companies.

    The Animation Showcase will be available on MIPCOM Online from Tuesday, the 13th of October, and you can also see it at the Korea Pavilion (www.kcontent.kr.) The Virtual Pavilion provides information, trailers, and direct access to the animation companies. There will be a helpful team on standby that can answer all inquires and recommend companies as well as a free downloadable K-Animation Guide E-book.

    The Korean Character, IP, and Animation industry has been strongly focused on animated content for children, mainly in CGI, with fun edutainment themes in preschool. Recently, the studios have been working on more colorfully zany 2D shows, slapstick shorts are on the rise, and serialized comedy adventures are ready to preview.

    Highlights for MIPCOM 2020 include Ocon Studios’ latest theatrical feature, and its famous franchise Pororo‘s sixth movie: Dragon Castle Adventure, in which Pororo and his friends restore balance to King Arthur’s Court. Roi Visual, famous for the Robocar POLI series that has aired in 35 languages in over 140 countries, is releasing a musical sing and dance along series featuring a new installment of Poli and the Rescue Team. Studio Moggozi’s latest preschool series Little Dreamer Gguda introduces five imaginative children on a tiny, beautiful island.

    With Kocca’s Stars of a digital tomorrow, there are contents at all stages of production. Some in pre-production already have global co-development partners attached like Korea’s WeCreative and Pixtrend with Norway’s Northern Lights series Honey Bear Bery. An 11-minute, 26-episode preschool series about a girl’s ordinary days transforming into a fantasy thanks to a magical bear is scheduled for release next year. Visit www.kcontent.kr to discover your next star Korean content.

  • Amazon Teases Robert Kirkman’s ‘Invincible’

    Amazon Teases Robert Kirkman’s ‘Invincible’

    Amazon Prime Video today released a teaser trailer from Robert Kirkman‘s (The Walking Dead) upcoming, hour-long animated series Invincible, as part of Kirkman’s appearance at New York Comic Con’s Metaverse, which is now available to stream on the NYCC official YouTube channel. The hour-long, eight-episode series will premiere in over 240 countries and territories in 2021.

    The teaser trailer gave fans their first look at what to expect from Kirkman’s television adaptation of his iconic comic book, including fan-favorite characters, high-flying action, and all the gore audiences have come to expect from the Invincible comics.

    Synopsis: Based on the Skybound/Image comic of the same name by Kirkman, Cory Walker and Ryan Ottley, Invincible is an adult animated superhero show that revolves around 17-year-old Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun), who’s just like every other guy his age — except that his father is the most powerful superhero on the planet, Omni-Man (J.K. Simmons). But as Mark develops powers of his own, he discovers that his father’s legacy may not be as heroic as it seems.

    Invincible will also star Sandra Oh (Killing Eve), Seth Rogen (This Is the End), Gillian Jacobs (Community), Andrew Rannells (Black Monday, Girls), Zazie Beetz (Deadpool 2), Mark Hamill (Star Wars: The Last Jedi), Walton Goggins (Justified), Jason Mantzoukas (Brooklyn Nine-Nine), Mae Whitman (Good Girls), Chris Diamantopoulos (Silicon Valley), Melise (The Flash), Kevin Michael Richardson (The Simpsons), Grey Griffin (Avengers Assemble), Max Burkholder (Imaginary Order) and more.

    Invincible is produced by Skybound and executive produced by Kirkman, Simon Racioppa, David Alpert (The Walking Dead, Fear the Walking Dead), Catherine Winder (The Angry Birds Movie, Star Wars: The Clone Wars) with supervising directors Justin Allen & Chris Copeland (Avengers Assemble, Ultimate Spider-Man), and Linda Lamontagne serving as casting director.

    Invincible, Kirkman’s second-longest comic-book series, concluded in February 2018 after a 15-year run.

  • Pixar’s ‘Soul’ Will Be Reborn as Exclusive Disney+ Holiday Release

    Pixar’s ‘Soul’ Will Be Reborn as Exclusive Disney+ Holiday Release

    The Walt Disney Company announced Thursday that Soul, the all-new original feature from Pixar Animation Studios, will debut exclusively on Disney+ on December 25. In international markets where Disney+ isn’t currently or soon to be available, Soul will be released theatrically, with dates to be announced.

    “We are thrilled to share Pixar’s spectacular and moving Soul with audiences direct to Disney+ in December,” said Bob Chapek, CEO, The Walt Disney Company. “A new original Pixar film is always a special occasion, and this truly heartwarming and humorous story about human connection and finding one’s place in the world will be a treat for families to enjoy together this holiday season.”

    Soul comes from visionary filmmaker Pete Docter, the Academy Award-winning director behind Inside Out and Up, and co-director/writer Kemp Powers, playwright and screenwriter of One Night in Miami. Academy Award nominee Dana Murray, p.g.a. (Lou) is the film’s producer. It stars the voice talents of Jamie Foxx, Tina Fey, Phylicia Rashad, Ahmir Questlove Thompson, Angela Bassett and Daveed Diggs and features original jazz music by globally renowned musician Jon Batiste and a score composed by Oscar winners Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross (The Social Network).

    “The world can be an exhausting and frustrating place – but it’s also full of unexpected joys, even in seemingly mundane things,” said Docter, director of Soul and Chief Creative Officer of Pixar Animation Studios. “Soul investigates what’s really important in our lives, a question we’re all asking these days. I hope it will bring some humor and fun to people at a time when everyone can surely use that.”

    Over the last six months, marketplace conditions created by the ongoing pandemic, while difficult in so many ways, have also provided an opportunity for innovation in approaches to content distribution. With over 60 million subscribers within the first year of launch, the Disney+ platform is an ideal destination for families and fans to enjoy a marquee Pixar film in their own homes like never before.

    Previously scheduled for theatrical release on November 20, Soul was named an official selection of the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year along with multiple upcoming festivals including the British Film Institute’s London Film Festival this Sunday.

