Tag: featured

  • HFPA Reveals Conventional List of Golden Globe Animation Noms

    HFPA Reveals Conventional List of Golden Globe Animation Noms

    The Hollywood Foreign Press came up with a more conventional list of nominees in the Best Animated Feature category this morning. Surprisingly enough, the Golden Globes completely shut out the bolder and unconventional options available this year—Sergio Pablos’ Klaus (Netflix/SPA) and Jeremy Clapin’s I Lost My Body (Xilam/Netflix) and opted for the more popular studio entries —Frozen 2 (Disney), Toy Story 4 (Disney/Pixar) How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (DreamWorks Animation/Univ.) and Missing Link (LAIKA). The big surprise was the inclusion of Disney’s The Lion King, which wasn’t promoted by the studio as an animated feature.

    The nominees:

    Animated Features

    • Frozen 2 (Disney)
    • How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (DreamWorks, Universal)
    • The Lion King (Disney)
    • Missing Link (LAIKA/ Annapurna, United Artists)
    • Toy Story 4 (Disney/Pixar)

    Best Original Song

    • “Beautiful Ghosts” (Cats)
      Andrew Lloyd Webber, Taylor Swift
    • “I’m Gonna Love Me Again” (Rocketman)
      Elton John, Bernie Taupin
    • “Into the Unknown” (Frozen 2)
      Kristen Anderson-Lopez, Robert Lopez
    • “Spirit” (The Lion King)
      Timothy McKenzie, Ilya Salmanzadeh, Beyoncé
    • “Stand Up” (Harriet)
      Joshuah Brian Campbell, Cynthia Erivo

    Over the weekend, the Critics’ Choice Association also revealed the nominations for the 25th annual Critics’ Choice Awards. They are:

    Best Animated Feature
    Abominable
    Frozen II
    How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World
    I Lost My Body
    Missing Link
    Toy Story 4

    Best Animated Series
    Big Mouth (Netflix)
    BoJack Horseman (Netflix)
    The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance (Netflix)
    She-Ra and the Princesses of Power (Netflix)
    The Simpsons (Fox)
    Undone (Amazon)

    Best Visual Effects
    1917
    Ad Astra
    The Aeronauts
    Avengers: Endgame
    Ford v Ferrari
    The Irishman
    The Lion King

    Also announced this morning: The nominees for this year’s Art Directors Guild Awards, in the animated category are:

    Abominable
    Production Designer: Max Boas

    Frozen II
    Production Designer: Michael Giaimo

    How To Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World
    Production Designer: Pierre-Olivier Vincent

    The Lion King
    Production Designer: James Chinlund

    Toy Story 4
    Production Designer: Bob Pauley

    In addition, the L.A. Film Critics Association picked I Lost My Body as the best animated feature of the year and its soundtrack as the best of the year as well.

  • Caroll Spinney, ‘Sesame Street’ Puppeteer, Dies Age 85

    Legendary Sesame Street puppeteer Caroll Spinney, who brought to life the beloved characters Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch, has died at age 85 at his home in Connecticut. Spinney passed away on Sunday, December 8, having lived with movement disorder dystonia for some time. The news was shared on the Sesame Street Facebook page.

    The post reads:

    Since 1969, Caroll’s kind and loving view of the world helped shape and define Sesame Street. His enormous talent and outsized heart were perfectly suited to playing the larger-than-life yellow bird who brought joy to countless fans of all ages around the world, and his lovably cantankerous grouch gave us all permission to be cranky once in a while. In these characters, Caroll Spinney gave something truly special to the world. With deepest admiration, Sesame Workshop is proud to carry his legacy – and his beloved characters – into the future. Our hearts go out to his beloved wife, Debra, and all of his children and grandchildren. We will miss him dearly.

    Spinney was born in Massachusetts on December 26, 1933 — named Caroll because he was born the day after Christmas. While serving in the U.S. Air Force after graduating high school, Spinney wrote and illustrated a comic strip about life in the military, titled Harvey. Going by his middle name, “Ed” Spinney also animated some episodes of the black-and-white cartoon series Crazy Crayon early in his working life.

    The young entertainer began puppeteering in the mid-1950s, working on Rascal Rabbit out of Las Vegas before moving back to Boston, where he puppeted Goggle on The Judy and Goggle Show and performed various costumed characters for the syndicated Bozo’s Big Top. Spinney continued to work as a commercial artist and animator through the decade, and created the puppet cat characters Picklepuss and Pop.

    Spinney met Jim Henson in 1962 at a puppeteering festival, and reconnected seven years later when Henson saw him perform at the Puppeteers of America festival, and sought him out. Spinney joined Sesame Street in its inaugural season in 1969.

    Over his long and lauded career, Spinney has been awarded five Daytime Emmy Awards as well as a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Television Academy, with another five nominations. He has also won three Behind the Voice Awards, and was honored with a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1994.

    “Before I came to Sesame Street, I didn’t feel like what I was doing was very important. Big Bird helped me find my purpose,” Spinney said in a statement announcing his retirement in 2018. “Even as I step down from my roles, I feel I will always be Big Bird. And even Oscar, once in a while! They have given me great joy, led me to my true calling — and my wonderful wife! — and created a lifetime of memories that I will cherish forever.”

    Spinney performed as Big Bird and Oscar on many hit shows outside Sesame Street and Muppets projects — including Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel’s late-night shows, Saturday Night Live, Portlandia, Supernatural, The West Wing and the movie Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian — and live across Europe, Australia, China and Japan, and put on the yellow feather suit to conduct orchestras across the U.S. and Canada, as well as voicing the characters on dozens of music albums.

    He also wrote (as Oscar) the picture book How to Be a Grouch (with J. Milligan) and The Wisdom of Big Bird (and the Dark Genius of Oscar the Grouch): Lessons from a Life in Feathers. He also narrated the audiobook of Michael Davis’ Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street, and was the subject of the 2014 feature documentary I Am Big Bird.

    Spinney announced his retirement last October, capping his remarkable career by continuing to guide Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch through the landmark 50th season of Sesame Street, which aired this year.

    Caroll Spinney in Big Bird
    Caroll Spinney in Big Bird
    Caroll Spinney and Jim Henson
    Caroll Spinney and Jim Henson
    Caroll Spinney
    Caroll Spinney
  • Industry Watchers Predict a Rough Week for ‘Playmobil’

    Industry Watchers Predict a Rough Week for ‘Playmobil’

    With an opening that was delayed several times this year, Playmobil: The Movie finally begins its run in U.S. theaters this weekend. The CG-animated feature, which is based on the popular German toys, is directed by Disney alum Lino DiSalvo and features the voices of Anya Taylor Joy, Jim Gaffigan, Daniel Radcliffe, Meghan Trainor, Adam Lambert and Kenan Thompson. The story centers on a young girl who has to find and bring back her brother after he is lost in the many fantasy worlds of Playmobil. The movie premiered at Annecy last June. You can read our interview with the director here.

    STX Entertainment distributes the movie, which was produced by ON Animation, On Entertainment and DMG Entertainment. Industry observers project a three-day opening of approximately $905,000, which is one of the lowest openers for a title playing in over 2,000 theaters. The critics were not kind to the movie either and gave it a 23% score on Rottentomatoes.com.

    Meanwhile, Disney’s Frozen 2 is predicted to continue its rule over the box office this weekend, with a three-day total of $40.3 million and a cume of $343.3 million in its third weekend. December 13 brings forth Jumanji: The Next Level, Dec. 20 is the opening date for Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker and Cats and Dec. 25 is the date for Disney/Blue Sky’s underdog features Spies in Disguise.

  • Moonbug Kids Channel Launches on Apple TV

    Moonbug Kids Channel Launches on Apple TV

    Children’s entertainment company Moonbug is now available to customers in the U.K., U.S., Canada and Australia, through Apple TV channels on the Apple TV app on iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Mac, select Samsung smart TVs, Roku and Amazon Fire TV devices.

