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Home Blog Page 1571

City of Rott, Dead Fury Creator Frank Sudol

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With Halloween fast approaching, we thought we’d take some time to get to know one of the few people making feature-length, animated horror movies. What’s more Frank Sudol (a.k.a. FSudol), does it all on his own. Working out of his apartment in North Eastern Pennsylvania, Sudol has completed two blood-soaked zombedies, City of Rott and Dead Fury, and has a third feature nearing completion under his Blackarro Prods. Dead Fury was recently released on DVD just in time for All Hallow’s Eve.

Sudol admits that his films are not for everyone. If you’re 13 years old at heart and have discovered the joys of Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead movies, City of Rott and Dead Fury are probably right up your alley. Some animation fans might find the pics too crudely animated to warrant serious consideration, but the filmmaker isn’t trying to be Walt Disney. Like Raimi, he’s taken gore to comic proportions and seems to get a kick out of mangling his animated characters in inventive ways. There’s also some great pop art to be found in these productions, if you like your art a bit on the gruesome side.

Animation Magazine Online: What’s your background and how did you get started with animation?

Frank Sudol: Before working on South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut as an additional animator, lip synch artist and assistant technical director (setting up scenes with a large team), I started drawing monsters while I was very young. Eventually, after deciding cartoons were my specialty and also learning quite a bit from my art teacher, Lance Sorchik (a well-respected hot-rod cartoonist), I decided to go to college for computer animation and graduated with a BFA. And speaking of Animation Magazine, I actually got the South Park job from an ad in the back pages of a 1998 issue, so a big thanks to Animation Magazine!

AMO: Describe your prodution pipeline. I know you’re using After Effects now, but previously you drew on paper and did everything else in PhotoShop?

FS: Just started using Adobe After Effects, a solid program which allows scaling and rotation effects not possible in my first animation program, Image Ready, which is a simple add-on program equipped with Photoshop. It allows for basic cut-out animation with linked layers and has some nice features that include the ability to duplicate and change layers quickly while animating. Prior to Image Ready, I used the traditional Cel Disney Animation Studio, on the Amiga 2000, which I got for Christmas one year ago. I used it to put together limited animation movies on home video, and occasionally created well-animated characters, something I’d like to get back to eventually when time permits.

As far as how it’s all accomplished, first everything’s hand drawn with much detail for shading and tone, then scanned into photoshop where I add color and separate everything into layers, then link them into one character, eyes, mouths, head, legs, arms, torso. After that, I place the characters into a scene and begin animating in Image Ready and After Effects. Both programs have their strengths, so for now, I’m still using them together to create “cut out” cartoons.

AMO: How do you create the great gore effects?

FS: The gore effects are inspired from my enjoyment of horror movies, mostly zombie and monster films. For the basic splattering of a zombie’s head, as seen in City of Rott, I start with the original head, then make a copy and cut it up into several gory pieces of tissue and membranes. On impact, I throw in some layers of blood, then spread them outward to give the sense of an exploding zombie head. I’ll include some animated blood squirts for a nice secondary effect. The gore effects are improving with each cartoon, mainly inspired by classics like Romero’s Day of the Dead and Raimi’s Evil Dead.

AMO: How would you describe your animation style?

FS: For now, it’s limited stop-frame animation, something like the early South Park cut-out style, only with high-level shading and texture details. Simplistic in motion, but it gets the point across. It won’t appeal to those looking for the brilliant flow of a Disney movie, but mostly to those looking for a gory, low-budget horror cartoon. I have skill doing traditional animation, and for my fourth cartoon I may decide to undertake such a giant task if time permits, as there’s never enough of it. I have no plans to expand beyond one animator at this time though.

AMO: A lot of your backgrounds are really great. Do you use photographic elements for some of these?

FS: The backgrounds in City of Rott were all drawn by hand and pieced together from various parts. Same for most of Dead Fury, except for the introduction, where I took original photographs and then converted them into cartoons by overlaying hand-drawn trees, rocks, plants and other objects.

AMO: How long did it take you to make City of Rott and Dead Fury?

FS: City of Rott took over 3000 hours between my day job, and Dead Fury about the same, so close to 6000 hours for both. Seems hard to believe looking at those numbers, but many 12-hour marathons into the night made it possible, working solo.

AMO: You mentioned bein inspired by Sam Raimi and George A. Romero. Who or what else has greatly influenced your work?