    Synopsis: What is it that makes you…YOU? Pixar Animation Studios’ Soul introduces Joe Gardner (Foxx) – a middle-school band teacher who gets the chance of a lifetime to play at the best jazz club in town. But one small misstep takes him from the streets of New York City to The Great Before – a fantastical place where new souls get their personalities, quirks and interests before they go to Earth. Determined to return to his life, Joe teams up with a precocious soul, 22 (Fey), who has never understood the appeal of the human experience. As Joe desperately tries to show 22 what’s great about living, he may just discover the answers to some of life’s most important questions.

    Read all about Soul in the December ’20 issue of Animation Magazine, coming soon!

  • Horror, Re-Animated: Jesse Blanchard’s ‘Frank & Zed’ Premieres at NightStream

    Horror, Re-Animated: Jesse Blanchard’s ‘Frank & Zed’ Premieres at NightStream

    What do you get when you combine a driving desire to create, a love for classic monster movies and a passion for puppetry? Well, this week, you get the gory, eerie and hilarious new independent feature Frank & Zed, which makes its World Premiere as part of the virtual NightStream horror film fest this week. The movie centers on two decrepit monsters whose zest for destruction is reawakened by a power-hungry lord, culminating in an “Orgy of Blood” between our inhuman heroes and the terrorized villagers.

    It took Portland, Ore.-based filmmaker and puppeteer Jesse Blanchard six years to film Frank & Zed (seven to complete). Produced by Blanchard and animation veteran Evan Baily (Sonic Boom, George of the Jungle), The 93-minute flick came to life completely independently with a crew of just over 100 people, supported by crowdfunding, private equity and personal investment — a labor of love any mad monster creator could be proud of!

    Blanchard was kind enough to give us a verbal tour of this ambitious production and share his passion, inspirations — and an explosive chemistry lesson for other puppeteers regarding hot glue and grain alcohol.

    Frank & Zed premieres Saturday, October 10 during NightStream. (nightstream.org | Oct. 8-11)

    Animation Magazine: How did you come up with the idea for Frank & Zed? Did you always plan for it to be a full-length movie?

    Jesse Blanchard: The kernel of the idea just popped into my head: I knew there were two monsters in a symbiotic relationship where Frank would get brains for Zed and Zed was responsible for hooking Frank up to charge. I also knew that Zed was slowly falling apart because Frank was feeding him squirrel brains instead of human brains. Until one day…

    The story did grow a lot from that first spark. Initially, it was just going to be a 15-minute short and you wouldn’t actually see the villagers. However, it quickly grew into a feature as I just had too much fun exploring the world.

    What prior experience with filmmaking did you have going into such an ambitious project?

    My day job is doing film, and I’ve also done a lot of creative work from start to finish. For me, it was this holistic knowledge of the process from beginning to the end that was critical. With puppets, for a character to enter a room, pick up a candle and blow it out is an incredibly complex sequence. So, knowing as a writer/director/puppeteer/editor how I could get all the elements to work together was invaluable.

    That said, every day was a lesson in humility, because every single shot starts as a failure — I can think of only one or two that worked the first time, the other couple thousand are just soul-crushingly hard to make work. But, if you keep at it, you somehow manage. So, in that sense, stubbornness and idiocy were also crucial!

    Jesse Blanchard (right) and Frank
    Jesse Blanchard (right) and Frank

    This movie took seven years to film and complete … what was the production process like over this long labor?

    The film is so big and daunting, getting started sometimes feels impossible. Like, how do you make a forest that looks real? How do you make a practical God of Death puppet that doesn’t look completely stupid?

    We average 11 shots per day, so you have to be incredibly focused because wasting even one shot adds 10%. So, for me, it was always a process of splitting my vision, keeping one eye focused on what we had to do that day — how do we get to 11 shots? — while also keeping the larger picture in mind.

    One thing that helps is, I storyboard exhaustively; 98% of the set-ups are in the finished film. You can’t shoot coverage with puppets, it’s just impossible and it takes too long. Plus, we only have one of every puppet. So, when that puppet gets destroyed in the Orgy of Blood. There’s no going back!

    So, literally the process was taking a couple thousands storyboards, putting them up on a wall and saying, “What 11 shots can we do today?” Then just tackling them one at a time … Fortunately, 99% of the work was done before COVID hit.

    Frank & Zed storyboards
    Frank & Zed storyboards

    Why was it important to you to have all hand-made puppets, props and practical effects?

    There’s lots of answers to that question! First, I made this film with puppets so I could make a puppet film! That’s a huge part of the reward — you get to do all these things. Second, my goal as a filmmaker is to entertain my audience; they are forefront in my mind at every step of the process. So, I hope the joy me and my incredible team have making all this stuff finds its way onto the screen and from there into the audience themselves. So, the hope is the process itself makes the movie better.

    How were all these elements created?

    Making all the stuff was, of course, a HUGE task. Frank and Zed were sculpted, cast and painted by Erin DeBray. He also did the Weapons of Power and other sculpted details. The felt puppets were all built by Jason Ropp. One of the things that I love about this movie is seeing these two very different styles crash into each other. I just love what both of these guys bring to the film. I did most of the set-building and mechanization, etc., as well as created all the practical effects elements. (The only puppet I built all by my lonesome was Grog, the 7-footer.)

    Frank & Zed
    Frank & Zed

    Beyond that, it’s also about creating an illusion, a fantasy. I felt that for it to be believable and to work together, everything had to be as real as possible. What’s amazing about practical effects is you get that reality instantly. You pay for it with set-up time and lots and lots of failure but, when it works, it’s so rewarding. I also knew I couldn’t compete with studio CGI even if I wanted to, so practical effects gave me the ability to deliver incredible effects with micro budgets. Lastly, the limitations of practical effects force creativity and spontaneity. It’s a strange combination of total control and letting go at the same time that can, with a lot of work, produce stunning results.

    The thunderstorm was done using a salt-water tank. It takes four hours per set-up, you have to light and focus on something that is not there. Then you get one take and, if you get it wrong, it’s another four hours to reset. There’s no Control Z. There’s no undo. It’s reality.

    That said, practical effects are also fun! We had a kiddie pool that the puppeteers would sit in because there was so much fake blood shooting out! It’s so stupid and silly you’re just laughing the entire time. The absurdity is overwhelming in the best possible way.