    Subscribers to the Moonbug Kids Channel through Apple TV channels can watch online or enjoy offline downloads of their favourite kid shows in the Apple TV app. Through Family Sharing, up to six family members can share subscriptions to Apple TV channels using just their Apple ID and password.

    The Moonbug service gives kids and families around the world the opportunity to watch their favourite shows, such as global toddler sensation Little Baby BumGo BusterMy Magic Pet Morphle and many more. Moonbug’s stable of popular kids’ content is focused on great storytelling promoting healthy values such as compassion, empathy and resilience, while teaching children fundamental life skills.

    Moonbug, which launched in 2018, is one of the most watched kids and family IP owners in the world. It brings together digital content from the best up-and-coming creators and expands their reach to audiences all over the world.

    Moonbug Kids
    Moonbug Kids
  • Riki Group’s ‘Weatherville’ Wins 3rd ATF Animation Pitch

    Riki Group’s ‘Weatherville’ Wins 3rd ATF Animation Pitch

    Winners of the ATF Animation, Chinese and Formats Pitches were announced Friday after a series of exciting on-stage pitches, where finalists presented their ideas to panels of elite judges – the likes of leading producers and commissioning editors, who provided their invaluable input for each of the pitched projects.

    The pitch competitions are part of the ecosystem that the Asia TV Forum & Market (ATF) has built for content creators. Apart from providing them a platform to showcase their creativity, winning projects are linked up with well-established industry players who can propel the winning concept into production for exposure within and outside Asia.

    The third winner of the ATF Animation Pitch, Weatherville by Riki Group, highlights the importance of protecting the environment by educating children about how to treat the Earth well and encouraging young viewers to learn more about the causes behind climate change. Judges noted that this topic made the concept feasible for export and development outside Asia. (http://www.riki-group.com/projects/weatherville/)

    Selected from amongst 41 entries and five finalists, Riki Group received a $19,000 USD prize from Green Gold Animation Pvt Ltd. This comprises a $2,500 cash award and a consultancy package worth $16,500 tailormade for Riki Group to further develop Weatherville, making it ready to pitch to broadcasters – a catalyst to eventually take this project to Asia and beyond.

    “This win is not just about the prize money – what’s more important is the opportunity to find the right partners for our show,” said Diana Yurinova, CEO of Riki Group. “I feel very happy about winning because it opens doors to securing co-producers, investors and potentially broadcasters.”

    With the theme “Dream. Believe. Dare.”, the ATF Animation Pitch is the premier Asian pitching competition where individuals, students and small to medium-sized companies can share new and innovative concepts for animation targeted at kids. Co-organized by Reed Exhibitions and Green Gold Animation Pvt Ltd, it is a platform that showcases Asian originality and facilitates the exchange of ideas and talent between leading international television, distribution and Asian-based producers.

    The winners of the ATF Chinese Pitch, now in its second year, were Malaysian indie director Ang Yee Sien’s The Lost Phone (Online Drama Series), Low Hui Hui’s Cia, Old Hero! (Theatrical/Online Movie), and Absolute Sincerity by Singaporean freelance screenwriter Link Sng.

    And taking the prize of the fourth ATF Formats Pitch was Gamaliel (Gammy) Paulus S., for the vibrant clue-solving game show concept Don’t Block the Numbers.

    Apart from ATF Animation Pitch and ATF Formats Pitch, ATF and ScreenSingapore are home to the ATF Chinese Pitch and Southeast Asian Film Financing (SAFF) Project Market.

    ATF and ScreenSingapore are part of the Singapore Media Festival (SMF).

    For more information, visit www.asiatvforum.com.

    Weatherville
    Weatherville
    ATF Animation Pitch 2019
    ATF Animation Pitch 2019
  • Hopster Renews Two-Minute Tales

    Hopster Renews Two-Minute Tales

    The educational and entertainment digital platform Hopster has commissioned a third series of its original animated series, Two-Minute Tales which will premiere next year. The show, which is produced by the Consortium of Gentlemen will consist of 10 x 2 minute episodes and is narrated, written, animated and directed by Mole Hill with Ellen Solberg serving as executive producer.

    The new series will focus on Shakespeare’s classic plays Hamlet, The Tempest, Romeo and Juliet, Henry IV, King Lear, Macbeth and Othello. Aimed at 4 – 6 year olds, the show introduces preschoolers to Shakespeare, its iconic characters, famous quotes and immersive core themes in a speedy, creative and fun way.

    The first two seasons of Two Minute Tales are based on the much-loved traditional Grimm’s Fairy Tales, have been internationally well-received, offering preschoolers fast-paced, modern and quirky stories that challenge traditional gender stereotypes and promotes diversity.  To date the show has been translated into nine languages (English, Icelandic, Romanian, Serbian, Bosnian, Slovenian, German, French, Kurdish) and has been picked up by WDR Westdeutscher Rundfunk Fernsehen (Germany), Zarok TV (Turkey) and France TV (France), with further deals in negotiation. The series has consistently performed well and is the fifth most watched show globally in the last 12 months on the Hopster app. Last year it was shortlisted for a British Animation Award in the Best Short Form Content category.

    “Shakespeare’s plays are wonderfully layered and complex, but can be hard for kids to engage with from a young age. We hope that by introducing kids to the key themes and characters of his stories in an enjoyable, creative and preschool-friendly way, they may go on to develop a stronger interest and passion for his plays and theatre later in life,” says Ellen Solberg, Head of Content at Hopster.

    For more info, visit www.hospter.tv

    Two Minute Tales
    Two Minute Tales
    Two Minute Tales
    Two Minute Tales
  • Van Eaton Galleries Hosts Rare Disneyland Auction This Weekend

    Van Eaton Galleries Hosts Rare Disneyland Auction This Weekend

    Van Eaton Galleries will host the largest Disneyland and Walt Disney World auction –  “A History of Disneyland & Walt Disney World” this weekend (Dec. 7, 8) beginning at 10 a.m. each day. The collection includes over 1,500 rare items which trace the history of the iconic theme parks and Walt Disney’s vision from inception to present day. It is the single largest Disney-related auction Van Eaton Galleries has hosted to date. Many of the items are coming to auction for the very first time. Up for grabs will be some of the earliest documents and conceptual pieces marking the very inception of Disneyland and Walt Disney World, to the extraordinary theme park props, ride vehicles, audio-animatronic figures, hand-painted attraction pieces, very rare early documents, remarkable memorabilia, signs, and more.

    Highlights include an extremely rare studio file copy of Walt Disney’s first pitch documents for financing Disneyland park. It includes some of Walt Disney’s earliest descriptions of what Disneyland would be, as well as a hand-colored map that showed what his park might look like. These are considered by many to be the “Holy Grails” of Disneyland memorabilia (Estimate: $10,000-$20,000).

    • Two original animatronic “Tiki Birds” from the “Enchanted Tiki Room” at Walt Disney World. The birds retain all their original mechanics and are actually functional, singing and moving along to the Enchanted Tiki Room Theme Song (Estimate $80,000-$100,000)
    • A 1954 Disneyland Plot Plan (Estimate: $8,000-$10,000).
    • A collection of early construction slides by Marvin Davis (Estimate: $600-$800).
    • Original hand-painted “Stretch Paintings” from the Haunted Mansions at Disneyland and Walt Disney World (Estimate $100,000-$150,000).
    • An original Space Mountain Ride Vehicle from Disneyland (Estimate $20,000-$30,000).
    • Original Attraction Posters from Disneyland and Walt Disney World including a rare park-used “People Mover SuperSpeed Tunnel” poster (Estimate $25,000-$30,000).
    • A General Electric Progressland Architectural Model 1964 (Estimate: $10,000-$15,000).
    • a Walt Disney Signed Disneyland Opening Day Guidebook (Estimate $7,000-$9,000).
    • a Skyway 1959 Lamppost Attractions sign (Estimate: $3,000-$5,000); a park used Disneyland Hotel Attraction poster (Estimate: $3,000-$5,000).
    • Original Charles Boyer 200 millionth guest painting (Estimate: $2,000-$3,000), and hundreds of other items.

