An animated series produced by Irish studio Giant Animation will be spearheading YouTube’s changing approach to its YouTube Originals content, when it is made available for free to all viewers this February.
Sherwood is a 10-episode animated series inspired by the legend of Robin Hood and set in a dystopian future where Earth has been destroyed by climate change and is ruled by the evil sheriff of Sherwood. In this modern retelling, Robin is a 14-year-old girl who uses technology and code to hack and do battle with the sheriff.
“A key focus of the show is trying to inspire young women and girls to be more interested in technology and to know that they can have an impact on the future of technology. We were very pleased to partner with YouTube to produce Sherwood, which is their first original animated series,” said Alex Sherwood, Creative Director & Co-Founder, Giant Animation.
“The response to Sherwood has been truly outstanding and we are thrilled that it already has over 20 million views. We are also delighted that it will be going free to all viewers in February so even more people will get a chance to watch it. More than 120 people worked on Sherwood at our Dublin office and it has a world-class cast, including The Witcher’s Anya Calotra.”
Sherwood was the first animated series commissioned for the YouTube Premium service, and other series include Cobra Kai, Impulse and Step Up: High Water. The first episode of Sherwood has over 20 million views.
YouTube is now changing its approach to its Premium service and is making all of its YouTube Originals series free to all viewers globally. This is a significant change from its plans to charge a monthly fee for access to original content, and could prove to be a major headache for Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney. In September 2019, YouTube also announced a major $100 million investment in original children’s content.
Sherwood was co-produced by Baby Octopus in New York and Toybox in Auckland, New Zealand. In the last 15 years, the number of animation studios in Ireland has risen from six to over 30. An estimated 1,500 people work in the sector, which generates around €200 million for the Irish economy annually.
Oscar-qualifying New York International Children’s Film Festival (NYICFF) announces the complete short film lineup for its 2020 Festival, which runs February 21-March 15 at theaters throughout New York. Established in 1997 and now in its 23rd year, the the nation’s largest film fest for children and teens presents a month of artistically distinctive, thought-provoking, and engaging new feature film and short film programs from more than 30 countries, selected for a new generation of filmgoers aged 3 to 18.
The 2020 festival will offer 10 Short Film Collections, screening 83 films from 28 countries — with 53% of the filmmakers represented being women.
Significant world premieres include the French-Korean animation Boriya (Short Films 1), celebrated animator Koji Yamamura’s Dreams Into Drawing (Friends & Neighbors: Japan) and the witty new animated music series The Musifants from Germany (NYICFF Rocks).
Dreams into Drawing
This year’s esteemed jury of filmmakers, actors and academic and industry leaders includes:
Academy Award-winning animator and NYU Professor John Canemaker (The Moon and the Son)
Netflix Original Animation VP Melissa Cobb
Academy Award-winning director/writer/producer Sofia Coppola
Academy Award-winning actor and Founder of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media Geena Davis
Tony- and Emmy-nominated actor Hope Davis
Award-winning animator Elizabeth Ito (Welcome to My Life, Adventure Time, forthcoming City of Ghosts)
Award-winning animator/director Jorge R. Gutierrez (Book of Life, Son of Jaguar, forthcoming Maya and the Three)
Geena Davis Foundation CEO Madeline Di Nonno
Award-winning actor Kyle McLachlan
Producer/director & NYU Tisch Associate Professor Lynne McVeigh
Award-winning actor Matthew Modine
Academy Award-nominated director/writer/producer/animator Mark Osborne (Kung Fu Panda, The Little Prince)
Academy Award-winning director Peter Ramsey (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Rise of the Guardians)
Award-winning filmmaker and Founder/Exec Director of Queer/Art Ira Sachs
Academy Award-nominated actor and Room to Grow children’s foundation board member Uma Thurman
Academy Award-nominated director and Cartoon Saloon co-Founder Nora Twomey (The Breadwinner, The Secret of Kells)
Academy Award-nominated writer/director/actor Taika Waititi
Peter Ramsey
The Festival culminates with a closing night celebration on Saturday, March 14, which includes the announcement of the 2020 award winners and a special program of the Best of the Fest short films
NYICFF’s signature shorts programs are its most popular screenings, featuring a broad range of new animated, live-action and documentary short films. The curated collections are shaped from submissions from filmmakers across the globe — representing artists at all career stages, from emerging filmmakers to veteran auteurs and multiple award-winners.
The 2020 festival continues its commitment to diverse and inclusive representation with a selection of short films that provide relatable, age-appropriate, thought-provoking ways to challenge gender and cultural stereotypes to expand crucial conversations for kids. From the artful animation and thought-provoking tone of Géraldine Charpentier’s Self Story, a self-reflection by one young person who, through cinema, realized they need not be bound by a fixed, binary idea of gender; to a warm and charming reflection on black male friendship, fatherhood and affection, in Camrus Johnson’s Grab My Hand: A Letter to My Dad; to the playful yet pointed emphasis on the importance of a girl voicing her needs in Teresa Romo’s Shy & Ketchup — these films reflect a broad landscape of storytellers and themes. Films are shared in their original language wherever possible.
Self Story
“Our shorts programs offer the opportunity to bring together so many extraordinary voices from around the world. We’re thrilled that female filmmakers continue to figure prominently, that our offerings circumnavigate the globe with films from Mexico to Iran, Korea to Qatar; that exceptional films from cultures throughout the U.S. historically underrepresented on screen get the spotlight they deserve, and that our next generation young audiences get to be inspired by an inclusive and diverse mix of stories, vision and languages.”
— María-Christina Villaseñor, Programming Director
The short film programs include Shorts for Tots for ages 3-6; Short Films 1 for ages 5-10; Short Films 2 for ages 8-14; and Short Films3 for ages 12 to adult. In addition to these general interest programs, NYICFF presents thematically organized shorts collections, including longtime favorite Girls’ POV, presented with support from the Sony USA Foundation, in which viewpoints from girls and women around the world are front and center; Boys Beyond Boundaries, now in its third edition which expands how boys and young men are typically portrayed on screen, while also challenging the possibilities for gender representation; and Heebie Jeebies, a much-anticipated collection that rewards quirky-minded tween, teen and curious adult audiences with unique tales that go beyond the expected.
Grab My Hand: A Letter to My Dad
In addition to the previously announced Friends & Neighbors: Japan focus, NYICFF 2020 makes two additions to its shorts lineup. New annual offering ¡Hola NYICFF! Shorts in Spanish offers an exciting panorama of live-action, documentary and animated shorts for audiences hungry for more Spanish-language content, with stories from Latin America, the Caribbean and the U.S. highlighted in the program and throughout the wider Festival slate. NYICFF Rocks: Musical Shorts is a special collection, bringing together an eclectic and innovative mix of inventive music videos, clever animated musical stories for kids, and plenty of upbeat surprises for all.
Ailin en la Luna
Bolstering its Spotlight on Canada will be exceptional films across multiple programs. From award-winning animation produced by the legendary National Film Board of Canada (Heebie Jeebies – Uncle Thomas: Accounting for the Days; Jury Award at Annecy 2020, Best Animated Short Subject Annie Awards 2020), to producing initiatives supporting the creative vision of female directors (Girls’ POV – The Butterfly Affect) to innovative works by recent graduates of the country’s top animation schools (Girls’ POV – Wash Day; Short Films 3 – In Passing), the strength of Canada’s stylistically and culturally diverse animation culture is brilliantly showcased at NYICFF. Canadian films at NYICFF are supported in part by the Consulate General of Canada and Telefilm Canada.