    Frank & Zed
    Frank & Zed

    How did you get started in puppeteering?

    I turned to puppets out of desperation. I was making films but couldn’t get what was in my head out onto the screen; it kept failing at the shooting stage. So I said, “What if I use puppets instead of actors?” I’d always wanted to do a barbershop horror short film. So, I tried one with puppets. The result was Shine, and it was so much fun, I never looked back.

    Who are your biggest inspirations as a filmmaker?

    Of course Jim Henson is the massive influence on Frank & Zed. However, it’s not just that he used puppets — it’s the way he treated them as real characters and the humanity of his work. There’s a warmth and a tenderness in everything that Jim Henson did that I have tried my best to replicate, even though I’m stuffing in a bunch of blood and gore. It’s a line that’s hard to articulate but feels very clear to me. That humanity, for lack of a better word, is what I find the most inspiring about Jim Henson’s work and what I tried my best to honor.

    Next is Peter Jackson: the way he controls the camera and the incredible rhythm of his films is so inspiring, not to mention the humor, world building and a million other things. Playfulness.

    Frank & Zed
    Frank & Zed

    Lastly, Richard Taylor. He’s been such a huge inspiration. The passion and depth that he creates in his worlds is so incredible. In fact, I snuck his name into the set as a small homage to him. I have this fantasy that one day I’ll be able to give it to him. Beyond that, I really tried to create the same atmosphere on the production that it seems like both Sir Jackson and Taylor create in their work. I believe people do their best work when they are invested in the project and having fun, especially on tasks of this magnitude. That, maybe more than anything, was absolutely invaluable on this film.

    I also have to give a shoutout to Satoshi Kon and specifically Paranoia Agent and Paprika. He shows unequivocally how powerful animation can be. A true master that set the bar so high, there’s a vast space below that I’m stretching up to try and fill.

    What was the biggest challenge of making this movie?

    Everything in the film was written specifically ignoring that it would be done with puppets. For instance, my two lead characters: Frank has water and a dome over his head and Zed has a huge hole in his head; these are both places where the puppeteer’s hand should be — they are terrible designs for puppets! But, I did that thinking we’d find a way.

    Beyond that, with puppets, every single little thing is fake. And if even one little tiny thing is off, the illusion fails. So, if the puppets’ eyelines are correct but their wrist bends in a funny way or you see the puppeteer too much, the entire shot is ruined. The margin of error is razor thin for five or six things all at the same time, so getting the timing of all the elements exactly right, frequently with more than one puppeteer on a single puppet AND hitting focus marks, etc., is really hard. Then, once you get all that, you have to do it fast enough and make it entertaining, make it feel alive. That constellation of challenges is really tough.

    Frank & Zed
    Frank & Zed

    If you had to pick, what is your absolute favorite / craziest / most rewarding moment in the final film?

    Honestly, the craziest thing for me is that I still love this movie. It’s bizarre that Frank and Zed and all the other characters feel real to me even though I was there every step of the way. I know they’re fake.

    Beyond that, seeing the film with an audience for the first time was incredible. Especially with the cast and crew, many of whom had been on the film for so long and really had no idea what the film would shape up to be. Those experiences really trump all the many soaked in blood, gore and fire that contend for my attention.

    … Although, we do have a fire-breathing puppet in the film, and we were using Everclear as the combustible. What I didn’t know at the time is alcohol is a release agent for hot glue, which is how we make a lot of the felt puppets. So, I’m up to my shoulder in this puppet, shooting out alcohol take after take, gradually soaking my arm, rushing to get the take as the puppet falls apart and then completely bursts into flames — which looks amazing! So, as they’re rushing in with the fire extinguisher I’m shouting “No! Keep rolling, keep rolling!” deathly afraid they won’t get the shot.

    Frank & Zed
    Frank & Zed

    We often hear about a “hand-drawn Renaissance” or a “stop-motion Renaissance” — do you think we’ll see a puppetry Renaissance?

    People want great stories and they want something different. At least I do. What’s great about all these different mediums is that they affect the process of telling the story. With puppets or stop motion, it’s so different from other mediums that it finds its way into the viewer’s experience. Some of the best moments are accidents or places where the puppeteer did something different than I expected, or what I wanted to happen was just failing miserably and a new, creative solution arose. For me, puppets are the best way to get what’s in my head out onto screen because it’s a combination of control and spontaneity that is so magical. As long as the process remains different, I can’t see it ever going away.

    Now that it’s making its big virtual premiere, what do you hope audiences get out of the experience?

    The number one thing I hope people get out of Frank & Zed is a good 90 minutes; I hope they get lost in this crazy little world and have a smile on their face. If an artist or storyteller saw the film and it encouraged them in some way to tell their own stories, that would be one of the biggest thrills I could have. Certainly, that’s what got me started, adding to that tradition in even a small way would be an honor.

    Frank & Zed
    Frank & Zed
  • More Tricks & Treats Await in ‘The Addams Family 2’, Coming Halloween 2021

    More Tricks & Treats Await in ‘The Addams Family 2’, Coming Halloween 2021

    The sequel to MGM’s 2019 box-office smash hit The Addams Family has rounded out its stellar voice cast with the additions of Bill Hader as all-new character “Cyrus” and Javon “Wanna” Walton taking on the role of the youngest Addams sibling, “Pugsley.” Hader and Walton join returning Addams Family film stars Charlize Theron (Morticia), Oscar Isaac (Gomez), Chloë Grace Moretz (Wednesday), Nick Kroll (Fester), Bette Midler (Grandma) and Snoop Dogg (Itt).

    Director Greg Tiernan has also returned for the sequel, which will be released in theaters October 8, 2021 via MGM’s United Artists Releasing banner.

    “The success of last year’s animated film was proof of the enduring legacy of The Addams Family and its ability to transcend popular culture,” said Tiernan. “This second film will be every bit as fun as the original. We are thrilled to welcome Bill Hader and Javon Walton, and to welcome back our incredible original cast for this exciting next chapter in the Addams’s journey.”