    Van Eaton Galleries is located at 13613 Ventura Blvd, Sherman Oaks, Calif. 91423

    For more information or to order a collectible catalog visit www.vegalleries.com/decemberauction

    To register to bid in the auction go to www.vegalleries.com/decemberauction

    Tiki Room
    Tiki Room
    Fantasyland
    Fantasyland
    Charles Boyer
    Charles Boyer
  • Eleven Arts to Bring ‘Wonderland’ to North America

    Eleven Arts to Bring ‘Wonderland’ to North America

    Keiichi Hara’a latest animated feature The Wonderland will be get a theatrical release in the U.S. and Canada beginning January 31st, thanks to indie distributor Eleven Arts. The film, which was released as “Birthday Wonderland” in Japan, was produced by the team at the Signal.MD animation studio, which also worked on Napping Princess and Recovery of an MMO Junkie. Hara is best known for directing Miss Hukasai and Colorful, both of which won Jury Awards at Annecy. The film’s character and visual designs are by the acclaimed Ilya Kuvshinov, who is known for his books Momentary and Eternal, as well as his digital and print illustrations that have earned him the adoration of millions of fans across the globe.

    The official synopsis of the movie reads: On the day before her birthday, young Akane meets the mysterious alchemist Hippocrates who brings her through a basement and into a fantastical world full of magic and color. He reveals that this world is in danger, and as the “Green Goddess” it is her destiny and responsibility to save this world. The only problem? Akane just wants to go home.

    The most up-to-date theater locations and ticket links can be found at www.elevenarts.net/wonderland or at participating theater box offices.

    You can see the film’s trailer here:

  • 67 Shorts Selected for Anima Brussels 2020

    67 Shorts Selected for Anima Brussels 2020

    Anima, the Brussels International Animation Film Festival — set to take place from February 21 to March 1 in Flagey — has announced the selection of short films in competition for the 39th Festival. The selection committee reviewed over 1,700 submitted films, coming up with 67 chosen works from around the world to delight and challenge audiences this spring.

    Check out the full selection on Anima’s new website.

    One noticeable trend the organizers point out is that short films are getting longer. Films are shifting toward 10- to 15-minute run times, sometimes even longer, in order to fully develop their stories and visual worlds.

    The 67 short films chosen for the international competition are mainly European (46 films) and will be screened in seven “Best of Shorts” programs for adults. As usual, France is the most-represented country with 22 films selected, followed by Germany and Canada.

    The number of documentary films has also continued to increase and confirms the importance of Anima’s dedicated competition program of documentaries. In addition, the selection committee notes the incredible profusion of films for children. Films for a young audience also abound in the national competition, along with many top-quality professional shorts. The Festival is therefore presenting all these little gems in two programs of short professional Belgian films.

    Finally, some big names have once again been selected, including new short by Bruno Collet, Mémorable (also nominated for the 2020 Césars); the latest from Kaspar Jancis, Cosmonaut; along with Uncle Thomas: Accounting for the Days by Régina Pessoa, The Dawn of Ape by Mirai Mizue and The Physics of Sorrow by Theodore Ushev. On the Belgian side, the committee remarked on the quick return of Lia Bertels, whose Nuit Chérie took the award for best short Belgian film at last year’s Festival.

    INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION – SHORT FILMS
    Acid Rain | Tomek Popakul (Poland)
    Le Cortege / The Procession | Pascal Blanchet & Randolphe Saint-Gelais (Canada)
    Cosmonaut | Kaspar Jancis (Estonia)
    Drive | Pedro Casavecchia (Argentina/France)
    Flow | Adriaan Lokman (France/Netherlands)
    Friends | Florian Grolig (Germany)
    Gon, the Little Fox | Takeshi Yashiro (Japan)
    Listen Papa! | Olga Poliektova, Tatiana Poliektova, Anastasia Pavlovich, Fabienne Giezendanner & Lilia Schneider (France/Germany/Russia)
    Lola the Living Potato | Leonid Shmelkov (Russia)
    Matter and Motion | Max Hattler (China/Hong Kong)
    Memorable | Bruno Collet (France)
    Metamorphosis | Carla Pereira & Juan Fran Jacinso (Spain/France)
    Movements | Dahee Jeong (South Korea)
    Mr. Mare | Luca Toth (Hungary/France)
    Per Aspera Ad Astra | Franck Dion (France)
    Physique de la tristesse / The Physics of Sorrow | Theodore Ushev (Canada)
    Purpleboy | Alexandre Siqueira (Belgium/France/Portugal)
    Repasse-moi / Iron Me | Ivan Rabbiosi (France)
    La tete dans les orties / Nettle-Head | Paul Cabon (France)
    Toomas Beneath the Valley of the Wolves | Chintis Lundgren (Estonia/France/Croatia)
    Uncle Thomas, Accounting for the Days | Regina Pessoa (Canada/France/Portugal)
    Winter in the Rainforest | Anu-Laura Tuttleberg (Estonia/Lithuania/Mexico)

    A trio of filmmakers will make up the international competition jury for 2020: Jonathan Hodgson, independent British animator, whose shorts Night Club and The Man with the Beautiful Eyes have left their mark and won many international prizes. His latest autobiographical short Roughhouse has done very well on the festival scene (especially at Anima 2019) and also won a BAFTA. Filmmaker, illustrator and teacher Sébastien Laudenbach experiments with animation in all its forms. He spent nine months drawing every frame of his feature The Girl without Hands and was rewarded with the Jury Award at Annecy 2016, among other prizes. The young Polish animator Karolina Specht has already made half a dozen student films that have won numerous prizes in international festivals.

    NATIONAL COMPETITION – SHORT FILMS
    #21xoxo | Sine Ozbilge & Imge Ozbilge
    Carrousel | Jasmine Elsen (Belgium/Czech Rep.)
    Freeze Frame (Soetkin Verstegen
    Ghost Eye | Wouter Sel & Thijs de Cloedt
    Hello, Are We in the Show? | Simona Denicolai & Ivo Provoost
    The Lying Angel | Kris Mergan & Geert Vandenbroele
    Machini | Frank Mukunday & Tetshim
    On n’est pas près d’être des super héros / And Yet We Are Not Super Heroes | Lia Bertels (Belgium/France/Portugal)
    Le Poisson fidele / The Faithful Fish | Atelier Collectif
    Saigon sur Marne | Aude Ha LePlege (Belgium/France)
    The Passerby | Pieter Coudyzer
    La Vigie / The Vigil | Atelier Collectif
    White Paradise | Xavier Istasse

    The winners of the national competition will be chosen by Juan Antin, Argentinean filmmaker of many shorts and two features: Mercano, the Martian (2002) and Pachamama (2018), which screened at Anima 2019 and, journalist Alex Dudok de Wit, who grew up in London and has been immersed in the world of animation from a very young age. He is currently associate editor at Cartoon Brew and curator for Short of the Week. Joining these two will be Sarah Van Den Boom, filmmaker and character designer, who co-founded the production studio Papy3D. Her latest film Raymonde or the Vertical Escape has been screened at over 100 festivals and has recently won its 30th prize.

    Anima will also be organizing its second competition for VR films. Selected projects and jury to be announced soon.

    The full festival program for Anima 2020 will be announced at a press conference on January 30.