FS: Plenty of inspiration from movies, TV shows, artists and cartoons over the years. Some that pop into mind include Terrahawks, a sci-fi puppet show featuring many of Zelda’s monsters, including Zelda herself, an android hag and her two offspring fighting Tiger Ninestein over planet Earth. Inspiration in the animation field comes from shows like Garfield and Friends, Voltron, G.I. Joe, The Transformers, Hanna Barbera toons like Yogi Bear and The Smurfs, South Park, King of the Hill, plus other cartoon series, especially Dungeons & Dragons, the arcade game Dragon’s Lair and movies like Antz and The Lion King all inspire me to make cartoons. Though my style is obviously different, those are a few that greatly move me to animate.

AMO: Did you get a distribution deal, or is Unearthed Films your own banner?

FS: Unearthed Films, an independent horror label, specializes in unique horror movies with a lot of gory effects, and I’m grateful for the opportunity they’ve provided, giving me my first break into the industry with City of Rott. They also have the classically animated film Rock ‘N Rule in their line up of films.

AMO: How have sales been? What’s your marketing strategy?

FS: City of Rott reached a wide audience in the U.S. and overseas, had a nice run in Hollywood Video and Movie Gallery for rental, and is available online as well. Dead Fury was just released in August online, so things are just getting started. The cartoons are featured on many horror websites, through reviews, interviews, preview articles and trailers. Details and advertising can also be found in the pages of Rue Morgue and Fangoria Magazine on occasion, with more outlets in the future. These cartoons are solely geared tohorror audiences ages 17 and older, due to the animated gore.

AMO: What can you tell us about your new cartoon? Is it a feature?

FS: The third cartoon is nearing the final stages of animation, and is a feature-length science-fiction/horror film set in a post-apocalyptic world overrun with alien beasts and monsters. The human race is all but eliminated when the story begins. It’s the first film that includes some After Effects work, so I’m excited about that as well. Solid improvements in gore, story and more will be on hand, hopefully released in late 2009, pending distribution. My fourth cartoon will likely shift the visual style, perhaps more anime in terms of visuals and animation. I’m very much looking forward to pre-planning and taking it to another level beyond the first three horror cartoons, with much more time invested.

Visit Black Arro Prods. at www.blackarro.com, and order your copies of City of Rott and Dead Fury at www.unearthedfilms.com.

New Batman, Superman Motion Comics Coming

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Warner Premiere and Warner Bros. Digital Distribution are developing short-form digital Motion Comics based on the renowned graphic album Batman: Black & White and the graphic novel Superman: Red Son. Bringing stories and comic-book art to life with limited animation, voice-overs and sweeping musical scores, the Motion Comics line recently kicked off with the debut of moving version of Alan Moore’s Watchmen and Frank Miller’s Batman: Mad Love. The first and second chapters of Watchmen are now available for download via iTunes, Amazon Video on Demand, Xbox Live and the Sony PlayStation Store. Summary editions of the Watchmen Motion Comics are available to Verizon Wireless V Cast customers and Sprint TV subscribers via the DC Comics Channel.

Batman: Black & White is taken from three award-winning volumes of short stories starring the Dark Knight, and highlights the work of some of today’s leading graphic artists and writers. Blending elements of romance, mystery and the supernatural, the tales are told from the perspective of Batman and feature appearances by such classic villains as The Joker, Harley Quinn and Two-Face. It’s Batman as seen through the prism of some of today’s most eloquent graphic artists and writers.

Superman: Red Son is on the Eisner Award-winning graphic novel written by Mark Milar and drawn by Dave Johnson. The Motion Comic will take viewers back in time to the Cold War between the U.S. and the Soviet Union as Superman fights for the Communists. In this unique twist, Superman is raised in Russia and grows to become the Soviet Union’s greatest weapon as the world is transformed into a communist state opposed only by a crumbling capitalistic America and its President, Lex Luthor. A Superman stands on the brink of ultimate power, Batman, Wonder Woman and Green Lantern each make a valiant stand to end the iron-curtain reign of the Man of Steel.

Release dates for Batman: Black and White and Superman: Red Son will be announced in the coming months, along with info on the next assortment of titles coming to the Warner Premiere Motion Comics slate.