    Additionally, an Addams Family superfan will have the exciting and unique opportunity to voice a yet-to-be-named character in the film by entering The Addams Family Voice Challenge. The global voiceover contest runs from October 8 to November 4 in select markets. Interested applicants can visit www.AddamsVoiceChallenge.com to learn more about how to apply.

    In The Addams Family 2, The Addams get tangled up in wacky adventures and find themselves involved in hilarious run-ins with all sorts of unsuspecting characters. Always staying true to themselves, the Addams Family brings their iconic spookiness and kookiness wherever they go. The film is produced by Gail Berman, Conrad Vernon, Danielle Sterling and Alison O’Brien. Executive producers are Jonathan Glickman, Cassidy Lange and Andrew Mittman. Laura Brousseau and Kevin Pavlovic will serve as co-directors alongside Tiernan.

    Bill Hader [Photo: Corey Nickols/Contour]
    Bill Hader [Photo: Corey Nickols/Contour]

    Bill Hader made the switch from being a master of impressions on Saturday Night Live to creating, directing, writing, producing and starring as a burned-out assassin trying to break into the L.A. theater scene in HBO’s Emmy-nominated series BARRY, which will return for its third season in 2021. He is also co-creator of IFC’s Documentary Now! and spent eight seasons on SNL, garnering four Emmy nominations for his work on the series. Hader has starred in such films as Trainwreck, Superbad, Pineapple Express, Tropic Thunder and The Skeleton Twins. He most recently starred in the 2019 box office hit, It Chapter Two, the sequel to the 2017 horror film, It.

    Javon Walton [Photo: ID PR]
    Javon Walton [Photo: ID PR]

    Javon ‘Wanna’ Walton is known as Under Armour’s youngest athlete. He is a five-time Georgia state champion and four-time USA Boxing South East regional champion boxer. Walton currently stars in Utopia, Amazon’s adaptation of the British television series, written by Gillian Flynn, opposite Sasha Lane, Dan Byrd and John Cusack. In Summer 2021, Walton will star opposite Sylvester Stallone in MGM’s upcoming superhero film Samaritan. In 2019, he made his acting debut as “Ashtray” in HBO’s critically acclaimed audience favorite, Euphoria, and will reprise his role in the highly anticipated season 2. With more than 270k active followers on Instagram, Walton was discovered when Steve Harvey found him on social media in 2017 and brought him on Steve.

    MGM’s upcoming releases include Respect, starring Academy Award winner Jennifer Hudson, the 25th film in the James Bond series No Time to Die starring Daniel Craig, Candyman from writer/producer Jordan Peele and Samaritan starring Sylvester Stallone. The studio’s recently announced projects include Ron Howard’s Thirteen Lives, The Martian author Andy Weir’s next novel (a.k.a. Project Hail Mary) with directors Phil Lord and Chris Miller, George Miller’s Three Thousand Years of Longing, Tommy Kail’s feature adaptation of Fiddler on the Roof, Dog co-directed by Channing Tatum (who will also star) and Reid Carolin, David Slade’s Dark Harvest, Paul Thomas Anderson’s next film about 1970s San Fernando Valley, Cyrano from director Joe Wright and Ridley Scott’s Gucci project.

    The Addams Family 2
    The Addams Family 2
    The Addams Family 2
    The Addams Family 2
  • Distillery Film’s ‘Sullivan Sails’ Casts Off with RTE

    Distillery Film’s ‘Sullivan Sails’ Casts Off with RTE

    Kilkenny-based animation studio Distillery Films announced the commission by Irish kids’ pubcaster RTÉjr for Sullivan Sails. The 26 x 7′ series for children aged 3-5 sets out to encourage a love of adventure, exploration and imagination in young audiences, while introducing them to incredible facts about geography, the environment and international cultures.

    Sullivan is fascinated by maps and aspires to grow up to be a cartographer and explorer. Every day, he opens up his Atlas and dreams up new places to travel to. He is usually accompanied by his imaginary friend Benji — a talking fox, and a former world-famous Navy Admiral. Benji is an old-style explorer and expert navigator — so his skills and experience come in handy when helping the animals and friends they meet along the way.

    Learning about the world they live in is a key part of what Sullivan Sails teaches its young audience. The series also focuses on their social and emotional development, helping them understand the challenges they may encounter as they grow up. Themes include learning to be resourceful, creating boundaries, developing empathy, understanding figures of speech and learning to be responsible for the planet.

    “The audience for Sullivan Sails are starting or have just started school, and are surrounded by new adventures, experiences, risks, challenges and potential,” explains Jonathan Clarke, founder of Distillery Films. “We want to reassure and guide our audience through this new world, and encourage them to be brave, inventive, confident and positive about the future. It’s also important to foster an awareness about the environment and global cultures at an early age. With Sullivan Sails, our goal is to use storytelling to achieve this.”

    Suzanne Kelly, Head of Children’s and Young People’s Content at RTÉ, adds, “I am very excited to welcome Sullivan Sails to our preschool slate of programming. With its unique visual style and engaging storytelling, I am very confident that this series will become a firm favorite with our younger audiences. We here at RTÉjr are always on the lookout for programming that will spark imagination and curiosity, Sullivan Sails is such a series and we cannot wait to travel the world with Sullivan and Benji!”

    Distillery Films is an animation production company specialising in developing original ideas for global audiences. With a background in international co-production, it offers a wide spectrum of services to clients seeking to produce animation in Ireland. Behind everything it does, it endeavors to have a positive impact on the audience that it serves.

    www.distilleryfilms.ie

  • Disney Junior Makes Special Delivery of Guru’s ‘Pikwik Pack’ Nov. 7

    Disney Junior Makes Special Delivery of Guru’s ‘Pikwik Pack’ Nov. 7

    Preschoolers coast-to-coast will “unwrap” a brand-new world of fun, surprise and adventure when Pikwik Pack premieres with two back-to-back episodes, Saturday, November 7, at 8:30 a.m. ET/PT on Disney Junior and DisneyNOW. Produced by Guru Studio, the animation company behind hit shows such as PAW Patrol and True and the Rainbow Kingdom, Pikwik Pack follows four adorable animal friends as they work together to deliver magical surprises to the kind citizens of their bustling town.