Leading Scottish production companies Red Kite Animation and Once Were Farmers are joining forces to create a brand new combined studio: Wild Child Animation. The 50/50 complementary joint venture will be based in Scotland and will focus on providing content and animation services for both the U.K. domestic and international marketplaces.
Wild Child Animation brings together the collective talents of multi award-winning production company Red Kite Animation (Dennis the Menace and Gnasher, Wendy) and BAFTA-winning animation studio Once Were Farmers, which specializes in story and character creation, graphics and visual effects and 3D animation.
Red Kite’s Sueann Rochester and Ken Anderson will be Managing Director and Director of Exploration and Discovery, respectively, of the new venture. Once Were Farmers’ Will Adams and Rory Lowe will both be Creative Directors of Wild Child Animation. Ron Henry will join the new company as Director of Operations and Michael McKiernan will be Finance Director.
“Having worked together co-developing previous projects, we realized that the combination of Once Were Farmers’ creative skills and Red Kite’s production expertise was a natural fit,” said Rochester. “Our complementary skill sets will accelerate our expansion and increase our impact at an international level.”
Red Kite Animation was launched in 1997 by Ken Anderson and Rachel Bevan Baker. With numerous short films, children’s and animated series, its properties have aired on major networks around the world, including: BBC, France Televisions, ZDF, Canal+, ABC, Disney XD, Teletoon, The Hub, Channel 9 Australia and Cartoon Network.
Founded in 2002 by Will Adams and Rory Lowe, Once Were Farmers is one of the most diverse digital production houses operating in Scotland, and has grown a reputation for cinematic flair and innovation in advertising, film and broadcast. The BAFTA-winning prodco and animation studio has teams in Stirling and Suffolk creating characters, stories, graphics and visual effects for an international client base.
Canada’s Guru Studio, a leader in children’s entertainment, has signed a co-development deal with Japan-based ADK Emotions (Doraemon, Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters, Beyblade) to produce The Ora Chronicles (working title), a new serialized action-adventure series for kids 6-11.
The Ora Chronicles tells the story of five very different middle school girls whose shared destiny is to defeat a great evil that resides within the Earth’s core.
Guru Studio will manage international distribution with ADK Emotions handling Asia Pacific in addition to all merchandising and licensing rights.
“We are very excited to be working with the incredible team at ADK Emotions, who have a rich history of building successful brands that travel the globe,” said Rachel Marcus, VP of Creative Development at Guru Studio.
“It’s our great honor to partner with Guru Studio, one of the world’s leading animation studios. We are so thrilled to be developing a fun and exciting show for kids with their amazing team,” said Rika Tsurusaki, Director of IP Producing Department at ADK Emotions.
Guru Studio will be bringing The Ora Chronicles to this year’s Kidscreen Summit in Miami. The studio, recently named #1 in the Kidscreen Hot50 Awards in the Production category, continues to build its roster of original shows — which includes the hit Netflix Original True and the Rainbow Kingdom, Pikwik Pack and Big Blue.
Finland’s POB Production, the prodco behind the Icebreaker Snow book series, and award-winning Finnish animation studio Anima Vitae have signed a contract to develop a trailer for a new animated series: Icebreaker Snow Adventures. The trailer is expected to debut by the end of May 2020.
Anima Vitae has been nominated twice for the Best European Animation Producer, and are best known for Moominvalley and 3D feature Niko and The Way to the Stars, which was sold to 118 countries and was nominated for Best Feature at the European Film Awards.
“We are very excited to announce our official collaboration with the award-winning studio Anima Vitae. We will work together to develop the best 3D animation trailer for our new Icebreaker Snow Adventure series, which will be shown in Annecy MIFA France, Cartoon Forum 2020 and various other events. This new collaboration will bring exciting new future for Icebreaker Snow Adventures content,” said Teemu Leppälä, the CEO of POB Production.
“Icebreaker Snow Adventures is something extraordinary. I have been following Icebreaker Snow’s development path for years, and we are putting our best talents and efforts to make a great trailer to share the story around the world. It is great to be a part of such a unique story about Arctic adventures, and we believe it will spark a lot of interest worldwide,” said Antti Haikala, the COO of Anima Vitae.
Located in Espoo, Finland, POB Production was founded in 2011. Today, the company is expanding operations to the animation, publishing, gaming and licensing industry. Icebreaker Snow Adventures animated series is one of the most remarkable projects of POB Production. The Icebreaker Snow book series has been published in various countries, such as Finland, China, India and Vietnam.
POB Production received funding from DigiDemo /AVEK, OKM for the development of this trailer.
Today (Feb. 4), The Gabe Foundation launched a campaign to help prevent teen suicide. This includes a fundraiser on Indiegogo in support of a powerful new animated series, My Life Is Worth Living.
The campaign’s organizers note that suicide is the second leading cause of death for young people ages 13-17. In the last decade, hospital admissions for suicide attempts have doubled.
Combining the skills of experienced animation storytellers and experts in the field, the goal of the series is to give at-risk teenagers hope by modeling what hope looks like, with teenage animated characters in stories that ring true and are relatable. When a desperate teenager is sitting alone in a dark place, the stories are intended to lead them out of the darkness and into the light.
Episodes of My Life Is Worth Livingwill be available for free 24 hours a day on YouTube and on social media — where teenagers spend 85% of their time.
The free online initiative will provide a global platform capable of connecting and engaging teenagers in the conversation about suicide prevention while teaching important prevention skills. This will include skills like recognizing warning signs associated with suicidal behavior and how to reach out when you’re having suicidal thoughts.
The first episodes of My Life Is Worth Living will premiere worldwide on Suicide Prevention Day, September 10, 2020.
The Gabe Alvarado Foundation is an IRS-designated 501c3 non-profit. All contributions are tax-deductible.
The Academy is closing final voting for the 92nd Oscars at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, February 4. If you’re still weighing the animation and VFX options on your ballot (or just want to review the highlights before cheering on this year’s winner on Sunday), Animation Magazine has compiled a quick list of our print and online stories covering the 2020 Academy Awards nominees.
A new design-led studio dubbed Plume has opened its shutters with a hypnotic, photoreal new CG short exploring the interplay of spiritual energy and the elements, Plume of Light. Established by the founders of sibling studio Feed Me Light, London-based Plume aims to deliver creative visions to clients through movement, design, art direction and technology.
The studio explains that launch film Plume of Light is loosely inspired by the experience of a Kundalini awakening, where energy rises through the body from the base of the spine to the top of the crown, up to the universe and spirit, according to Hindu beliefs. The team used the five elements (Earth, Water, Fire, Air, Spirit) to guide the audience on an emotional and spiritual journey from the depths of the Earth through an inner path towards light. This frame allowed Plume to experiment with different elemental effects and looks, and showcase its capacities for both strong animation and creating realistic visual worlds.