Developed with the participation of Dave Gibbons, who illustrated the original Watchmen graphic novel, the second chapter of the Watchmen Motion Comic takes place at the time of The Comedian’s funeral. Silk Spectre recalls her assault at the hands of The Comedian as Nite Owl and Doctor Manhattan recount their own experiences the larger-than-life enigma who proves to be a hero and a villain in one costume. Warner Bros. Digital Distribution will debut chapter three during the week of October 20, and will release future chapters every two weeks thereafter.

Yogi, Flintstones Movies to Debut on DVD

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Warner Home Video has announced that Dec. 2 will see the feature-length animated movies Hey There, It’s Yogi Bear (1964) and The Man Called Flintstone (1966) released on DVD for the first time. Both classic Hanna-Barbera titles are newly re-mastered and will retail for $19.98 apiece.

‘These films are some of Hanna-Barbera’s finest ventures onto the big screen,’ says Amit Desai, Warner Home Video’s VP of family, animation and sports marketing. ‘We feel strongly about preserving these films for future generations and we put our best efforts towards re-mastering the originals in order to offer consumers improved picture and sound quality.’

Tired of Yogi’s ‘pic-a-nic’ basket stealing shenanigans, Jellystone National Park’s Ranger Smith ships Yogi off to the San Diego Zoo in this theatrically released comic adventure. Yogi manages to outwit Ranger Smith by having another bear crated off in his place, but the Jellystone watchdog isn’t the only one fooled. Believing her love has been sent away, Yogi’s girlfriend, Cindy, goes looking for him and is captured by a circus owner who forces her to perform a perilous high-wire act. Yogi and pal Boo Boo then set out on a cross-country mission to rescue her

The Man Called Flintstone marked the theatrical debut of the modern stone-Stone-Age family. The adventure begins when Fred is recruited by a secret organization to take the place of Rock Slag, an injured agent who happens to be Fred’s exact double. His mission is to travel to Eurock to find the villainous Green Goose and thwart his bid for world domination. Unable to tell his family or friends about the cloak-and-dagger plan, Fred takes Wilma, Barney and Betty along on a vacation in intrigue.

Marvel Animation Brings Avengers to TV

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As the conglomerate of Marvel superheroes known as the Avengers gradually assembles on the big screen, Marvel Animation is prepping an animated television series that will bring together such iconic comic-book heroes as Iron Man, Captain America, The Incredible Hulk, Thor, Wasp and Giant Man. Toon shop Film Roman is producing 26 episodes of The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes for broadcast in 2011.

The cartoon show will should be available to broadcasters in time to take advantage of the media blitz for The First Avenger: Captain America, which will follow the Marvel Studios features Iron Man, The Incredible Hulk and Thor to theaters. Once the main players have been introduced in solo celluloid outings, Marvel will put them all together in The Avengers.

The Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes is being produced by Ciro Nieli, whose credits include the anime-inspired kids’ show Super Robot Monkey Team Hyper Force Go! and the DC Comics-based series Teen Titans. Returning to the Avengers property is writer Christopher Yost, who will serve as story editor on the new toon. He wrote the recently released direct-to-DVD animated feature Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow, and also contributed to stories for the Marvel animated series Iron Man Armored Adventures and Fantastic Four: World’s Greatest Heroes.

Next Avengers was the third Avengers feature released on DVD. Marvel Animation kicked off its series of animated superhero features with Ultimate Avengers in 2006, and followed it with Ultimate Avengers 2: Rise of the Black Panther. Iron Man and Dr. Strange toon movies were also released at retail. Marvel Animation is in the midst of a big push in the toon sector. For television, Marvel is readying the animated series Wolverine and the X-Men and Iron Man: Armored Adventures for Nicktoons in 2009. The company has also teamed with cable outlet BET to bring The Black Panther to the screen vi animation, and is looking for a broadcast partner for its kids’ comedy Marvel Super Hero Squad, which features goofy versions of Marvel heroes and villains for younger tykes.

Studio B Enrolls in High Drama High for TELETOON

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Studio B Prods. has signed on to develop High Drama High, an animated series for TELETOON in Canada. The show is created by Jillianne Reinseth and Jennifer Daley. Reinseth has been a development and production exec on Fairly Oddparents for Nickelodeon, Kim Possible, Lilo & Stitch and W.I.T.C.H. for Disney Channel and Kid vs. Kat for Studio B. Daley’s writing credits include Robson Arms and Mustard Pancakes.