    Suki the brave hedgehog, Axel the go-getter raccoon, Tibor the reliable hippo and Hazel the silly cat travel together by land, sea and air to bring packages of joy to their neighbors. Whether it’s a telescope, birthday gift or even a snow-cone – young viewers will learn gentle life lessons about the importance of community, responsibility and working as a team to accomplish a common goal.

    “Kids everywhere love the thrill of unwrapping a special surprise, and they’ll get to experience this joy in each episode of Pikwik Pack,” said series creator Frank Falcone. “Parcel delivery is increasingly becoming a central part of families’ daily lives. In the town of Pikwik, kids get to witness firsthand the important role that package delivery plays in bringing communities together.”

    Pikwik Pack brings to life in colorful 2D animation a bustling town filled with unique vehicles, bright buildings and friends of all shapes, sizes and colors. Each day, a new surprise arrives at the Pikwik Post that must be delivered! Together with the Pikwik Pack, viewers at home learn about navigating directions, geography and weather to deliver packages safely to their destinations. And though they may face rough rapids, stormy skies or a foggy forest, when they work together, the Pikwik Pack always delivers!

    The series was selected as a MIPJunior 2019 World Premiere.

    Led by President and Executive Creative Director Frank Falcone, Guru Studio is an industry leader in animated storytelling for kids of all ages. Its productions include hit series True and the Rainbow Kingdom (Netflix), PAW Patrol (Spin Master), Abby Hatcher (Nick Jr.), Ever After High (Mattel) and two-time Emmy nominee Justin Time. It is currently producing original comedy-adventure series Big Blue with the CBC. The studio also contributed vizdev to Oscar-nominated animated feature The Breadwinner.

    www.gurustudio.com

    Pikwik Pack
    Pikwik Pack
  • Welcome to the Pack! AppleTV+ Debuts Full ‘Wolfwalkers’ Trailer

    Welcome to the Pack! AppleTV+ Debuts Full ‘Wolfwalkers’ Trailer

    A new official trailer for upcoming Apple Original Film Wolfwalkers — from the brilliant Oscar-nominated studios Cartoon Saloon and Melusine (Song of the Sea) — was dropped Thursday morning during its NYCC panel. The spot brings us deeper into the lushly illustrated 2D forest with Mebh as Robyn comes to terms with Wolfwalker magic, and danger presses in on the pack — set, appropriately, to “Running with the Wolves” by AURORA.

    Directed by Tomm Moore and Ross Stewart, Wolfwalkers will be released in U.S. theaters on November 13 through GKIDS, and will premiere globally on AppleTV+ on December 11.

    Synopsis: In a time of superstition and magic, a young apprentice hunter, Robyn Goodfellowe, journeys to Ireland with her father to wipe out the last wolf pack. While exploring the forbidden lands outside the city walls, Robyn befriends a free-spirited girl, Mebh, a member of a mysterious tribe rumored to have the ability to transform into wolves by night. As they search for Mebh’s missing mother, Robyn uncovers a secret that draws her further into the enchanted world of the “Wolfwalkers” and risks turning into the very thing her father is tasked to destroy.

    Wolfwalkers features the voices of Honor Kneafsey as Robyn, Eva Whittaker as Mebh, Sean Bean, Simon McBurney, Tommy Tiernan, Jon Kenny, John Morton and Maria Doyle Kennedy.

    Wolfwalkers
    Wolfwalkers
  • Kate Mulgrew Returns as Capt. Janeway in Nick’s ‘Star Trek: Prodigy’

    Kate Mulgrew Returns as Capt. Janeway in Nick’s ‘Star Trek: Prodigy’

    Nickelodeon and CBS Studios today announced that Kate Mulgrew (Star Trek: Voyager) will reprise her role as Captain Kathryn Janeway in Nickelodeon’s all-new animated series Star Trek: Prodigy. The news was revealed today as a surprise announcement during the Star Trek Universe virtual panel at New York Comic Con. Additional casting news will be announced in the coming months.

    “I have invested every scintilla of my being in Captain Janeway, and I can’t wait to endow her with nuance that I never did before in Star Trek: Prodigy,” said Mulgrew. “How thrilling to be able to introduce to these young minds an idea that has elevated the world for decades. To be at the helm again is going to be deeply gratifying in a new way for me.”

    Executive producer Alex Kurtzman said, “Captain Janeway was held to a different standard than her predecessors. She was asked to embody an inhuman level of perfection in order to be accepted as ‘good enough’ by the doubters, but showed them all what it means to be truly outstanding. We can think of no better captain to inspire the next generation of dreamers on Nickelodeon, than she.”

    “Kate’s portrayal of Captain Janeway is truly iconic, and has resonated with a global audience for many years,” said Ramsey Naito, President, Nickelodeon Animation. “We can’t wait to see her bring this character to life in a whole new way, while continuing to be an inspiration for both new and loyal fans.”

    Watch the NYCC panel on YouTube.

    Developed by Emmy Award winners Kevin and Dan Hageman (Trollhunters, Ninjago) and overseen for Nickelodeon by Naito, Star Trek: Prodigy follows a group of lawless teens who discover a derelict Starfleet ship and use it to search for adventure, meaning and salvation. The CG-animated series will debut exclusively on Nickelodeon in 2021 for a new generation of fans.

    Star Trek: Prodigy is from CBS’ Eye Animation Productions, CBS Studios’ new animation arm; Secret Hideout; and Roddenberry Entertainment. Alex Kurtzman, Heather Kadin, Katie Krentz, Rod Roddenberry and Trevor Roth will serve as executive producers alongside co-showrunners Kevin and Dan Hageman. Ben Hibon will direct, co-executive produce and serve as the creative lead of the all-new animated series. Aaron Baiers will also serve as co-executive producer with Mac Middleton as a producer. Production of Star Trek: Prodigy is overseen for Nickelodeon by Claudia Spinelli, Senior Vice President, Animation Development and Kelley Gardner, Vice President, Current Series Animation.