    Uncle Thomas
    Uncle Thomas
    Saigon sur Marne
    Saigon sur Marne
    Machini
    Machini
    Listen Papa
    Listen Papa
    Gon the Little Fox
    Gon the Little Fox
  • ‘Clifford’ Makes His Big Premiere on Amazon, PBS

    ‘Clifford’ Makes His Big Premiere on Amazon, PBS

    Scholastic Entertainment’s Clifford the Big Red Dog makes its return to screens with a big, big makeover this weekend! The new 39 x 22’ series launches Friday, December 6 on Amazon Prime Video, followed by a broadcast debut on PBS KIDS on Saturday, December 7.

    Featuring fresh but faithful new designs and larger-than-life adventures, Clifford the Big Red Dog reboots the beloved property created by children’s author Norman Bridwell with an expanded world and a more independent young heroine for today’s audiences. In this series, Clifford and Emily Elizabeth will speak to each other for the first time as they explore and meet new friends on Birdwell Island.

    Emphasizing social-emotional skills and a curriculum designed to boost early literacy and encourage imaginative play, the show will also feature original songs to accompany Clifford and Emliy Elizabeth’s adventures.

    Clifford the Big Red Dog is produced by Scholastic Entertainment, in collaboration with 100 Chickens and 9 Story Media Group.

    The new series will be supported by an expansive licensing and consumer products program and a global publishing program, with new titles launching in 2019.

    The live-action hybrid Clifford the Big Red Dog feature film from Paramount Pictures, starring Darby Camp, Jack Whitehall, John Cleese, Sienna Guillory, Kenan Thompson and Rosie Perez, premieres November 13, 2020.

  • First-Time Director Delivers Holiday Music Vid with Blue Zoo Short Program

    First-Time Director Delivers Holiday Music Vid with Blue Zoo Short Program

    The latest project from U.K. animation studio Blue Zoo’s BAFTA-nominated shorts program is waiting to be unwrapped. Created as a music video for Scouting for Girls, this year’s Christmas-themed short Let’s Not Go Away was helmed by first-time director Katie Gascoyne, Blue Zoo’s Recruitment & Talent Coordinator. While it’s the first to be directed by an admin team member, it’s the program’s 12th project in its boundary-breaking shorts program.

    Scouting for Girls themselves chose Gascoyne’s idea to bring their Christmas single (debuting on their current U.K. tour and released by Sony Music alongside new album The Trouble with Boys).

    “For me, this was an opportunity to tell a Christmas story with all the sweetness you’d expect, but a bit off-kilter,” Gascoyne explains. “Everything is as you’d expect. Young couple in love at Christmas, renting a crappy but well-loved flat in London, one of them dreading spending Christmas day with their other half’s family. Except in this scenario, the boyfriend is a living gingerbread man, and her family have a bad habit of nibbling him when she’s not around. Needless to say, he’s not looking forward to another holiday with them.”

    “There’s a run-in with some robins, a (ginger)breadcrumb trail and a super sweet romantic gesture on top. At its heart, it’s about leaving obligation behind and spending Christmas with the people we choose to.”

    The film was animated in-house at Blue Zoo’s 2D studio in London, using Toon Boom Harmony.

    Emmy-winning songwriter David Freedman worked with his son, Jackson Freedman, to write the heartwarming original song performed by the enduringly popular Scouting for Girls. The band’s song list includes mega-hits like “She’s So Lovely,” “This Ain’t a Love Song” and “Heartbeat.”

    “Every year we make something funny and Christmas related, and this song was hilarious, cheeky and also incredibly sentimental,” says studio co-founder and EP Oli Hyatt. “We got cracking right away with an in house competition for an animated short film to go with the song. Anyone can enter, and Katie from HR won with a sentimental concept, just this side of weird. This was the perfect chance to create a short film in our recently opened 2D studio.”

    “I’m so beyond grateful for the opportunity to tell this story, and to direct a short film. This wouldn’t be possible anywhere else but Blue Zoo,” notes Gascoyne. “It’s incredible how much the studio has supported and trusted me as a director for this production — and that’s not just a superfluous title, I really did get to direct it! I’m absolutely blown away by the talent of the 2D studio in the making of this short, and I’m extremely grateful to be part of the making of Blue Zoo’s first 2D Christmas short. I am endlessly amazed by what this studio can accomplish.”

    Blue Zoo’s 2D studio opened earlier this year as part of the long-term strategy to diversify and broaden the studio’s content. Currently in production is 2D half-hour buddy comedy, Pony, aimed at kids aged 8-10. The series is created by Ant Blades, who will also direct the series. The show currently has an order for 20 half-hour episodes from Nickelodeon.

  • Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy Discusses Her Powerful Short ‘Sitara: Let Girls Dream’

    Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy’s animated short Sitara: Let Girls Dream tackles one of the most important issues facing young girls in many countries around the world: how many are forced to abandon their personal dreams and marry older men through arrangements by their families. The beautifully animated CG short tells the story of 14-year-old Sitara, who dreams of becoming a pilot, but her goals are restricted by a middle eastern society that forces young girls to have arranged marriages. We had the chance to catch up with the two-time Academy Award winner and three-time Emmy Winning Obaid-Chinoy to find out about her latest work and its inspirations:

    First of all, congrats on the success of your short. Can you tell us a little bit about the origins of the project?

    Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy: Let Girls Dream is an animated short film that was initially dreamt up many years ago. When my team and I began researching and carried out a series of interviews with young girls around the world who had been forced into early marriage – aged between 10 and 13 and married off to much older men — what we most commonly encountered was that the girls spoke a lot about their dreams. They regretted the fact that they had to give up school, were no longer able to be with their friends, and unable to study and become doctors, lawyers or artists.

    After going through those recordings I thought to myself that there needed to be a film made about the dreams of young girls that becomes a global conversation starter between parents and children — something that could be shown on digital platforms, in cinemas, in schools and community centers with the purpose of persuading parents to rethink the need to invest in the dreams of their daughters. That’s how the thought of Pari, the protagonist of Sitara, was born.

    When I began to write about Pari I always imagined her to be free and to be flying. We sat her on a rooftop, and gave her dreams of becoming a pilot because when that dream is taken away from her and she is married off, there’s a moment when you realize that her dreams will never take flight — that’s how the premise of the film evolved.

    How long did it take to make and how many people worked on it?

    Waadi Animations, my animation production company in Pakistan, began working on the project in 2017 and it took us about 15 months to complete. We have about 35-40 people in total that have worked on the film.

    Was all the animation done at your studio, and which CG tools does the team at Waadi use?

    The animation was done entirely in house in Pakistan. We have used a number of tools including open software, developed our own pipeline.

    Why do you think it’s so important to bring up the issue of child marriage in an animated project?

    Animation allows you to convey things that I feel live-action and documentary films cannot. Animation is also not considered a threatening medium — parents watch it, children watch it. You give life to characters that shine on screen, they sing, you use music — it’s possible to reach two different audiences, parents and children, and I think that child marriage is such a sensitive issue in so many countries, including mine, that creating a film that spoke about that issue seen through the lens of the dreams of a young girl was hugely important.

    I thought that animation was the only really suitable medium that could be utilized to do that, and now over the past four months we have managed to take the film into schools all around the world. In almost every school we have been to, there have been thoughtful discussions — sometimes with parents or with just the students — and in some of the communities that we have been screening the film, child marriage is in practice. Animation allowed us to get our foot in the door so that we could at least have that conversation.

    Can you tell us a little about forming your animation studio in Pakistan?

    Ours is a small animation studio based in Pakistan and everyone here is self-taught. We do not have animation schools or universities in Pakistan, so to create animation in Pakistan is what I would call the work of some very brave people, because we have very old hardware, our servers break down and have long electricity outages due to extreme weather conditions.