With a name inspired by nature and her elements both physical and conceptual, Plume has been a passion project of Feed Me Light founder Denis Bodart for the past few years, harkening back to his days as a motion-graphics artist and leaning on his experience setting up FML — one of London’s up-and-coming animation studios.
Combining this experience and skillset positions Plume to uniquely blend animation expertise from FML into its design-led production studio. The two outfits sit within the same four walls, allowing for a natural expansion, knowledge sharing among the pool of talent and procedural support, while maintaining clear, individual creative visions.
Visit www.plume.tv or Instagram @plume.tv to discover the new studio.
Paris-based producer & distributor GO-N Productions keeps on expanding its successful series Simon, as its commercial entity GO-N International has wrapped up a new raft of broadcast deals for Seasons 1 & 2 of the preschool show in many new countries, as well as pre-sales for Season 3, which will be completed in July 2020.
New broadcasters in Europe have picked up more seasons of Simon (52 x 5’ HD), produced by GO-N Productions with France Televisions: JimJam (AMC) picked up Seasons 1 & 2 for all of Central Europe, Clan RTVE in Spain just signed up for Season 2 following top ratings on both the channel and app, as did VRT (Belgium), DR TV (Denmark), TV5 Worldwide, ERR (Estonia) and RTS (Switzerland).
This follows the sales previously announced by GO-N:
Worldwide: Netflix, TV5 Monde
Asia: Disney Southeast Asia, NHK (Japan), Jetsen Huashi TV (China)
Latin America: Disney Junior
North America : TeleQuebec (Canada)
EMEA: Clan-RTVE (Spain), Channel 5 Milkshake! (U.K.), Cartoonito (Turner Italy), RTS & RSI (Switzerland), NPO (Netherlands), YLE (Finland), RUV (Iceland), DR TV (Danemark), SVT (Sweden), NRK (Norway), ERR (Estonia), HRT (Croatia), RTV (Slovenia), HOP! (Israel), Discovery Kids (MENA)
Thanks to strong and increasing ratings on most channels, GO-N also secured pre-sales for Season 3: France Télévisions, Cartoonito (Turner) in Italy, HOP! (Israel), VRT (Belgium), TéléQuébec (Canada) and DR TV (Denmark) are already on board, with more to come as new episodes will be completed by July 2020. Simon is also confirming international digital success with 3.5 million subscribers worldwide and more than 1.25 billion views.
Based on the best-selling series of books by Stephanie Blake published in over 20 countries, the TV series follows Simon, an adorable little rabbit who exudes all the vitality of childhood. He’s at an age when little rabbits (and indeed, little children!) are starting to come into their own — challenging relationships with parents, embarking upon school life, learning about the world in general. Kids can use Simon as an example when standing their ground, they can learn from him, his mishaps and the way he has to get down off his high horse, but always with humor and good grace.
“Simon has been very popular with young audiences and plebiscited by their parents since its first launch, we are so glad it enjoys increasing success worldwide,” said Eric Garnet, Producer & Co-Founder of GO-N Productions. “Broadcasters all around the World have identified the potential of this energetic little rabbit, who is becoming a global preschool property.”
The BRIC Foundation, dedicated to increasing representation in the entertainment industry, today announced its second annual BRIC Talent + Innovation Summit, bringing together a community of thought provokers and disruptors across tech and entertainment to chart a course for meaningful change this February 21.
The 2020 Summit will be emceed by comedian and actor Hisham Fageeh (Barakah Meets Barakah), with speakers including Effie T. Brown, CEO at Gamechanger and Producer (Dear White People); Karen Toliver, EVP of Creative at Sony Pictures Animation (producer, Hari Love); Julie Ann Crommett, VP Multicultural Engagement at Walt Disney Studios; Darnell Moore, Director of Inclusion Strategy for Content & Marketing, Netflix; and Marya Bangee, Executive Director at Harness, an organization that works within Hollywood to center the narratives of marginalized communities in popular culture.
BRIC (Break, Reinvent, Impact, Change) was created with the mission of creating new access points for women and members of underrepresented groups to excel at creative leadership and to enable cultural change through engaging and empowering talent. The BRIC Foundation was founded in 2018 by entertainment industry heavyweights Alison Mann, VP Creative/Strategy Sony Pictures Animation, and Producers Jill Gilbert and Nicole Hendrix.
The 2020 Summit will focus on answering four key questions:
BREAK: What we can learn from creators/directors that have successfully navigated across platform, media, and content?
REINVENT: With the recent surge of creator driven platforms allowing creators/directors to tell the stories they want, how do the entertainment giants attract and incentive the talent to want to work with them?
IMPACT: What can studios do to support individuals that can’t afford art schools? And what can art schools do to create more access and interest in the arts?
CHANGE: How can diverse talent and creative leadership drive a competitive advantage?
The all-day event will be held on February 21, 2020 at the ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena (1700 Lida St, Pasadena, CA 91103) from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. The Summit will be packed with inspiring talks, engaging workshops, and actionable insights.
In addition to a full day of programming, the inaugural BRIC Impact Awards Presented by the Nickelodeon Writing Program will recognize individuals, students, corporations, and non-profits for the work they’ve done in the past year to drive meaningful change in driving diversity and inclusion efforts in the industry. Women In Animation (WIA) will also be presenting their scholarship awards during the ceremony.
Additional summit participants include: Christina Wun, Art Operations Director, Riot Games; Gerta Xhelo, Director of Production, TED-Ed; Kristin Kucia, Manager of Student Affairs, Exceptional Minds; Aron Warner, Producer (Shrek, The Angry Birds Movie 2); Josh Herman, Chief Creative Officer, Gnomon; Maureen Fan, CEO, Baobab Studios; Aaron Bruce, Chief Diversity Officer, ArtCenter College of Design; Larry Laboe, Executive Director, New Film Makers LA; and many more.
Summit sponsors including ArtCenter College of Design, Nickelodeon Writing Program, Cartoon Network Studios, Sony Pictures Animation, The Walt Disney Studios, Illumination, WildBrain Studios, Dreamworks Animation, Gentleman Scholar, Supercell & Armed Mind.
Mondo TV, one of the largest European producers and distributors of animated content, is packing a strong and varied production slate for this year’s Kidscreen Summit in Miami (February 10-13), including new and returning animated series MeteoHeroes, Sissi the Young Empress, Invention Story, YooHoo to the Rescue and Robot Trains, as well as live-action web series House of Talent.
Mondo TV and Toon2Tango will also be showcasing some of the projects in development since the launch of their strategic alliance, announced in 2019. Toon2Tango is the new kids and family entertainment venture headed up by long-time television and movie industry experts Ulli Stoef and Jo Daris. The alliance will focus on developing, producing and distributing unique and high-quality programs — at least eight new animated TV series in the next four years, which Mondo TV Group and Toon2Tango will co-produce and distribute.
The big news from Mondo TV’s established production portfolio is the long-awaited arrival of the highly original new children’s animated series MeteoHeroes on Italian TV. The full 52 x 7’-episode show, a co-production with Meteo Expert Center, Italy’s leading weather forecasting group, addresses issues like climate change, ecology and respect for nature through the amazing adventures of six superpowered children. It’s an important message, but it’s delivered in a fun, engaging way in a series full of action and comedy that helps young viewers understand the issues and how they can help the planet.