High Drama High aims to entertain kids 9-14 with the humorous exploits of Jessica and Ben, two freshmen at High Drama High who are determined to ascend to the top of the social ladder. Armed with a yearbook from the previous year, they’ve worked all summer to concoct the perfect plan to follow the exact paths of the most popular kids who came before them.

‘High Drama High is an original take on the cliques and personalities that dominate high school life,’ says Michael Goldsmith, director original content for TELETOON Canada. ‘With its smart writing and style sensibilities, I’m sure it will prove popular with our tween audiences.’

Headquartered in Vancouver, Studio B Prods., a production subsidiary of DHX Media Ltd., produces such popular animated series as Ricky Sprocket ‘ Showbiz Boy, Being Ian, The Amazing Adrenalini Brothers, Class of the Titans and George of the Jungle, a co-venture with Classic Media that is seen on Cartoon Network U.S. Studio B’s new properties include Martha Speaks, a co-production with WGBH Boston that launched on PBS KIDS, and Kid vs. Kat, an original series with YTV and Jetix Europe.

Little Bird Sells Novel’s Horrid Henry

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Little Bird Rights has secured a number of new international broadcast deals for Novel Ent.’s animated series Horrid Henry. In the run up to MIPCOM ’08, the 52×11 show has been picked up by MNet in South Africa, RTP Portugal, Digiturk in Turkey and SVT Sweden. Little Bird holds worldwide television rights to the property outside of the U.K. and Germany.

Commissioned by CITV in the U.K., Horrid Henry centers on a headstrong boy constantly raging against the tyranny of adults, his irritating brother, Peter Perfect, and infuriating girls like Moody Margaret next door. The show is based on the set books written by Francesca Simon and illustrated by Tony Ross. Publisher Orion Children’s Books has sold more than 11.5 million books in the U.K. alone. The tomes are available in 27 countries worldwide, including the U.S., and has been translated into 22 languages.

Broadcast deals had already been secured with Disney Channel in France, ZDF Germany, RTE Eire, RUV Iceland, NRK Norway and YLE Finland. CITV has commissioned a second season, bringing the number of episodes to 104. The second set of 52 installments is slated for delivery in the Spring of 2009. Novel has also signed a DVD distribution deal for the second season with Abbey Home Media Group, and has launched a touring Henry stage show with Watershed Prods., in association with Sheffield Theatres.

Lance Bass Joins Handy Manny Cast

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After making young girls scream as part of the pre-fab pop group NSync and putting his moves to the test as a current contestant on Dancing with the Stars, Lance Bass is getting animated for a hit Disney Channel preschool show. The tabloid headline’making vocalist has signed on to voice a recurring guest role on Handy Manny, which stars Wilmer Valderrama (That ’70s Show) as the voice of the title character.

Bass plays the role of a klutzy, good-natured surfer dude named Elliot. In the episode premiering Friday, Oct. 10 at 9 a.m. (ET/PT), Elliot’s new rooster, Milton, is crowing and waking up everyone in town. Manny must find a way to control Milton’s crowing so that the neighbors are happy and Elliot can keep his pet.

Created by Roger Bollen, Marilyn Sadler and Emmy-wining writer and producer Rick Gitelson, Handy Manny follows the adventures of Manny Garcia, a bilingual Hispanic handyman with set of talking tools. The animation is produced by Toronto-based Nelvana.

Past Handy Manny guest stars have included Kurtwood Smith (That ’70s Show), Shelley Morrison (General Hospital), Fred Willard (WALL’E), Penn Jillette of Penn and Teller and rapper Snoop Dogg.

$9.99 Gets Oscar-Qualifying Run

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The independently produced stop-motion feature $9.99 will get a limited theatrical engagement to qualify for Academy Award consideration. Handled by Regent Releasing in the U.S., the Israeli-Australian co-production will open on Dec. 12 at the Music Hall in Los Angeles. It premiered at the Toronto Festival in September.

$9.99 marks the feature debut of Israeli-born director/animator Tatia Rosenthal, whose short A Buck’s Worth played at Sundance in 2005. Rosenthal has worked as an animator on such TV series such as Blue’s Clues and The Wonder Pets!.