    Star Trek: Prodigy joins the expanding “Star Trek” franchise for ViacomCBS as the first Star Trek series aimed at younger audiences for Nickelodeon. The Star Trek Universe on CBS All Access currently includes hit original series Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, the animated series Star Trek: Lower Decks, the upcoming Star Trek: Strange New Worlds and the development of a Section 31-based series with Michelle Yeoh.

    Kate Mulgrew
    Kate Mulgrew
  • Fonda Snyder Joins Battat Co. as EVP of New Entertainment Division

    Prominent global toy company Battat Co. is launching a new entertainment division. Company President and Owner Joe Battat announced that award-winning literary producer and former Disney Channel VP Fonda Snyder will serve as Executive Vice President, Battat Entertainment.

    “Fonda’s appointment reflects our commitment to excellence. Her track record of innovation and success demonstrates a unique creative sense and keen strategic thinking, making her the ideal executive to build Battat Entertainment,” said Battat.

    Snyder will lead the creative development, packaging and production of entertainment based on the company’s award-winning best selling brands that include Our Generation, Li’l Woodzeez, Land of B. and Glitter Girls.

    Li’l Woodzeez
    Li’l Woodzeez

    Over the course of her career, Snyder has written, developed and sold more than 50 projects — including animated features to DreamWorks, Warner Bros, Sony and Netflix, and TV series to Disney Junior, PBS and Netflix.

    As President of Alchemy Ink, Snyder worked with renown creators including Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Berkeley Breathed, New York Times Bestselling authors Suzanne & Max Lang, Eisner Prize winner Brad Meltzer, Academy Award-winning actor Kevin Costner and The Jim Henson Company. She also created strategies for iconic brands such as Raggedy Ann, Encyclopedia Brown and The Phantom Tollbooth.

    Prior to Alchemy, she served as VP, Disney Channel Original Movies and helped launch Technicolor’s IP development efforts. Snyder also co-founded Storyopolis, a franchise-oriented, family entertainment company financed by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.

    With her extensive knowledge and experience, Battat Co. will look to Snyder to spearhead partnerships with family entertainment companies, animation studios, global broadcasters and streamers.

    “I look forward to adapting Battat’s beloved properties. To be able to curate my favorite writers, creators and artists — to work with exceptional animation studios worldwide and build compelling TV series is a thrilling opportunity,” said Snyder. “Battat’s mantra, ‘Childhood is magical,’ will definitely be reflected in all of our projects!”

    Battat Co. toys are distributed both online and in major retailers in 65 countries throughout all seven continents. A family-owned business since 1897, brothers Joseph and Dany Battat lead the company. At its Montreal headquarters, teams of designers create, dream and inspire. Collaborating with overseas offices, engineers innovate to develop more sustainable manufacturing practices.

    www.battatco.com

  • ‘Hazbin Hotel’ Creator Vivziepop Teams with Horseless Cowboy on Devilishly Twisted ‘Helluva Boss’ Series

    ‘Hazbin Hotel’ Creator Vivziepop Teams with Horseless Cowboy on Devilishly Twisted ‘Helluva Boss’ Series

    ‘Hazbin Hotel’ Creator Vivziepop Teams with Horseless Cowboy on Devilishly Twisted ‘Helluva Boss’ Series

    The wildly popular animated web series Helluva Boss is releasing a new season on YouTube this fall with an exciting roster of voice talent, cast and recorded by Horseless Cowboy.

    Helluva Boss is a dark comedy animated web series directed, written and produced by Vivienne Medrano, the creator of the incredibly successful animated web series Hazbin Hotel. After posting the pilots for both series to her YouTube channel, “Vivziepop”, the videos became an overnight sensation, and both pilots have amassed a combined 65 million views since their premiere in late 2019. A24, the production company behind Euphoria and The Lighthouse, announced on August 7 that it plans to pick up Hazbin Hotel for a full series order.

    The new season of Helluva Boss will begin with eight episodes which tell the story of a group of eccentric imps who attempt to start their own assassination agency by using a magical book which allows them to jump between Hell and Earth. The creative consultancy Horseless Cowboy partnered with Medrano to cast and record actors who could lend their singing voices to the musical numbers while also delivering vocal performances in the devilishly twisted comic tone that the series requires.

    Helluva Boss
    Helluva Boss

    “We were thrilled to partner with a brilliant young creator on such a unique series. Fans of the pilot will enjoy it as we further explore the world and introduce new characters voiced by some wonderful actors,” said Timothy Cubbison, General Manager of Horseless Cowboy. “The show is special and has developed a loyal following. In fact, some well-known actors even reached out about getting involved, so fans should expect a couple fun surprises during the season.”

    The cast includes co-writer and star Brandon Rogers (Magic Funhouse!, Blame the Hero), Richard Steven Horvitz (Invader Zim, The Angry Beavers), Erica Lindbeck (The Owl House, Your lie in April English dub), and several surprise guest stars.

    Medrano and Horseless Cowboy are anticipating a great response from fans to the premiere of the next episode of the first season of Helluva Boss in the fall of 2021. The entire first season will be released on Medrano’s VivziePop YouTube channel.

    Helluva Boss
    Helluva Boss

    Horseless Cowboy provides the highest-quality casting and performance services for video games, virtual reality, television and movies. Based in Los Angeles, Horseless Cowboy is trusted by hundreds of prestigious game studios, producers and streaming services like Ubisoft, Netflix, Tangible Play, Remedy Entertainment, EA and Google to deliver writing, casting, voice-over and performance-capture content. With 15 years of experience producing voice-over for video games, original animation and dubbing foreign content into English, Horseless Cowboy has overseen the recording of over 1 million lines of dialogue.

    www.horselesscowboy.com

  • MIP Month! Global TV & Streaming News

    MIP Month! Global TV & Streaming News

    Hasbro’s global entertainment studio eOne has secured a strong line up of broadcast partners across most of the globe for My Little Pony: Pony Life, a brand-new 40 x 11′ series premiering in select territories this fall, with a larger roll-out running end of 2020 to spring 2021. The series explores the funny side of friendship, following the hilarious adventures of the ponies as they spend most of their time at Sugarcube Corner. The ‘Mane 6’ (Twilight Sparkle, Applejack, Rarity, Pinkie Pie, Rainbow Dash and Fluttershy) run into all sorts of cupcake conundrums, frosting fails and magical mishaps as Pinkie Pie serves up frosted cupcakes to the best customers in the world — her friends!