MeteoHeroes is set to premiere in autumn 2020. On April 22, the 50th anniversary of Earth Day, there will be a major media campaign featuring the show’s stars as ambassadors in the fight to protect our planet.
Mondo TV will also be promoting the recent return to Cartoonito of the much-loved animated series Sissi the Young Empress for season three, in a brand-new format: a 26 x 11’ series in 3D CGI. Sissi, married to Franz, now lives in Schönbrunn, where she starts a new life as an empress. However, she’s still the free-spirited, strong-willed princess everyone loves. Each episode is full of adventure as Sissi seeks to help her many human and animal friends around the estate.
This year also sees the arrival of the funny and clever animated series Invention Story (52 x 11’), which will debut on free-to-air TV in April 2020 on Frisbee in Italy, Karusel in Russia and TV2 Kiwi in Hungary. A major pay TV deal for the Americas – North, South and Central America – is also on the way and will be formally announced very soon. This 3D CGI comedy encourages its young audience to have a creative approach to problems as they find out more about science and how it works.
The second season of the animated action adventure Robot Trains – which is now rolling out across multiple markets – was quickly followed by an agreement between Mondo TV and CJ ENM, one of South Korea’s largest content and media companies, for the production of a third season of the series, featuring exciting new adventures for the Railwatch team members. The 52 x 11’ 3D CGI series will debut in autumn 2020. Mondo TV, which was the distributor and licensing agent of series one and added co-production to its portfolio for series two, is in charge of the whole production, along with distribution and licensing, for series three.
Outside animated entertainment, the 260-episode, web-based show House of Talent, is a major new undertaking for Mondo – and a big success! House of Talent is already a phenomenon: a crew of over 20 talented teenage online influencers boasting more than half a billion monthly impressions that has also inspired two novels (with more to come) and multi-venue fan meet-and-greets that have attracted over 80,000 fans since the beginning of 2019. The launch of the web series last September saw the crew test their talents in different areas such as cooking, science, fashion, music and more in the rooms of a real house. House of Talent is now expanding into more formats, to be revealed very soon.
MeteoHeroesHouse of TalentYooHoo to the RescueInvention StoryRobot TrainsSissi the Young Empress
Artist and animator Edgar Henderson, who brought his Hollywood studio know-how back home to Houston to bring life and color to the Astros baseball fan experience, died on January 25 of natural causes. He was 95 years old.
“Ed was like a dad to me. He was just the sweetest, kindest man you ever saw in your life,” family friend Clayton Thorp told the Houston Chronicle.
Henderson was born in Mississippi in 1924, and moved to Houston, Texas as a child. As a 17-year-old, he got special permission from his father to join the Marines after the attack on Pearl Harbor sent the U.S. into the fray of World War II. Henderson served at Guadalcanal, where he contracted malaria — but survived to return home and marry his wife Shirley. They were wed for 75 years, and lived together until a few months ago when Ed suffered a fall and was moved from hospital to a care center.
After marrying, the couple moved to California, where Henderson worked at Columbia Pictures’ Screen Gems studio on the popular The Fox and the Crow cartoons. He later moved to Walt Disney Animation, working on the beloved traditional animation classic Sleeping Beauty (1959).
Ed and Shirley had a daughter, Sherry, in 1954, and moved back to Houston in the early 1960s. Here, Henderson began working with larger-than-life public figure Roy “The Judge” Hofheinz — who was a driving force in bringing Major League Baseball to Houston — lending his artistic touch to the expanding Astros brand. Over his 20-plus years working with the team, Henderson brought joy to fans with his Astrodome scoreboard animations and designed visitor maps for AstroWorld theme park.
Hofheinz also commissioned Henderson to create a folding replica of AstroWorld that could fit in a briefcase, which The Judge toted while raising funds to build the park. An 80-square-foot replica (complete with model of Hofheinz’s trademark black Cadillac) once sat in the AstroWorld corporate HQ, then in Henderson’s garage, before finding a home at the Houston Public Library.
After the closure of the Astrodome and AstroWorld, Henderson and his brother, Frank, set up shop for themselves, creating animation and graphics for commercials and other client projects out of Ed’s garage studio.
Henderson is survived by his wife, Shirley; daughter, Sherry; sister, Shirley; and nephew, Mark.
Services will be held Tuesday at Southeast Church of Christ in Friendswood. Henderson will be buried with full military honors at Houston National Cemetery on Wednesday.
In case you were distracted scrubbing bean dip stains out of your lucky jersey during the Big Game, here’s a quick recap on the exciting new animated and VFX-laden spots, sneak peeks and trailers that debuted during Super Bowl LIV on Sunday (in alphabetical order).
Cartoon Network Studios has announced its second annual Storyboard Artists Training Program finalists: Makena Bajar, Isabella Hanssen, Georgia Henderson, Patradol Kitcharoen, Lauren McKinley and Kevin Olvera. The annual program begins today (Monday, Feb. 3).
The selected artists will gain firsthand animated production experience as well as writing and boarding lessons with rotating in-house productions and guest instructors, who include Owen Dennis (creator, Infinity Train), John Fang (showrunner, Ben 10), Stephen Neary (creator, The Fungies), Julia Pott (creator, Summer Camp Island) and Alonso Ramirez (co-executive producer, Steven Universe The Movie), among many others.
Last year’s finalists were staffed on series such as Close Enough, Craig of the Creek, The Fungies, Infinity Train and Summer Camp Island, with several participants currently working full-time on select series.
Launched in 2018 as part of the Cartoon Network Studios Academy (CNS Academy), the Storyboard Artist Training Program is a 90-day, full-time paid union position for up-and-coming talent designed to help bridge the gap in knowledge about storyboarding specifically for television by providing the fundamentals and tools essential to their career growth. The program will cover advanced storyboarding techniques, writing dialogue, gesture drawing, defining elements of physical comedy, and more. In addition to these boarding essentials, the course will also stress collaboration, motivation and inspiration.
CNS Academy offers a variety of internal and external opportunities for both promising and seasoned artists to help discover and develop their professional and personal growth. These include classes and workshops that initiative critical thinking; guest speakers who share their expertise and experiences to inspire open dialogue; monthly gallery shows featuring artwork meant to stimulate creativity; and outreach into colleges and universities, including partnerships with diverse festivals and organizations to foster and build relationships with talent across the country.
The 2020 Storyboard Artist Training Program finalists are:
Makena “Mak” Bajar is a 2D artist from Sacramento, California. As a freshman, she joined Sheldon High School’s animation program, K9 Studios, where she gained experience working on many student animated projects as a storyboard artist, animator and character designer. Highlights include working on Shoe Wars as an animator and character designer, which won first place at the Teen Animation Festival International at the Walt Disney Museum, as well as directing the program’s first 2D virtual reality project. Additionally, she directed and storyboarded an animated short her senior year called UFO, which went on to win both a Regional and National Student Emmy. Bajar is passionate about visual development and storytelling, putting a strong emphasis on character expression and interaction.
Isabella Hanssen is a comic/game/story artist and writer who has created six animated shorts and worked on four student-led video games in the past two years. She has experience working as freelancer, primarily in games, and has led the development of two student games. She attended the California Institute of the Arts and is currently working on her personal comics project.