Co-financed by the Israeli Film Fund, $9.99 is based on a collection of macabre short stories by Etgar Keret (Wristcutters: A Love Story, Jellyfish). Australian actors Geoffrey Rush and Anthony LaPaglia provide voices for the production, which revolves around a group of characters living in an apartment complex in Sidney, each searching for meaning in their lives. The film is an expansion of A Buck’s Worth, a Sundance Lab project.

E For All Attendance Down

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The spectacle that was E3 is becoming a distant memory as attempts to recapture the magic of the extravagant gaming trade show miss the high-water mark left by past floods of gamers and industry professionals descending upon Los Angeles. Daily Variety reports that this year’s E for All suffered a 17% dip in attendance from last year’s inaugural event.

The failing economy and belt tightening on the part of gamers, publishers and developers has no doubt afflicted the 2008 edition, which ended over the weekend. The event attracted approximately 15,000 people, compared to last year’s headcount of roughly 18,000. August’s Penny Arcade gaming expo in Seattle did much better, drawing nearly 60,000 people.

Despite low attendance, E3 organizer IDG World Expo is hailing this year’s expo as success nonetheless. Those who showed up were treated to presentations and sneak peeks at new games from Microsoft, which sat out last year’s edition. Attendees also got to purchase new games on the spot through new retail partner Target.

After scaling back to become a smaller, press-oriented affair in 2007, E3 may open its doors to the public again next year, rumor has it. Also put on by IDG, the expo may even be absorbed into E for All. E3 was held in July at various hotels and other locations in Los Angeles.

Plastic Wax Expands Globally

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Plastic Wax, an Australian digital animation studio specializing in video games and other forms of entertainment, has announced global expansion plans that include extensive talent acquisition, investments in new technology and the opening of an office in San Francisco focused on business development.

Over the past few months, Plastic Wax has welcomed more than 30 members to its team, including producers, animators, lighting leads and rendering leads. The new talent brings a wide range of veteran creative and technical experience from the worlds of video games, feature length films and television commercials.

The company’s serious investment in technology for its studio in Australia brings a state-of-the art, in-house motion-capture studio and onsite audio and video production tools. Plastic Wax has long specialized in pre-rendered CG animation, but claims to have improved its expertise in ‘in-engine’ video-game work in its ongoing efforts to work as collaboratively as possible with developers and integrate seamlessly into their production pipelines.

‘We are very proud of our strides forward over the last three years, specifically in video games,’ says Plastic Wax CEO Roger Maddams. ‘It has been an honor to work on premiere titles like Bioshock, Tomb Raider, The Darkness, and Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II. At this point we are making strategic moves to make sure the right people and technology are in place so we can continue to offer unmatched CG and motion-capture services to those leading the way in entertainment.’

Plastic Wax’s new office in San Francisco is being headed by Kevin Gill, a video-game industry veteran who was one of the original Brand Managers at Rockstar Games and later oversaw many brands and development projects at Eidos. As managing director of global operations for Plastic Wax, he is directing the company’s expansion. The Bay Area location was opened to act as a convenient point of contact for the game-development, publishing and entertainment communities in California and around the world. For more information, go to www.plasticwax.com.

Academy Salutes NFB Shorts in D.C.

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Celebrating more than 50 years of Oscar-worthy short-subject films, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, in partnership with the Charles Guggenheim Center for the Documentary Film and the Foundation for the National Archives, will present ‘A Salute to the National Film Board of Canada’ on Thursday, Oct. 23 at 7 p.m. in the William G. McGowan Theater at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. The evening will be hosted by animation critic, historian and Animation Magazine contributor Charles Solomon, with an introduction by Academy President Sid Ganis.

The program will feature a panel discussion with NFB chair and Government Film Commissioner Tom Perlmutter, NFB animation producer Marcy Page, and Torill Kove, animator of the Oscar-winning 2006 short The Danish Poet. Torill’s film will be screened, along with several other NFB-produced films, including Neighbours (1952), Walking (1969), Bob’s Birthday (1993) and Ryan (2004).

Tickets for the event are free and do not require reservations. Seating is on a first come, first served basis. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The National Archives Building is located at 700 Pennsylvania Ave., NW. The entrance for special events is on Constitution Ave.For more information, go to www.archives.gov.

U.K. Toon Shops Go Green for Disney Channel

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Playhouse Disney, Disney Channel’s preschool programming block, has recruited six leading U.K. production houses to develop a series of short animated films that help teach preschoolers about the environment. The interstitials created by Bermuda Shorts, Artillery, Mr & Mrs Smith, Fold7, Studio AKA and Partinzan Lab will be part of Playhouse Disney’s ongoing ‘Playing for the Planet’ campaign, which aims to help the next generation of preschoolers to grow up green.