    International broadcast partners include Turner Australia, Turner South East Asia and Channel 9 GO! in Australia, TVNZ New Zealand, Mediacorp Singapore, Spacetoon in the Middle East, Sony Pictures Television’s Tiny Pop in the U.K., Discovery Kids in Latin America, Discovery Family in the U.S., Corus Entertainment’s Treehouse in Canada, Disney Channel in Germany, Gulli in France and Cartoonito in Italy. The show will also be available on selected digital platforms at a later stage. Pony Life will join its portfolio partner Peppa Pig in several territories, including Canada (Treehouse), Latin America (Discovery) giving the partners the chance to present two iconic brands which are guaranteed to keep their audiences engaged and entertained.

    Mighty Little Bheem
    Mighty Little Bheem

    Jetpack Distribution has acquired worldwide rights for global hit Netflix original Mighty Little Bheem, produced by India’s Green Gold Animation. The quirky, non-dialog preschool series will be offered for pay TV, free-to-air, catch-up and in-flight at MIPCOM 2020. The series comprises Season 1 (21 x 5’30”), Season 2 (26 x 5’30”) and special episodes (3 x 6′). Netflix’s first original animation produced in India debuted in 190 countries in 2019, with more than 27 million households around the world streaming the series and helping it attain the streamer’s No. 1 pre-k spot in the U.S. The show also achieved a record-breaking 1.5 billion YouTube views and was the most-watched video on the official Netflix kids channel.

    Mighty Little Bheem is the international spin off of India’s most beloved animated character, Chhota Bheem. It follows the adventures of toddler Bheem, whose boundless curiosity – and extraordinary might – lead to mischief and adventure in his Indian town Dholakpur. He travels across Dholakpur making friends with everyone he meets in search of his favorite treat, ladoos (an Indian sweet).

    Eena Meena Deeka
    Eena Meena Deeka

    WildBrain Spark and Cosmos-Maya have joined forces to grow non-dialog comedy Eena Meena Deeka. The partners will co-finance Season 3 of the 2D-animated series, to be produced by Cosmos-Maya for delivery in Dec. 2020. The new season will roll out alongside S1 on a new exclusive YouTube channel, launched and managed by WildBrain Spark. Cosmos-Maya created the series and handled the production and distribution of the first two seasons worldwide, engaging audiences in over 100 countries. WildBrain Spark will hold AVOD and other distribution rights for S1 & S3 outside India and the Indian subcontinent, and will also spearhead ad sales for Eena Meena Deeka on AVOD platforms in the same territories. Cosmos-Maya retains global linear television rights for the series. Worldwide rights for season two are held by Netflix.

    Eena Meena Deeka is a slapstick action comedy series full of gags, which tells the story of a constant chase between a cunning fox and three chicks – Eena, Meena and Deeka. The perennially hungry fox is forever on the prowl for these chicks who are always at the ready to foil his plan and out-fox him. Every failure goads the angry but determined fox to devise even more elaborate plans to outwit them in each passing episode, which usually ends up being a wild chick chase.

    Who Who
    Who Who

    Meta Media Entertainment has been appointed as the worldwide distributor for Croatian 2D preschool series Who Who. The show, formerly known as Little Who Who, was the winner of last year’s MIP Junior Best Pitch when it was presented by ]Recircle (Nutz, Tree & Bee). The animation has been commissioned by Croatian pubcaster HRT. Simon Rolph (Wussywat the Clumsy Cat) is co-creator and head writer on the series. The project was supported by the Croatian Audiovisual Centre (HAVC), the city of Zagreb, and the MEDIA Sub-programme of Creative Europe.

    The series is about exploring the world, diversity and social-emotional challenges through the eyes of a curious little owl called Who Who, as he discovers the world and meets new people. Who Who lives above the clock tower at Tiny Hill station at the heart of Big Forest with his mum, Mother Who, the station chief. Each episode, someone new alights at the station to await their next train. No matter who it is or where they are from, Who Who and friends welcome them into Tiny Hill with open arms, before involving them in an adventure where someone’s problem needs fixing or there’s a puzzle to solve.

    Pins and Nettie
    Pins and Nettie

    Monster Entertainment is launching Daily Madness’ new series Pins and Nettie at this year’s MIPJunior. A raft of sales have already been made across the globe, with deals recently being signed with RTÉ in Ireland, Showmax in South Africa, YLE in Finland and Hopster in the U.K. The 26 x 5′ series is aimed at a 2-5 year old audience and explores the very real issues of shyness and anxiety in preschoolers. First pitched at Cartoon Forum 2019, production is being completed at present.

    Hedgehog best friends, Pins and Nettie, alongside their friend the narrator, explore the sometimes difficult feelings associated with shyness and anxiety. Co-creators Lindsey Adams and Shannon George teamed up with research expert and educational consultant Karen Leavitt to design a bespoke Shyness Curriculum that ensured that the series would hit the right note with its young audience. As a result, this series will empower the youngest of audiences by teaching them to recognise their feelings of shyness, and supplying them with all the tools they need to build both their self-esteem and their social skills.

    Bing
    Bing

    Acamar Films’ International Emmy Award-winning preschool series Bing continues to go from strength to strength, thanks to a significant new deal signed with Italian free TV broadcast partner Rai. Bing – currently rated currently #1 on the Rai YoYo app – has enjoyed huge commercial success in Italy following its launch in 2018. This new deal further strengthens the partnership with an extension of rights for S1-S3, and the acquisition of S4 (debuting by end of year).