Georgia Henderson is a story artist and cartoonist from Portland, Oregon, who is currently dehydrated from the lack of rainfall. Since graduating from Loyola Marymount’s Animation program, she has worked as a storyboard artist at Shadowmachine and Bento Box on projects like BoJack Horseman and The Great North. She has also self-published her own comic, Elli and Her Papa, as well as being published in the Ignatz-nominated Alloy Anthology. Henderson loves running, drinking coffee and taking naps — exactly in that order. It is her goal to bring to life stories her nine-year-old self would love and be empowered by.
Patradol Kitcharoen — or, as he is known by friends, “Dodo” — is a recent MFA animation graduate from the University of Southern California and a storyboard artist based in Los Angeles. He specializes in story and 2D animation, especially in action and comedy. His work experience includes animated short films, animated documentaries, projection mapping and television series. Dodo enjoys making playful, quirky and lighthearted illustrations or short animated sequences and has a particular soft spot for details or sequences that can draw a good laugh from the audience.
Lauren McKinley is a storyboard artist currently completing her Bachelor of Fine Arts in animation and minor in storyboarding at Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD). Recently, her short film Heat Stroke was featured at the renowned Animation Block Party festival in Brooklyn, New York. She also works as a freelance video editor, editing videos to be used as highlight reels. McKinley has also collaborated on numerous short films designing, directing and producing. She loves finding the comedy in small real-life moments and expanding on it.
Kevin Olvera is a story artist and 2D animator who most recently worked for Bento Box Entertainment as a storyboard artist for an upcoming Netflix show. Prior to that, he freelanced as a 2D animator for various studios such as Mighty Animation and Moving Colour. Olvera attended CalArts from 2015 to 2017. He also holds a bachelor’s degree in media arts from Indiana University (IUPUI). He aspires to master both hand-drawn animation and storyboarding.
***This article originally appeared in the March ‘20 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 298)***
Mike and Julie Scully know a few things about writing and producing shows about animated families. After all, Mike has worked as writer and exec producer on that little-known show The Simpsons since 1994, and Julie Thacker, his wife of over 20 years, has also written for the series since 1999. They have also worked on shows as diverse as Parks and Recreation, Complete Savages, The Pitts, Napoleon Dynamite and Fuller House. This month, the talented couple launch a brand-new, animated prime-time show on FOX-TV’s Sunday night block called Duncanville.
Exec produced by their friend, actress Amy Poehler (with whom Scully worked on Parks and Recreation), the show centers on Duncan, a “spectacularly average 15-year-old boy, his family and friends.” Poehler, who is no stranger to animation (The Mighty B!, The Awesomes, Inside Out), provides the voice of the boy and his high-strung mother. Emmy nominee Rashida Jones (Parks and Recreation) voices Mia, his crush and classmate, and Ty Burrell (Modern Family) provides the voice of Duncan’s dad on the 2D-animated show, which has been picked up for a 13-episode first season on the network.
Mike Scully says the inspiration for the show goes all the way back to 2016 when he got a text from Poehler, who told the couple that she wanted to create an animated show with them. “Amy had just done Inside Out for Pixar around that time, and animation seemed like a fun idea,” he recalls. “We started kicking around some ideas and we quickly came up with Duncan. Amy wanted to do the voices for two characters — Duncan and his mother. We tried to tell her that It was going to be daunting. We told her, ‘Do you know what you’re getting into?’ But she insisted.”
(L-R) Exec producers Amy Poehler, Mike Scully and Julie Scully
Help from Ed Sheeran
After they pitched the show to Fox in May of 2017, the network fast-tracked it, and the series got picked up in November of 2018. “We’ve been producing the show with Bento Box (Bob’s Burgers) for the past year,” says Julie Scully. “Bento did the eight-minute presentation for the network, and they ordered 13 episodes.”
The Scullys admit that their original pitch was a bit more unusual than most. “We didn’t have a particular visual style in mind, because we can’t draw,” says Mike. “Once it was decided to go with Bento Box, they worked on different character designs and potential looks for the show. There was a lot of back and forth. But when we were pitching to FOX, we didn’t have any drawings to show the network. We were talking about Duncan as a teenage boy with messy red hair, and Julie found a picture of teenage Ed Sheeran on the internet and a picture of Dave Grohl (lead singer of the band Foo Fighters) and that’s what we used as visual aid for Duncan and his best friend!”
Duncanville follows the daily lives of Duncan Harris, who seems to be always one step away from making a bad decision; his mom, a parking enforcement officer who dreams of being a detective someday; his dad, his 12-year-old sister (Riki Lindhomme) and Jing (Joy Osmanski), his six-year-old sister, who often provides the voice of reason in the family!
According to the Scullys, what makes the show stand out is that the kids are older than the usual characters we see in animated sitcoms. “Bart and Lisa on The Simpsons are 10 and eight, for example, and Tina on Bob’s Burgers is 12 I believe.” says Mike. “Duncan is 15, and we’re trying to capture that period in your life where you can taste adulthood, independence and freedom, but you don’t have any of it. You have your learner’s permit, but you have to have your mom in the car with you!”
“We talked about That ‘70s Show, where Topher Grace’s character was in the middle of his friends and parents,” adds Mike “We used that as a model, but we lean more on the family than they did.” Julie points out, “We also have a great mom character, who has a career and, like most American women, she makes 70 cents on the male counterpart!”
Duncanville
OK, Boomer!
When they were discussing the character of Duncan’s dad, Poehler suggested that he should be like Mike Scully. When Mike asked her what she meant, Poehler responded, “You know how you can take any conversation and turn it into a boring story about Bruce Springsteen? That’s what I mean!”
The couple, who have five grown daughters (between the ages of 29 and 37 years old), mined some of the experiences of raising them, as well as their own teenage years, for the show. They also relied on real-life stories from Poehler, who has two sons who are approaching their teenage years. “What was really important for us was to have characters that the audience would care about,” says Julie. “Shakespeare’s stories are still being told today because you care about the characters.” Mike adds, “If the story is emotionally grounded, can be crazier with the storyline. You want the audience to see a little bit of themselves and their families in it. Technology and clothes and hair, that kind of stuff changes, but the emotional parts — the insecurities, the awkwardness — those things stay the same.
As an example, Mike describes the show’s pilot episode. “We find out that Duncan has his driver’s permit, but he never asks to drive the car, which drives his father crazy because when he was a kid that’s all he ever dreamed of,” explains Mike. “There are still kids now that can’t wait to start driving, but there are also kids that don’t care that much about it because they feel self-driving cars are coming and eventually they’ll have their own Uber account. Why do I need to drive? We wanted to play into that and also wanted to find a reason that Duncan decides he really wants to drive, which is because of his crush on his friend Mia.”
Duncanville
Unlike Duncan, Mia is very politically aware and socially conscious. She’s always on her way to a protest or a social cause. “She awakens Duncan’s social consciousness,” says Mike. “The teens on the show are a diverse mix. They have cell phones , which you don’t see a lot in animation. We didn’t want to pretend that they don’t exist, but we also didn’t want them to be constantly looking down on their screens. There’s a character named Yangzi, played by Yassir Lester, who is very plugged in social media-wise. We are trying to represent all different types of teenager.”