Each production house was asked to take a complex environmental issue and reduce it to a single idea or example that a preschooler could easily understand. The spots empower kids by illustrating the simple actions that they can take by themselves or with their families, and shows them the positive impact they can have on the environment.

Simon Amster, creative director for Disney Channels U.K,. comments, ‘We encouraged a uniquely collaborative approach to the project by bringing all the production companies together to share creative ideas from the outset. The result is a variety of styles but shared creative visions and high production values. We are delighted with the results.’

Employing a range of techniques from animation to puppetry, the interstitials each focus on a specific environmental theme: saving water, recycling, reducing pollution, preserving nature, saving energy and spreading the green message. This second series of ‘Playing for the Planet’ shorts from Playhouse Disney will air on Disney Channel in November.

marblemedia Brings Gnasty Gnomes to MIPCOM

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marblemedia today announced the development of a new animated series based on the popular R.L. Stine children’s book Gnasty Gnomes. Aimed at kids 6-9, the property will be introduces to buyers at next’s week’s MIPCOM market in Cannes.

Gnasty Gnomes chronicles the humorous adventures of 8-year-old Wort, his older sister, Juny, and their family of foul, revolting and, above all, ‘gnasty’ Gnomes. Each week, our unlikely heroes and Wort’s pet rat, Catfood, find new and nauseating ways to save their family and friends from being turned into ceramic lawn ornaments by the perfectly refined (and perfectly evil) Gardners.

Content-creation company marblemedia received the 2007 Lions Gate/Maple Pictures Innovative Producer Award and was nominated for Company of the Year by the 2008 CNMA’s. Some of the company’s notable projects include the teen/tween competition series The Adrenaline Project; the hit preschool series This is Daniel Cook and This is Emily Yeung; the first television series and website in American Sign Language, deafplanet.com; the mobile short film anthology Shorts in Motion: The Art of Seduction; and Taste Buds, a kids cooking and food adventure series. Upcoming projects for the independent producers include the adult animated series The Dating Guy, being co-produced by Blueprint Ent. for TELETOON Canada. More information is available at www.marblemedia.com.

Bell, Lucas Join Astro Boy Cast

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Kristen Bell (Heroes, Gossip Girl) and Matt Lucas (Little Britain) have signed up to lend their voices to Astro Boy, Imagi Studios’ upcoming CG-animated feature film based on the classic anime and manga property. The actors will be joining a cast that includes Freddie Highmore, Nicolas Cage, Donald Sutherland, Nathan Lane, Bill Nighy and Eugene Levy.

Kristen Bell recently starred in the feature films as Fanboys and Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and is headlining with Meg Ryan in the upcoming comedy Serious Moonlight. BAFTA-winning actor-writer Matt Lucas has appeared widely on the stage as well as in feature films and television, most recently starring in the new HBO series Little Britain USA.

David Bowers (Flushed Away) is directing Astro Boy from a screenplay by Timothy Harris (Trading Places, Kindergarten Cop), with Maryann Garger producing. The pic will put a new twist on the sci-fi/adventure property created by legendary ‘god of manga,’ Osamu Tezuka, in the 1950s.

Set in the future, the Astro Boy movie is described by Imagi as a classic superhero origin story about a young robot with incredible powers who sets out on an adventurous journey in search of his identity and destiny, a quest that will take him into a netherworld of robot gladiators before he returns to save Metro City. The flick is slated for domestic release on Oct. 23, 2009 through Summit Ent. Summit holds worldwide distribution rights, except for Imagi’s reserved territories of Japan, Hong Kong and China.

Based in Los Angeles and Hong Kong, Imagi produced TMNT, the 2006 CG-animated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles reboot, which did well at the domestic box office considering its modest budget. The company is also busy at work on Gatchaman, a feature-length adaptation of the classic anime TV series Science Ninja Team Gatchaman, which debuted in the 1970s and is better known in the U.S. as Battle of the Planets or G-Force. Imagi’s CG update is being directed by Kevin Munroe (TMNT), and is expected to hit theaters in 2010.