    Italian episodes are also available to stream and download (along with a suite of learning games and activities) via the recently launched app Bing: Guarda, Gioca, Impara, and Bing’s Italian language YouTube channel – which currently generates an average of around 30 million views each month. Bing will continue to be available via Italian VOD platform TIMVision (currently producing Bing’s first ever sign-language version) and on DeA Junior, where it is the #1 show on-air. Bing will make its Amazon Prime Video Italy debut in October.

    France TV Distribution is launching three new animated series as part of its MIPCOM 2020 portfolio:

    • Ana Pumpkin (52 x 5′), produced by Folimage / Les Armateurs, introduces us to the world of a little girl of five years old and her everyday adventures. With the help of her loving, confident family, Ana explores the world around her in her own way, full of joy and curiosity, even if she sometimes finds out that her way is not always the best. In any case, she never gives up and always follows up on her ideas, even the strangest ones! She and her inseparable companion, Buddy the dog, are always there for each other and share everything. As with all best friends forever, they have their squabbles and disagreements, but there is generally a great deal of understanding, laughter, affection, humor and love between them.
    • Disco Dragon (52 x 13′, in development) from Mondo TV is set in Grooville, the home of Disco, a dragon who’s crazy about music and can hear each child’s inner groove. When one of those little soundtracks goes off the rails, Disco gets edgy! It’s an alarm signal meaning a child needs help. On his missions, Disco can count on the help of his little neighbor, Betty, a music-mad hothead like him. The highly ingenious girl has an answer to every problem and sets the tempo. Betty’s high spirits and Disco Dragon’s awkwardness lead to some unlikely situations… and plenty of confusion! But a confusion that helps each child to work out how to find the harmony in their inner sounds. And that really is groovy!
    • Grosha & Mr. B (52 x 11′, in production), produced by La Station Animation, offers a children’s take on the detective genre and cult comedy-action films. Grosha & Mr. B are two cat detectives who work as a team at the Special Bureau of Investigation (SBI). The two agents have diametrically opposed methods and characters, and their job is to solve the wackiest of criminal cases. Grosha, the cat from a modest background, and the aristocratic Mr. B are backed by the SBI’s brilliant team of experts led by Miss Tigri: Turbo, the forensic tortoise, and Paquo and Paco, the two flying-squad pigeons.
    Ollie and Friends
    Ollie and Friends

    Distributor Planet Nemo by Ankama has sold two new preschool series to Discovery Kids in the Middle East and Northern Africa (MENA, both launching October 25. Super Builder is a 13 x 11’ preschool show produced by Benlai about a spirited team of young construction vehicles, called into action to lead the renovations in the town of Sunshine Bay. The 66 x 11’ series Ollie & Friends is produced by Infinite Studios and welcomes kids to Ollipolis, a fantastic world where shapes come to life.

    Simon
    Simon

    GO-N Productions continues to build upon the successful commercialization of global preschool hit Simon produced by GO-N in collaboration with France Televisions. The Paris-based producer/distributor has secured broadcast deals in additional territories with the completion of Season 3 and full delivery of 156 x 5’ episodes. New pick-ups include Tiny Pop (Sony Picture Television) in the U.K., Canal Panda (Dreamia) in Portugal, IVI.ru in Russia and TVNZ in New Zealand.

    These sales are in addition to those previously announced: Netflix (Worldwide), TV5 Monde (Worldwide), NHK (Japan), Jetsen Huashi TV (China), Disney Southeast Asia, Disney Junior Latin America, TéléQuébec (Canada), Clan-RTVE (Spain), Cartoonito (Turner Italy), RTS & RSI (Switzerland), NPO (Netherlands), YLE (Finland), RUV (Iceland), DR TV (Denmark), SVT (Sweden), NRK (Norway), ERR (Estonia), HRT (Croatia), RTV (Slovenia), HOP! (Israel), Discovery Kids (MENA) and JimJam (Central Europe).

    GO-N has also inked a new development deal with France Televisions for a fourth season of its iconic IP. The previous seasons were about children exploring everyday life, this new season will take young viewers into a world of superheroes! Production is due to start in 2021 for delivery by Summer 2022.

  • Exclusive Clip: French-Cambodian Feature ‘The Khmer Smile’

    Exclusive Clip: French-Cambodian Feature ‘The Khmer Smile’

    We are very pleased to present an exclusive clip from the upcoming animated feature The Khmer Smile, (Le Sourire Khmer) written and directed by Fabrice Beau. The Animalps/Luchafilms production tells the autobiographical story of a young man of Cambodian background who was adopted by French parents when he was six months old. He and his partner Francesca leave their home in Paris and return to Cambodia to find out the identity of his birth parents, not realizing what a wild and unexpected adventure awaits them.

    The feature, which has a ballpark 1.5 million euro ($1.8 million) budget, is being produced by two Cambodian studios, Phare Creative Studio in Battambang and The Weaver Ants in Phnom Penh, and is being animated using TVPaint.

    The Khmer Smile
    The Khmer Smile

    As Beau, who has been working in the French animation industry for many years, tells us, “When I was adopted in France, I was a baby. I was born in Cambodia in 1974, but I visited for the first time my country of origin in 2010. After this exciting trip, I decided to express my feelings and experiences through an animated feature. So, I started to write the script for The Khmer Smile. The key word of the movie is ‘identity,’ but it’s ‘animated road movie’ at heart, an adventure for family audiences.” He adds, “This movie is a testimony of an adopted child. It’s a mix of fantasy and real events. I wish to mix lived moments with magic, drama, action and humor.”

    Fabrice Beau
    Fabrice Beau

    The feature was one of the “In Concept” projects selected at Cartoon Movie four years ago. Beau and his team began pre-production in the beginning of 2019, and the animation process began in Cambodia last summer. “We plan to deliver the movie towards the end of 2021 and are hoping for a release in the spring of 2022,” says Beau.

    The producers provided Animation Magazine with an exclusive WIP clip which shows the very beginning of The Khmer Smile‘s incredible journey:

    LE SOURIRE KHMER_CLIP_2020 from Animalps Productions on Vimeo.

    You can find out more about this charming 2D-animated feature at www.thekhmersmile-themovie.com.

    The Khmer Smile
    The Khmer Smile