Julie also brings up the fact that the show has a very diverse cast. “Our family has an adopted daughter named Jing,” she says. “We don’t really talk about it, we don’t have an origin story [for Jing’s adoption]. Families look different now and it’s nice to have a character like that as a matter of fact.” “Modern Family really opened the door to the fact that families look different now,” adds Mike.
Interestingly enough, neither Mike or Julie ever thought they would find a career in animation when they were growing up. “We loved animation as kids, the Warner Bros. cartoons and all that, but it wasn’t our goal,” says Mike. “We got very lucky when we stumbled into The Simpsons. We learned a tremendous amount not just about writing for animation but comedy writing in general from that experience.”
For now, they have pretty basic goals for what they’ll achieve with Duncanville. “We hope audiences will laugh,” says Mike. “We hope they like the characters and want to come back and see them again the following week. And we hope they all want to buy their t-shirts.” “We also want to look good to our three grandkids,” adds Julie with a laugh.
Duncanville premieres on FOX-TV on Sunday, February 16.
***This article originally appeared in the March ‘20 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 298)***
Four years ago, French helmer Rémi Chayé’s debut feature Long Way North dazzled audiences around the world and impressed critics. The beautifully visualized 2D movie centered on a feisty 19th century Russian heroine who went searching for her grandfather in the North Pole. This year, the talented director is back with another stunning animated epic set in the past: Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary charts the early days of the famous frontierswoman and professional scout as she has to take care of her siblings after her father is injured during their journey west.
Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary
Chayé began looking for new ideas about five years ago, when he was about to finish his last movie. “I stumbled upon a documentary about Calamity Jane on the French TV channel Arte,” he tells Animation Magazine in a recent interview, ahead of the film’s sneak-peek at Cartoon Movie. “That’s how I discovered that Martha Jane Cannary, who would become Calamity years later, had travelled along the Oregon Trail and that she had learned a lot during those times. Hunting, riding horses, driving carriages; she had loved this period despite the recent loss of her mother. I started thinking: What if her father had had an accident and Martha Jane is driven into living a boy’s life? She discovers the freedom attached to it and never wants to give it back. That could be a good subject.”
That’s when Chayé asked collaborators Fabrice de Costil and Sandra Tosello to write a script based on the idea, and they presented it to the veteran producer Henri Magalon, whose credits include Ernest and Celestine, Zombillenium and Long Way North. “The idea for Calamity was born first and foremost from my desire (and the whole team’s) to go on a new adventure together. Long Way North had been an extraordinary experience for all of us — a film that had its share of challenges, but one that resulted in a collective outcome which we’re all very proud of.”
Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary
A Pioneering Force
Magalon says he immediately saw the subject matter’s great potential: “A new, strong female character and an emblematic figure of the place of women in the modern world, Martha Jane Cannary, in my view, is the first famous actress in history. Before even the birth of cinema, she was able to invent her own legend through her ‘stage performances’ and her stories in a society which confined women to an established role. Without renouncing her femininity, she helped in opening mentalities to the prospect of seeing a girl be free, leading and independent.”
With an estimated $9.4 million budget, the movie, which is a co-production between Maybe Movies in France and Nørlum Studios in Denmark, took about six years to complete. The clean 2D animation, which incorporates few lines, was produced using Adobe Animate. The pipeline was created based on Adobe Animate from the storyboard stage to the final cleanup. “Calamity took us about four years less than the previous one,” says Chayé. “That’s pretty fast for a European animated film,” adds Magalon. “We spent three years on the story and the script before having any of our partners read it, and the main financing of the movie took only six months. After that, we had two years of actual production between graphic design, storyboard, animatic, animation, compositing, music and sound post-production. Everything went great among the different teams that were gathered firmly around a strong story.”
Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary
The producer mentions that the creative team around Rémi really gave it their all to realize his vision. “From script to animation, from junior to experienced artists, all associated talents demonstrated their commitment to the production each and every day. It should also be noted that, back in 2012, Rémi was the first animation director to insist on parity, requesting a recruitment at each qualification level of 50% women, 50% men. This was a major move at the time and remains a key creative improvement for all of us.”
Magalon says the innovative project involved a considerable amount of risk. “The movie is one of the most ambitious European independent productions of the moment,” he notes. “Risks were taken to complete the financing plan. We had to convince European partners to fully invest in our film in order to avoid being forced either to relocate part of the production to additional territories, and/or to reduce quality quotas. But the eminent family audience potential makes the adventure worth it, and we trust in our strategy to bring back such a fresh and wise tale both on domestic and international screens.”
Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary
Diving into Saturated Colors
The film’s highly stylized and impressionistic visuals had some interesting sources of inspiration. Chayé says he and the film’s color designer Patrice Suau (I Lost My Body, Long Way North, Les Lascars) looked at many of the vintage travel posters from the 1930s and 1940s. “These images had very saturated colors and dynamic simplifications,” explains the director,
who has worked on a wide range of animated movies, including The Secret of Kells (2009), Eleanor’s Secret (2009) and The Painting (2011). “Our biggest challenge was depicting the grandeur of the American landscape. Just as we did in Long Way North,we drew our characters with no outlines. The style is a little more realistic though, but the animation is still as simple as possible. We tried to evoke the most possible emotions with the least number of drawings.
The director points out that the challenges of making an animated feature are numerous, especially with a subject that stages a convoy of carriages, a community of pioneers, horses, dogs and many characters. He adds, “But the biggest challenge is to create a narrative and visual movement that grows from the beginning to the end and stops the audience from thinking about where they are.”
Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary
“Completing a 2D animated feature is more and more of a challenge these days, when 3D CGI has now become the main, if not the only, thing offered to kids,” says Magalon. “I would have to say that the thing I’m personally very proud of is this character-driven story of Calamity. It is a strong, yet simple adventure that I hope children and their parents will equally enjoy watching.”
Magalon mentions that because he also works on live-action features and documentaries, his producer friends in the industry are impressed that they handle such long production cycles in animation. “But they think that it’s easier for us because our scripts are aimed at children,” he says. “But in my experience, it’s the complete opposite, because kids are the most demanding audience in terms of story logic and character psychology. They are uncompromising on every detail and they want to understand everything. Moreover, we have an even greater ethical responsibility, because children discover values for the first time through animated films!”
Now that the film is about to arrive in cinemas this spring, Chayé has high hopes for his feisty Western heroine. “Our movie is about a girl that crosses the cultural fence between genders,” he concludes. “It’s also about the price she pays for doing so. It’s a movie that says that you don’t have to be defined by the strict traditions and gender stereotypes associated with being a girl. I hope that the public will leave the theater feeling that they have actually met Calamity Jane and know a lot more about this fascinating figure.”
Calamity: A Childhood of Martha Jane Cannary will have a sneak preview at Cartoon Movie in Bordeaux in March. The film will be released later this year in France by Gebeka. It is produced by Maybe Movies and Nørlum, and co-produced by 2 Minutes, France 3 Cinema and 22D Music Group.