    Our entire collective knowledge of animation and post comes from teaching ourselves – either through finding online mentors around the world to help guide us through interactive sessions or going through tutorials and PDFs that we find online.

    So having taught ourselves about almost everything we could possibly learn, when Sitara: Let Girls Dream finally made it into the world, and we began to see the reactions that children, parents and audiences had, it gave us and the people who have worked on the film a lot of self confidence in our abilities to create animation, and to experience what it felt like to be part of the animation fraternity — the global animation fraternity.

    What do you hope the impact of the short will be?

    My team who has worked on the film have one simple hope: that girls around the world will be inspired to achieve their dreams. If Sitara can play a small role in doing that (which we are already seeing happen during and after screenings), it gives us all tremendous joy and hope for the future.

    Can you talk a little about your goals and how you decided to create opportunities for female animators in your country?

    Waadi Animations was set up so that I could create local heroes — local characters for the children of Pakistan, because most of them had never seen a reflection of themselves on the big screen before. They could hear their language, they could see their clothes, they could see their streets come to life! Whilst we were quite used to watching animation from Hollywood here, I thought our children also deserved to see more representations of themselves and that’s what motivated us to create animation.

    From artists to producers, there are numerous women involved in the animation of Sitara. I want Waadi Animations to be a company where women feel safe, where they can come and create animation which allows them the ability to hone their skills, express themselves and display their own creativity. Not just with Sitara: Let Girls Dream, but with other films and short films that we are creating here, we want to encourage all female illustrators, animators, compositors to come forward and work with us. As a female filmmaker I always strive to ensure that women have a place on the table that they are given the opportunities and spaces to create and be creative.

    What kind of challenges did you face along the way?

    It has been a very difficult journey because we had to start from scratch and we have made many mistakes along the way. It’s expensive to create animation — the software and the hardware are expensive. We don’t have a basic infrastructure in place, so the very fact that we have been able to create Sitara and release it into the world, on this international platform — that in itself for us is our biggest accomplishment!

    Produced by Netflix and Waadi Animation, Sitara: Let Girls Dream is written and directed by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy. Imke Fehrmann serves as a producer. Executive producers include VICE Media Group CEO Nancy Dubuc, women’s rights activist Gloria Steinem, Oscar winner Darla Anderson (Coco, Toy Story 3), Emmy nominee Ariel Wengroff, and Waadi Animation. The score was composed by Laura Karpman.

    For more info, visit www.letgirlsdream.org.

    Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy leads a team of animators at her Waadi Animation studio in Pakistan.
    Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy leads a team of animators at her Waadi Animation studio in Pakistan.
    Sitara: Let Girl's Dream
    Sitara: Let Girls Dream centers on a young girl who dreams of becoming a pilot when she grows up.
    Sitara: Let Girl's Dream
    Sitara: Let Girls Dream
    Sitara: Let Girl's Dream
    Sitara: Let Girls Dream
    Sitara: Let Girl's Dream
    Sitara: Let Girls Dream
    Sitara: Let Girl's Dream
    Sitara: Let Girls Dream
  • ‘Spies in Disguise’: Espionage Takes Wing

    ‘Spies in Disguise’: Espionage Takes Wing

    ***This article originally appeared in the January ‘20 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 296)***

    There’s a surprising message in Spies in Disguise, the new Blue Sky Studios/20th Century Fox animated feature hitting theaters on Christmas Day from Walt Disney Pictures. It’s not simply that an epic, globetrotting, action-filled spy film can legitimately be done in animation. Nor is it that an action-adventure film can also successfully support a gonzo comedy angle. It isn’t even that, yes, audiences will accept a black Bond. Instead, the film’s message has to do with the state of the world we live in today, and how it could be made better.

    Pretty heavy for a family film ostensibly about a man turning into a bird.

    Spies in Disguise is loosely based on Lucas Martell’s 2009 short Pigeon: Impossible, in which a pigeon accidentally takes control of the president’s nuclear football. Writers Cindy Davis, Brad Copeland and Lloyd Taylor crafted an entirely new adventure centering on the daring, and ultimately bizarre, exploits of too-cool-for-school secret agent Lance Sterling, played by two-time Oscar nominee Will Smith.

    Spies in Disguise
    Spies in Disguise

    Played by, as opposed to voiced by, is the accurate term, too, according to the filmmakers. “We had a rough blueprint for the dialogue,” says Troy Quane, who directed the movie along with Nick Bruno, “but when we’d get into the room with Will and start to improv through the scenes, that would give us a lot of spontaneous actions and lines and jokes. We recorded some of that and brought it back to our animators, so you get not only the vocals but the physicality as well.” He adds that the animators also referenced some of Smith’s classic films, such as Independence Day.

    Acting as cocky Lance Sterling’s foil in the story is a young, incalculably brilliant, idealistic engineer in the spy agency’s gadget lab named Walter Beckett, played by Tom Holland. Walter advocates for using such non-violent spy “weapons” as a device that envelops the enemy in a plastic hug, and a spontaneously-exploding image of a kitten in a snowstorm of glitter, whose “Awww!” factor disarms even the nastiest bad guy. The two are destined to remain apart until a concoction of Walter’s accidentally turns the superspy into a pigeon, which forces them to team up in order to prevent the cyborg villain Killian, a.k.a. Robo-Hand, from wiping out the entire U.S. espionage operation with deadly drones. Not only that, they must work surreptitiously, since Robo-Hand (so named for his high-tech mechanical claw) has framed Lance as a turncoat.

    A New Take on the Buddy Pic

    Much of Spies in Disguise is a high-voltage buddy film that belies the fact that Smith and Holland recorded their parts separately. “We never managed to get a session with them together,” says Bruno. “In the recording sessions we’d use the pages, but then seeing where we ended up we’d go back to the other guy and say, ‘Okay, we’ve got a new version of this.’ There was a lot more back-and-forth between them, but they were both really game and really patient.”

    Spies in Disguise
    Spies in Disguise

    Australian actor Ben Mendelsohn voices Robo-Hand and in a refreshing twist for any spy film, the villain is actually given understandable motivation for wanting to destroy the other side. In fact, Bruno says that the film’s repeated release postponements ─ it was originally slated for January 2019 and bumped even before Disney’s acquisition of Fox ─ created more time to really fine-tune the character. The spy agency’s director Jenkins, a.k.a. Joyless, is played by Reba McEntire (cast very much against type), while Rashida Jones gives voice to Internal Affairs Agent Marcy Kappel, who embarks on a heavily-armed, Javert-like quest to bring in the supposed double agent, and Rachel Brosnahan plays the key role of young Walter’s mom.

    Spies in Disguise is the first feature directorial gig for both animator Bruno and story artist Quane, who found their creative partnership easy to manage. “We didn’t divvy it up in the sense of, ‘You handle all these departments, and I’ll handle all those departments, and I’ll see you at the end of the movie,’” says Quane. “We really see things similarly.” Adds Bruno: “As everybody that we work with can tell you, there’s really only one brain we share.”

    Nick Bruno and Troy Quane
    Nick Bruno and Troy Quane

    They also share a love of spy films, though their aim with this movie was not to spoof the originals, but rather have fun with their conventions. One such example was in designing Lance Sterling to resemble a martini glass with a wide torso over thin, stem-like legs (shaken, not bird). That proved to be a challenge for the animation team, according to supervising animator Jeff Gabor. “When you have legs that thin doing a lot of action they tend to get wiped away either with motion-blur or image strobes,” he says. “You have to be extra careful with your space and timing of animation to make sure those things read.”

    Spies in Disguise offered myriad challenges for just about every department, starting with designing human Lance and pigeon Lance so that they were both recognizably Lance. “We spent a year trying to make sure the models were in reference to each other, particularly the eyes,” Gabor says. “At Blue Sky we’re pretty familiar with animating birds [through the Rio films] but we wanted to make sure than Lance felt more like a man in a bird suit, so you can actually feel Will Smith coming through the bird.”

    Spies in Disguise
    Spies in Disguise

    Another tall order for the team was animating the sumo-sized henchman Kamora (voiced by Masi Oka) after he falls victim to a weapon of Walter’s that temporarily eradicates the skeleton, leaving a mass of living Jell-O. “That took a lot of coordination between the sim, effects, animation and design departments,” Gabor states. “You can’t just make him squishy and squashy since he has tattoos all over him. Everything has to move and relate to everything else and if you just push on one little area, you won’t get the feeling that it’s all one piece.”

    Pigeon’s Point of View

    A challenge of a different sort was creating bird Lance’s pigeon POV, depicting 360-degree vision in a visual environment that would give Salvador Dalí vertigo. “It was definitely tricky,” says production designer Michael Knapp. “We started looking at 360-degree video camera footage, but ultimately we could only do so much in Maya. We ended up doing a render within CGI Studio [Blue Sky’s rendering package]. We animated to camera and then the render group would show us what it looked like unwrapped and rendered in all 360 degrees outside of that camera. Since we were working in 2:35 aspect ratio, it had to unwrap in a way that fit the screen top to bottom, as well as side to side, and connect as Lance’s point of view shifts.”

    Says Bruno, “We did some tests and finally found the look we were happy with, but then we put some characters into it and saw them explode all over the place. It was really a back-and-forth process with some friendly, patient, and forgiving animators.”

    It also fell to Knapp to create the many exotic and evocative locales seen in the film, including such highly recognizable ones as the National Mall in D.C. and Venice’s Piazza San Marco. “The goal was always to try and capture the feeling for the place,” he says. “We would take liberties with what we needed to tell the story and so the action would unfold properly.”

    A bigger challenge, though, was the completely fabricated setting of Robo-Hand’s lair, a ruined edifice on a remote Scottish island, because it had to accommodate so many different action scenes. “You’re constantly redressing the set for different action,” says Knapp. “You’ve got hundreds of drones, you’ve got soldiers and our main characters duking it out, and you’ve got glitter involved.” To enable the film’s many crowd scenes, an innovative enhanced crowd animation package was developed. “For this film we started a background generator system so we could make many, many more variations of characters without having to rig and materialize every single variation,” Gabor notes. “That’s definitely something we’re looking to expand further.”

    Spies in Disguise
    Spies in Disguise

    Still, the heart of Spies in Disguise remains its message. Walter is convinced there is a better way to spy, and even live, than Lance’s violent fight-fire-with-fire approach. That is the main point of conflict between them, even overshadowing their obvious hipster-versus-dork polarization. Quane states that their philosophical confrontation scene was the toughest of the film. “Lance and Walter are on a boat and all they had to do was talk about their differences,” he says, “but every word means something and every line counts. It took forever to find the efficiency of that scene in a way that didn’t bore us to tears, but at the same time got their messages across on where they stand in their philosophies.”

    The moral, the directors say, is that you can conquer every technical challenge of digital animation that can be thrown at you, but it still all comes down to the characters, their authenticity, and their emotions.

    And glitter, if you’ve got it.

    Disney releases Blue Sky’s Spies in Disguise in theaters December 25.

    Spies in Disguise
    Spies in Disguise
  • Trailer: A Power-Hungry Villain Heats Things Up in ‘Marvel Rising: Playing with Fire’

    Trailer: A Power-Hungry Villain Heats Things Up in ‘Marvel Rising: Playing with Fire’

    The trailer has dropped for the latest installment in the Marvel Rising series of animated specials, Marvel Rising: Playing with Fire — debuting December 18 on Marvel HQ.

    Marvel Rising: Playing with Fire stars Tyler Posey (Teen Wolf) as Inferno. In this 44-minute special, Inferno’s powers are stolen by a young and powerful villain and it’s up to the Secret Warriors to defeat their new foe and help their friend. But does Inferno even want his powers back? Meanwhile, America Chavez, voiced by Cierra Ramirez (Good Trouble), learns a lesson about friendship and family from teammate Ms. Marvel.

    Marvel Rising: Playing with Fire
    Marvel Rising: Playing with Fire
  • Heartfelt ‘Hair Love’ Short Makes Online Debut

    Heartfelt ‘Hair Love’ Short Makes Online Debut

    Hair Love, the heartfelt animated short film from director Matthew A. Cherry that focuses on the relationship between an African-American father, his daughter Zuri, and the most daunting task a father could ever come across – doing his daughter’s hair – is now available to view online.

    Watch Hair Love on YouTube, Instagram TV, Facebook and Twitter.

    Directed by Cherry (executive producer, BlacKkKlansman), Everett Downing Jr. (animator, Up, WALL·E) and Bruce W. Smith (creator, The Proud Family; animator, The Princess and the Frog), Hair Love is a collaboration with Sony Pictures Animation that was launched as a Kickstarter campaign in 2017 with a fundraising goal of $75,000. Strong support led to the campaign amassing nearly $300,000, making it the most highly-funded short film campaign in Kickstarter history.

    Hair Love features the voice of Issa Rae (Insecure) as the young girl’s mother. The short is produced by Karen Rupert Toliver, Stacey Newton, Monica A. Young, Matthew A. Cherry, and Lion Forge Animation’s David Steward II and Carl Reed. Peter Ramsey (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse) and Frank Abney (animator, Toy Story 4) serve as executive producers.

    The short’s co-executive producers include Jordan Peele, Andrew Hawkins, Harrison Barnes, Yara and Keri Shahidi. The short’s associate producers include N’Dambi Gillespie, Gabrielle Union-Wade & Dwayne Wade Jr., Gabourey Sidibe, Stephanie Fredric and Claude Kelly.

    The picture book Hair Love was released by Kokila Books/Penguin Random House releasing on May 14, 2019, and became a New York Times Bestseller.

  • Bob, Homer & BoJack Vie for Writers Guild Animation Award

    Bob, Homer & BoJack Vie for Writers Guild Animation Award

    Writers Guild of America West (WGAW) and Writers Guild of America, East (WGAE) have announced nominations for outstanding achievement in television, new media, news, radio/audio, and promotional writing during 2019. Winners will be honored at the 2020 Writers Guild Awards on Saturday, February 1, 2020, at concurrent ceremonies in Los Angeles and New York City.

    Unsurprisingly, Fox primetime comedies once again dominate the Animation category, with three nominations for The Simpsons and two for Bob’s Burgers, while Netflix’s BoJack Horseman is back in the race after being left out last year. Bob’s Burgers writer Steven Davis has received a second consecutive nomination this year; familiar names also include John Frink (one win, five nominations), Brian Kelley (one win, two nominations) and Elijah Aron (one nomination). Kelvin Yu and Dan Vebber are nominated for the first time.

    Nominations in the Animation and Children’s categories below. A full list of the nominees is available at wga.org.