Director Rémi Chayé and producer Henri Magalon (Maybe Movies)
The winners of the 2020 EE British Academy Film Awards — BAFTA’s international celebration of the very best in film — were honored Sunday night at the Royal Albert Hall in London. The prestigious BAFTA trophy was awarded to the outstanding talent behind 15 stellar films, including Animated Film winner Klaus, British Short Animation winner Grandad Was a Romantic, and multi-award-winning Best Film pick 1917
The EE Rising Star Award won by actor Micheal Ward (Top Boy), and the Outstanding British Contribution to Cinema Award and Fellowship presented Andy Serkis and Kathleen Kennedy, respectively.
Netflix/SPA Studios highly acclaimed hand-drawn holiday pic Klaus (director Sergio Pablos, producer Jinko Gotoh), which recently took the Animated Feature prize at the 2020 Annie Awards, won out over major contenders from established studios: Disney’s Frozen II, Pixar’s Toy Story 4 and Aardman’s A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon.
This win could be a very good sign for the Academy Award-nominated Klaus — the same film has won this category in both the BAFTA and Oscar races 11 out of 13 years since the British Academy introduced the category in 2006. The venerable institutions disagreed in 2014, when The LEGO Movie won the BAFTA but was left off the Oscar nominations list (the award went to Big Hero 6), and in 2017, with the BAFTA going to Kubo and the Two Strings and the Oscar to Zootopia.
Director Maryam Mohajer was awarded the British Short Animation prize for Grandad Was a Romantic, a reflection and celebration of romantic love inspired by the stories passed down through her Iranian roots. The other nominees were In Her Boots by Kathrin Steinbacher and The Magic Boat by Naaman Azhari and Lilia Laurel.
World War I epic 1917 earned the Best Film prize for director Sam Mendes and his squad of producers, as well as Special Visual Effects honors for Greg Butler, Guillaume Rocheron and Dominic Tuohy — beating out the spectacles of Avengers: Endgame, The Irishman, The Lion King and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.
BAFTA has presented an effects award since 1982; in the past 35 years, this category has had a lower rate of correlation with the Oscar picks than feature animation (23 of 35, or nearly 66%), but it’s worth noting that this is the exact same nominees lineup for the VFX Oscar race.
1917 also picked up the awards for Outstanding British Film, Director, Cinematography, Production Design and Sound.
Other multiple winners were Bong Joon Ho’s Parasite (Film Not in the English Language, Original Screenplay) and Joker (Leading Actor – Joaquin Phoenix, Original Score, Casting).
DreamWorks Animation has named Jenny Marchick as Head of Development for the feature film division. The appointment, effective February 3, was announced by Kristin Lowe, Chief Creative Officer, Features for DreamWorks.
“Jenny’s extensive experience in animation and enthusiasm for storytelling make her the perfect addition to the DreamWorks Animation team,” said Lowe. “Her instincts and talents are extraordinary as well as her notable contacts with world-class talent in the animation community.”
In her new post, Marchick will build the DreamWorks slate of animated feature films. She is tasked with finding and developing projects as well as identifying key talent for the studio, which produces two to three films per year. In expanding DreamWorks Animation’s pipeline, Marchick will lead a team which will develop a wide range of films drawing from known IP and books to original ideas. She will also supervise the creative direction and production of the studio’s active development slate.
DreamWorks Animation’s upcoming feature slate includes Trolls World Tour and The Croods 2 in 2020, along with The Boss Baby 2, Spirit Riding Free and The Bad Guys in 2021.
“What is so exciting about joining DreamWorks Animation is the opportunity to work with Margie [Cohn, President] and Kristin as they craft a vision for the future of the renowned studio,” said Marchick. “Their commitment to telling fresh and compelling stories while still honoring the DWA legacy is an exciting endeavor, and I cannot wait to be a part of their team.”
Marchick previously served as Senior Vice President of Creative for Sony Pictures Animation, where she helped supervise the creative direction and production of the studio’s slate of features, including Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation. Prior to Sony Pictures Animation, she served in executive production and development positions at Mandeville Films and 20th Century Fox, working on projects such as Beverly Hills Chihuahua, Eight Below, The Proposal, Date Night and Knight and Day.
***This article originally appeared in the March ‘20 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 298)***
British stop-motion studio Aardman Animations is bringing cinema’s best-known ovine baa-ck with an out-of-this world new adventure in A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon.In the making for over four years – the Aardman team began developing the sequel before they’d even finished its predecessor, Shaun the Sheep Movie – the latest installment of the franchise sees our woolly-headed hero boldly go where no sheep has gone before. In the process, he learns a valuable lesson about responsibility thanks to a brand new character, Lu-La, a young (and adorable) alien with glittery, floppy ears, strange powers and a taste for sugar, who crash-lands near Shaun’s farm.
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon
“We struggled with lots of different types of story until we kind of landed on the one we have,” explains Paul Kewley, a producer on both Shaun movies. “Funnily enough, [a story] often comes about because you start talking about something personal, and we actually ended up talking a lot about being an elder brother.”
In Farmageddon, Shaun is depicted as the capricious middle child, while sheep dog Bitzer is the authoritative older brother figure who is left to clean up the mess. It’s a paradigm that many of the creators identified with.
Kewley says the team had been itching to do a space movie for some time. “I’d pitched a number of sci-fi ideas at Aardman over the years after joining [10 years ago],” he says. Somewhat counter-intuitively, it was the pastoral environs of Shaun’s home at Mossy Bottom that eventually provided the opportunity for a close encounter of the third kind. “The farm environment and alien movies kind of belong together,” Kewley points out. Richard Phelan, who directed the film alongside Will Becher, was equally enamored with the idea of taking Shaun to space. “[We thought] we could bring an alien to the farm and it just sort of snowballed from there because we’re all such big sci-fi fans.”
The concept also meant there’d be plenty of opportunities to both pay homage to and, in typical Aardman fashion, gently spoof some of their favorite sci-fi films and television shows, with inspiration taken from H.G. Wells, Steven Spielberg, James Cameron, Robert Zemeckis and Stanley Kubrick, among others. In one scene, a piece of burnt toast looks like the Monolith from 2001: A Space Odyssey; in another, the stains from a pizza box resemble the inkblot-like language in 2016 movie Arrival. “We’re just trying to find out the goofiest way of doing these things,” says Becher. “There’s lots of nods and winks.”
It wasn’t all fun and games, however. Lu-La’s presence at Mossy Bottom proved nearly as much of a trial for the crew as for Shaun, it turned out. “Adding the new character of Lu-La to such an established universe was a real challenge,” admits Phelan. “We need[ed] to bring someone who is Shaun’s equal so audiences will fall in love with her and see why Shaun likes her so much, and hopefully care about her as well.”
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon
The design team were given a blue sky brief when it came to sketching out initial ideas for the alien, and she quickly took shape as a simple, almost 1950s style cone body with a large, cutesy head, which suited both her childlike character and her co-star’s already-established world. “Shaun is such a classic silhouette that he needs to be able to stand next to her,” Phelan explains. “We honed in on trying to make her look incredibly simplistic and then, as the film goes on, you find out she’s got all these powers.”
To give Lu-La a more extra-terrestrial vibe, they asked concept artist Aurélien Predal, who also designed the farm, to create an alien world that was “almost like a tropical fish, like bioluminescent,” says Phelan. “He did this almost UV planet and then he did these different color palette tests of Lu-La next to Shaun. And the softer blue and pink, it just really popped.” The problem, however, was that the shade of blue they wanted for Lu-La wouldn’t work against the greenscreens, which meant fiddling with the tone until they found one that suited both purposes. “The puppet is almost like a baby blue but then on camera sometimes it looks almost purple. It’s very technical,” says Becher. “There were many, many tests to get it to work.” For a final, celestial touch, the team added glitter nail polish to her ears.
Like most characters in the Aardman cinematic universe, the Lu-La maquette boasts a plasticine face atop a wire armature covered by silicon. Without a traditional body, however, the crew initially struggled to work out how she would walk. “Just kind of figuring out who she was and where she came from, how she moved,” animator Carmen Bromfield Mason says of the challenges Lu-La presented. In addition to live-action video references, the team also made a life-size (4 ft.) Lu-La maquette. “We ended up using that sometimes to just try and get a sense of how fast she could move, because we wanted her to be quite free of a body,” Becher explains. That concept was taken to its limit in one mind-bending scene where she gets hopped up on sugar: the animators swapped the silicon for plasticine “so she can squash and stretch,” says Phelan. “It was a real blast to push her as far as she could possibly go.”
Both Phelan and Becher are full of praise for how far their animators – who numbered around 30, including the assistants – honed their craft during production. “There’s a scene, for example, where Shaun’s very emotional, it looks like he’s actually breathing,” recalls Becher. “The animators have just come so much further since the first film that they’re using all their abilities and rigs and stuff to make the characters feel more alive.” With the aim of producing 24 frames per second and 1.6 to 2 seconds of footage a day, it was, as always, a painstaking shoot, made that much more tricky by fast-paced space scenes. “On this film, we were more ambitious in terms of the set pieces, so we had quite a lot of camera moves and quite a lot of really complicated setups,” says Becher. “So it actually involved [the animators] working on more singles” (in which every single frame requires the puppets to move rather than every other frame).
For Bromfield Mason, one of the most challenging sequences was in fact a lingering shot in which Shaun’s eyes fill with tears as he waves goodbye to Lu-La for the last time. “I had to figure out how I was going to go from Shaun waving happily to realizing that he’ll probably never see her again,” Bromfield Mason recalls. “You don’t really want to go too big with emotional sequences because it could end up looking a little bit pantomime-y, so it’s all about the really, really small things – like a slight eye dart or the ears curving down slightly – to get that sense of sorrow.”
Aardman artists use a variety of substances – including jelly, glycerin and Vaseline – to create tears, although each solution has different properties. “It depends how long your shot’s going to take,” Bromfield Mason explains. “You need something that’s going to hold its shape really well because you don’t want to go for lunch, come back, and then find that one frame to another it’s just gone or evaporated or slid down the face.” After concocting just the right blend of substances, the animator proceeded to apply it onto Shaun’s eyes with a pin as they fill, drop by drop and shot by shot, with tears. “It’s that delicate,” she says. The entire sequence took Bromfield Mason two full days to shoot.
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon
Equally tricky, she says, was positioning the puppets amid the cameras and lights in the tight interior of the spaceship, which was roughly the width of a laptop. “You need to be really, really slow,” she says. “If you drop something, like a mouth or an eyelid, that’s gone. There’s so much rigging underneath you can’t get it.” At the same time, Farmageddon also boasts some of the biggest sets Aardman has ever done, such as the International Space Station. Some were so big, in fact, they would have gone past the roof, and so had to be set on their sides. “They tipped the cameras up sideways to shoot them and it was a real brain-melter for the crew,” says Phelan. “Everything had to be built sideways, but then we’d flip all the monitors so the animators can see what they’re doing.”
Although they don’t know the exact size of the sets, they said the studio space used for Farmageddon exceeded even that of Aardman’s last feature, Early Man, which took up the equivalent of four Olympic-sized pools. “And Rich and I are basically walking around that all day,” says Becher. “So I think we figured we did about seven kilometers (4.4 miles) each a day, quite easily.” The budget, meanwhile, was roughly the same as for Shaun the Sheep Movie, adjusted only for inflation.
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon
Shaun has now been a familiar face at Aardman for more years than some of its staff (“He long predates me,” laughs Kewley), which can make working on his films an intimidating prospect, particularly with creators Nick Park and Richard Starzak (who devised the first Shaun the Sheep series) still in the building. “Because we’re first-time directors — we know the world very well — [but] we were obviously following on from some of the best animation filmmakers at Aardman,” says Becher. “And actually, it was a massive joy to be given the responsibility, because that was a huge task for us to try and outdo the first film or try and make it feel different.”
“I think what everybody enjoys is that process of telling great stories, making great films, engaging the audience,” Kewley agrees. “So nobody’s precious about [the characters] in those terms and everybody loves the characters as well, so it’s fun. It’s a little daunting at times when Nick walks into the room or Richard walks into the room and you think, ‘I hope we’ve done the right thing with their characters,’ but they’re always massively supportive. And Shaun’s just a brilliant character, isn’t he?”
A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon premiers on Netflix on February 14 (U.S. and Latin America). The movie is nominated for a BAFTA award for Best Animated Feature, and has already made over $37.7 million internationally.
Los Angeles-based OddBot Inc., the production company behind Disney Junior’s Emmy Award-nominated Muppet Babies and other hit programs, has announced the development of two animated series: Job Jungle and True Martian. OddBot will showcase these new titles at the annual Kidscreen Summit in Miami (Feb. 10-13).
Created by Aaron Simpson (Esme & Roy, Rainbow Rangers) and Laura Sreebny (Muppet Babies, She-Ra: Princesses of Power), Job Jungle (52 x 11’) is a preschool action-comedy about three best friends: Sparky, an elephant and enthusiastic fireman; Belle, an inquisitive koala scientist; and Brick, a giraffe who is an industrious builder! Their adventures help the residents of Job Jungle celebrate the skills and thrills of the everyday workers who keep a community thriving, showing that everyone has a role to play!
Job Jungle
Created by Josh Saltzman (Pete the Cat, Inspector Gadget), True Martian (26 x 22’) is an epic, serialized adventure about a 14-year-old girl named Quaid Landsman – the first human born on Mars! She’s the first generation of Martian pioneers settling a new frontier after an ongoing climate disaster that is making Earth uninhabitable. These pioneers soon discover that human beings aren’t the only beings on the Red Planet. The Trü eke out an existence below the surface after a climate catastrophe of their own making many centuries ago. Quaid and Lor, son of the Trü king, must forge a new world together in spite of their constantly warring species, before it’s too late.
True Martian
“Job Jungle and True Martian celebrate community, authenticity and following your heart,” said OddBot Executive Producer, Fred Schaefer. “They reflect our values as a company, which makes them perfect projects for us.”
OddBot has also optioned the one-of-a-kind bestseller that started a movement. Created by Barney Saltzberg and published by Workman Publishing, Beautiful Oops! shows young readers how every mistake is an opportunity to make something beautiful. An animated Beautiful Oops! series will emphasize this important theme through lovable characters and how they experience the magical transformation from blunder to wonder.