    ANIMATION
    “Bed, Bob & Beyond” (Bob’s Burgers), Written by Kelvin Yu; Fox
    “The Gene Mile” (Bob’s Burgers), Written by Steven Davis; Fox
    “Go Big or Go Homer” (The Simpsons), Written by John Frink; Fox
    “A Horse Walks Into A Rehab” (BoJack Horseman), Written by Elijah Aron; Netflix
    “Livin’ La Pura Vida” (The Simpsons), Written by Brian Kelley; Fox
    “Thanksgiving of Horror” (The Simpsons), Written by Dan Vebber; Fox

    CHILDREN’S EPISODIC, LONG FORM AND SPECIALS
    “It’s Just… Weird” (Alexa & Katie), Written by Romi Barta; Netflix
    “Remember Black Elvis?” (Family Reunion), Written by Howard Jordan, Jr.; Netflix
    “Remember How This All Started?” (Family Reunion), Written by Meg DeLoatch; Netflix
    “Stupid Binder” (Alexa & Katie), Written by Nancy Cohen; Netflix
    “Time to Make… My Move” (Jim Henson’s The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance), Written by Javier Grillo-Marxuach; Netflix

    BoJack Horseman
    BoJack Horseman
    Bob's Burgers
    Bob’s Burgers
    Dark Crystal
    Dark Crystal
  • Trailer: ‘Fast & Furious: Spy Racers’ Kicks into Gear

    Trailer: ‘Fast & Furious: Spy Racers’ Kicks into Gear

    Universal and DreamWorks Animation unveiled the official trailer for the highly-anticipated Netflix original series, ​Fast & Furious: Spy Racers. ​Inspired by Universal’s multi-billion dollar ​Fast & Furious ​franchise, Fast & Furious: Spy Racers is an all new animated series geared toward a younger audience. The series revs up on Netflix worldwide on December 26.

    Teenager Tony Toretto follows in the footsteps of his cousin Dom when he and his friends are recruited by a government agency to infiltrate SH1FT3R, an elite racing league serving as a front for a nefarious crime organization bent on world domination. Tim Hedrick (​DreamWorks Voltron Legendary Defender​) and Bret Haaland (​All Hail King Julien​) will serve as executive producers and showrunners. The series is also executive produced by Vin Diesel, Neal H. Moritz and Chris Morgan, who also serve as producers on the live-action ​Fast & Furious ​franchise.

    The thrilling new trailer provides a first look into Tony Toretto and his crew of Spy Racers living up to the Fast family legacy with more high octane racing action and incredible covert operations.

    Spy Racers features the voice talents of Tyler Posey (​Teen Wolf​) as Dom’s younger cousin turned spy racer Tony Toretto, Camille Ramsey (​American Vandal)​ as the formidable Layla Gray, a notable underground racer who works for SH1FT3R, Luke Youngblood (​Harry Potter​) as Frostee Benson, a 13-year old tech genius, Charlet Chung (​Overwatch​) as Echo, a master artist and natural spy, Jorge Diaz (​Jane the Virgin)​ as Cisco Renaldo, both the muscle and the sweetheart of the crew, Renée Elise Goldsberry​ (​Hamilton)​ as the team’s secret agent liaison Ms. Nowhere, Similce Diesel as Frostee’s younger sister Sissy, and Manish Dayal (​The Resident)​ as Shashi Dhar, the world-domination-obsessed leader of the criminal organization SH1FT3R.

    Jimmy Tatro (​American Vandal)​, Carlos Alazraqui (​The Fairly OddParents)​ , Eric Bauza (​The Adventures of Puss in Boots)​, Grey Griffin (​DC Super Hero Girls)​, Kevin Michael Richardson (​Trolls: The Beat Goes On!​), Fred Tatasciore (​Trollhunters: Tales of Arcadia​) and Tru Valentino (​Archibald’s Next Big Thing​) also guest star.

    Fast & Furious: Spy Racers
    Fast & Furious: Spy Racers
    Fast & Furious: Spy Racers
    Fast & Furious: Spy Racers
    Fast & Furious: Spy Racers
    Fast & Furious: Spy Racers
  • ‘Weathering with You’: A Torrent of Talent

    ‘Weathering with You’: A Torrent of Talent

    ***This article originally appeared in the January ‘20 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 296)***

    Weathering with You, which debuted earlier this year in Japan, is Makoto Shinkai’s first feature since he dazzled audiences on both sides of the Pacific with Your Name. in 2016. An intriguing, complex film, Your Name. combined elements of a body-switching teen romcom with a profound meditation on the trauma the Japanese people are still suffering from what they call the Great East Japan Catastrophe and Westerners refer to as Fukushima.

    Shinkai had already won a devoted international following for his earlier features, The Place Promised in Our Early Days (2004), 5 Centimeters Per Second (2007) and The Garden of Words (2013). But none of them approached the runaway success of Your Name., which became the number one box office hit in Japan that year ($361 million) and the sixth-highest grossing film of all time there. It was the first animated film not directed by Hayao Miyazaki to gross more than ¥10 billion ($92 million).

    Makoto Shinkai
    Makoto Shinkai

    Weathering with You was produced by Genki Kawamura (Mirai, Parasyte, The Boy and the Beast) at Tokyo-based CoMix Wave Films with the 2D animation created with Toon Boom tools. The movie is another critical and financial success, earning over ¥12.72 billion ($117 million), making it the 18th highest grossing film in Japanese history and the top grosser of 2019. It received a 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes, and was chosen as the Japanese submission for the International Feature Oscar — the country’s first animated candidate since Princess Mononoke in 1998. It also won the top prize at Hollywood’s Animation Is Film festival in October.

    As the film opens, teenager Hodaka Morishima comes to a rain-sodden Tokyo: he has run away from his island hometown, hoping to find more interesting life. Unlike the sensible, artistic Taki in Your Name., Hodaka is impetuous and impractical: He has very little money and doesn’t carry the student ID card that would enable him to get a part-time job. While living on the streets of Shinjuku, Hodaka meets Hina Amano, an appealing girl who treats him with kindness. He discovers she’s an orphan, struggling to care for herself and her younger brother, Nagisa.

    But Hina also possesses a power out of legend: She can call to the sun to part the clouds and shine on people – -for a brief time. Hodaka hatches a scheme to exploit her talent, which brings them happiness and more money than they’ve ever seen in the hardscrabble world of the post-Bubble Japanese economy.

    A Boy, a Girl and a Water Disaster

    “I don’t really think of this as a boy-meets-girl story,” Shinkai commented during a recent interview at Animation Is Film. “A boy does meet a girl, but I didn’t write it as a love story. It’s more about an adolescent boy finding someone who is really important to him, then what he goes through with her.”

    Shinkai explained that the inspiration for the film came from the meteorological and geological threats the Japanese people face: “Every summer, there’s a water disaster of some sort. But in recent years, there have been more disasters, more earthquakes, more water disasters — and in October, Typhoon Hagibis struck. Living in Japan, I’ve seen a lot of disasters, so the film probably reflects that fact.”

    In Hodaka’s Tokyo, it rains constantly, flooding sections of the low-lying city. Commentators have interpreted the unceasing rains as a metaphor for climate change. Like other young people around the world, Hodaka and Hina feel trapped in the rapidly warming, increasingly inhospitable planet previous generations have left them.

    “In Garden of Words, I used rain as a visual challenge,” Shinkai said. “Having done that, in Weathering with You, I wanted to use the rain more emotionally. It’s always raining, just as there’s always this peer pressure members of the young generation experience: People have to be a certain way. All these emotions keep accumulating, just like the rain accumulates. I wanted to express that with the rain.”

    “Also, Tokyo is a city full of black asphalt, and when it rains, it gets really black,” he added. “I imagined an image of a girl wearing a white sweatshirt standing on the black asphalt and the light just spreading around her.”

    Weathering with You
    Weathering with You

    Knowledgeable viewers have noted that if anyone needed to reconstruct early 21st century Tokyo, they could use Weathering with You as a template. Shinkai’s depiction of the city is meticulously and accurately detailed. The metropolis almost becomes another character in the story.

    “I wanted to make Weathering with You really relatable for Japanese audiences,” Shinkai said emphatically. “This is the city that we live in, this is the city we see on the screen. So there’s a McDonald’s in Shinjuku — just as there is in real life — and we use real corporate logos in the film, unlike most animated features.”

    The director felt is was so important to have Hodaka and Hina meet in a real McDonald’s, rather than one of the obvious spoofs in other anime, he met with McDonald’s executives in Japan and eventually persuaded them to grant permission to use the famous Golden Arches.

    Weathering with You
    Weathering with You

    Musical Storytelling

    The rock band Radwimps wrote and performed the music for Your Name., drawing praise from critics and fans. Shinkai wanted to work with them again for his new film.

    “For Your Name., Radwimps did a wonderful composition, but in Weathering with You, they actually changed the story,” he recalled. “I wrote the script, but when I sent it to Radwimps, lead vocalist/songwriter Yojiro Noda wrote the lyrics to accompany the film. His lyrics made me better understand the characters of Hodaka and Hina better, so I changed certain scenes and some of the dialogue. Radwimps aren’t just composers now: They really got involved in the storytelling.”

    As Your Name. broke so many records, following up its success could be daunting. But Shinkai approached his new film with his accustomed modesty: “Your Name. was a hit, but Weathering with You was only my first film after it. When I was making Weathering, I thought about how to make the film more enjoyable to a larger audience, because the audience for Your Name. was so much bigger than for any of my previous films. I wanted to make something that would really deserve the attention of so many people.”

    GKIDS will release Weathering with You in theaters on January 17, 2020.

    Weathering With You
    Weathering With You
  • Wonder Media Launches Teen Suicide Prevention Series

    Wonder Media Launches Teen Suicide Prevention Series

    Leading education technology (EdTech) animation studio Wonder Media has started production on a new project titled My Life Is Worthy Living: Prevent Teen Suicide. The public is invited to participate in this important initiative to help lower the 56% increase in teen suicides, as reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The studio seeks $375,000 to fund the first series of episodes for this important initiative and is seeking contributions from the public via Indiegogo.

    Previously, Wonder Media produced the hugely successful “Protect Yourself Rules,” a sexual abuse prevention animation series for The Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center Foundation.

    The studio specializes in producing animated stories to connect with children at risk. This initiative to prevent teen suicide comes on the heels of what they accomplished for the The Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center Foundation to prevent child abuse. The “Protect Yourself Rules” series and the “Stop the Secrets that Hurt” series have been viewed by more than 200 million people worldwide. The printable extension lessons have been downloaded in 15,000 cities.

    The two series have been adopted by Education for Justice, an initiative of the United Nations, The National Foundation to End Child Abuse and Neglect, The National YMCA, Association of School Psychologists and The Association of American Educators.  The Boy Scouts of America has made the “Protect Yourself Rules” required viewing for every Cub Scout in the world. They have also been endorsed by the Crimes Against Children Research Center, the American Psychological Assocation and the American Association of Forensic Nurses

    The Prevent Teen Suicide pilots were developed by Wonder Media for the Gabe Alvarado Foundation with national suicide experts Dr. James Mazza and Dr. Jennifer Stuber. Wonder Media, was co-founded by animation veteran Terry Thoren and Ryan Cannon. Thoren is the former CEO of Klasky Csupo, the company that incubated The Simpsons and produced Rugrats , Rocket Power and The Wild Thornberrys for Nickelodeon.

    “We are passionate about protecting children,” says Thoren, “Animation knows no race, religion, culture or creed. Research shows that children and teens, will pay attention to behavior exhibited by animated characters before they trust the advice of a teacher or parent. Crowdfunding allows those who have been affected by the tragedy of suicide to contribute to something powerful and help us bring down the rise in teen suicides.”

    Wonder Media is an L.A.-based studio which specializes producing content that helps children at risk and addresses hunger, emergency preparedness, social-emotional learning, critical thinking, autism, nutrition, children with disabilities and children living in a home with an addicted adult. The studio has produced animated lessons for the Global Institute for Habits of Mind, the Barbara Sinatra Children’s Center Foundation, the Betty Ford Children’s Center, the Hero in You Foundation, the Gabe Alvarado Foundation, the NALC Food Drive, The Boy Scouts of America, the The Girl Scouts of America and the Wyland Water Foundation. Wonder Media is also the creator of WonderGrove Story Maker®, which turns classrooms into state-of-the-art animation production studios. Research shows that when students use authentic production tools, the experience ignites reading and writing engagement. Story Maker® is in 172 school districts in 24 states nationwide.

  • News Bytes: PS4 Ad Plagiarised, Viacom & CBS Reunite, Full ‘Frozen II’ Original Song, ‘Locke & Key’ Dated & More

    News Bytes: PS4 Ad Plagiarised, Viacom & CBS Reunite, Full ‘Frozen II’ Original Song, ‘Locke & Key’ Dated & More

    NYFCC Awards 2019
    Jeremy Clapin’s I Lost My Body was named the Best Animated Feature of the year by the New York Film Critics Circle. Martin Scorsese’s The Irishmantook Best Picture, while Bong Joon Ho’s Parasite snagged the Foreign Language Film prize.

    WATCH: Disney+ Togo Official Trailer
    Get whisked away to the sweeping landscapes of Alaska and caught up in some serious VFX flurries in Togo, directed by veteran cinematographer Ericson Core. The Disney+ original movie, based on a true story, debuts Dec. 20.

    When a deadly epidemic strikes Nome, and the only cure is more than 600 miles away, the town looks to champion dogsled trainer Leonhard Seppala (Willem Dafoe) to help transport an antitoxin serum. Seppala turns to Togo, an unassuming, undersized and aging Siberian husky, to be his lead. His wife (Julianne Nicholson) has championed Togo since his days as a mischievous puppy who could dig himself out of any situation — literally and figuratively — and Seppala, having observed Togo’s loyalty and tenacious spirit, knows Togo offers his only chance of surviving this mission. Undaunted by the massive storm heading their way or his wife’s urging him not to go, Seppala and Togo set out a harrowing, historic journey.

    WATCH: Frozen II “Into the Unknown”
    Disney has released the full original song sequence from the hit movie. The song is performed by Idina Menzel (voice of Elsa) featuring Norwegian singer-songwriter AURORA, and written by Academy Award winners Kirsten Anderson-Lopez & Robert Lopez. ”Frozen II, directed again by Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck, is in theaters now.

    ‘Locke & Key’ Debuts Feb. 7 on Netflix
    The live-action adaptation of Joe Hill and Gabriel Rogriguez’s best-selling IDW comic-book series follows the sinister events as the three Locked siblings and their mother move into their ancestral home after the mysterious murder of their father. They soon discover that Keyhouse is full of magical keys that may be connected to his death. As the Locke children explore the different keys and their unique powers, a mysterious demon awakens — and will stop at nothing to steal them.

    The series is created by Carlton Cuse (Bates Motel, Lost) and Meridith Averill (The Haunting of Hill House), and stars Darby Stanchfield (Scandal) as Nina Locke, Jackson Robert Scott (IT, IT 2) as Bode Locke, Connor Jessup (American Crime) as Tyler Locke, Emilia Jones (Horrible Histories) as Kinsey Locke, Bill Heck (The Ballad of Buster Scruggs) as Rendell Locke, Laysla De Oliveira as Dodge, Thomas Mitchell Barnet as Sam Lesser, and Griffin Gluck (American Vandal) as Gabe.

    Viacom and CBS Corp. Are Officially Back Together Again
    Having first merged in 1999 and broken up in 2005, the new ViacomCBS teamup will collect cable, broadcast, film and publishing outlets under one roof, as things continue to head up in a highly competitive media landscape. Announced in August, the merger is valued at $30 billion.

    Sony Pulls PS4 Ad after Animation Plagiarism Claims
    The lineup music video released by Sony Interactive Entertainment Japan Asia features clips from multiple PlayStation video game titles as well as animated sequences between clips which appear to have been traced from a variety of sources, from Cartoon Network’s Steven Universe The Movie and Adult Swim’s FLCL to student films. DualShockers reported that the animation director is Kevin Bao, who has been accused of plagiarism previously.

    Togo
    Togo
    Locke & Key
    Locke & Key
    I Lost My Body
    I Lost My Body