Bashir at Center of Oscar Controversy

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As Oscar season heats up, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is being criticized for a change in rules that has made the Israeli animated feature Waltz With Bashir ineligible for competition in the Best Documentary category. According to The Hollywood Reporter, distributors and film festivals are up in arms over the new rule that requires a doc to have a one-week qualifying run in New York and Los Angeles by Aug. 31.

A festival favorite, Bashir has been submitted as Israel’s Best Foreign Language Film entry, and is also eligible for Best Animated Feature. The potential to be the first toon nominated in those two categories and the Best Documentary race was squashed by a decision the Academy claims is aimed at encouraging theatrical distribution of documentaries.

Distributors are reportedly protesting the move because they don’t necessarily want to screen films for media outlets in New York before their official releases. In years past, distribs only had to give their pics a limited engagement in Los Angeles and ten other U.S. cities. The New York Film Festival, along with other fests, is also against the new rule because organizers want to host the New York premiere of each film in competition.

Rather than blowing the chance to be featured in the New York Film Festival, the producers of Bashir opted to skip the Gotham Oscar qualifying run. Sony Pictures Classics will give the movie a limited U.S. theatrical run starting Dec. 25, the same window it gave last year’s foreign animation standout, Persepolis.

Festival organizers and filmmakers are lobbying Academy members to revise the documentary requirements. A petition is being circulated in advance of a late-October meeting of the documentary committee. The compromise being suggested would have screeners submitted by the end of August, but qualifying runs slated for later in the year.

Alvin Leaves the Chipmunks

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After 50 years of entertaining children with their high-pitched tunes, the animated musical group Alvin and the Chipmunks has lost its front man. Of course, it’s only a publicity stunt aimed at getting kids to visit www.chimpunkaudition.com and try out to become the group’s new lead vocalist. The promotion also supports the Nov. 4 release of the new Chipmunks album, Undeniable.

Visitors to www.chipmunkaudition.com will be able to upload their own audition videos to the Chipmunks’ YouTube channel. Any song will be accepted and costumes, props and other creative ideas are encouraged.

More than 40 albums have been released under the Chipmunks franchise. Undeniable features a remix of ‘We’re The Chipmunks,’ the theme song from the popular cartoon series, as well as a version of Bob Marley’s ‘Three Little Birds.’ There’s also a new holiday tune titled ‘Ho Ho Ho,’ a spoof of Bon Jovi’s ‘Livin’ On a Prayer’ and a ‘munked version of Led Zeppelin’s ‘Rock and Roll.’ Rising pop star Drew Seeley, who contributed to the High School Musical soundtracks, is also featured on a duet of the classic disco hit ‘Shake Your Groove Thing.’

Sleeping Beauty, Harryhausen Pix on Blu-Ray

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Several classic films have been polished up for re-release on home video Tuesday. The Disney favorite Sleeping Beauty is the first Mouse House animated classic to be released on Blu-ray Disc, and four fantasy faves featuring stop-motion animation by vfx legend Ray Harryhausen make their Blu-ray debut as well. The four-disc collectible gift set offers 20 Million Miles to Earth, The 7th Voyage of Sinbad, It Came From Beneath the Sea and Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers in high-definition for the first time.

Available on both Blu-ray and standard-definition DVD, the 1959 fairytale Sleeping Beauty has once again been digitally re-mastered for superior picture and sound quality in time for its 50th anniversary. Last reissued in 2003, the enduring tale of a doomed princess and her brave knight now comes with a never-before-seen alternate opening and a new documentary titled Picture Perfect: The Making of Sleeping Beauty. Other bonus materials include deleted songs, interactive games and a new ‘Once Upon a Dream’ music video performed by Hannah Montana’s Emily Osment. The Blu-ray edition also includes a behind-the-scenes tour with picture-in-picture commentary by Pixar’s John Lasseter, Disney animator Andreas Deja and film critic and historian Leonard Maltin. In addition, Walt Disney Imagineering’s Sleeping Beauty Castle Walk-through attraction, which has been closed for 30 years, has been digitally recreated in 3D. The two-Disc DVD set lists for $19.99, and the Blu-ray edition can be has for $34.99 or less.

The Ray Harryhausen Collection on Blu-ray from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment provides 578 minutes of good, old-fashioned sci-fi and fantasy matinee fun crawling with stop-motion monsters, mythical creatures and alien invaders. The set carries a suggested retail price of $107.95. Also debuting Tuesday is a stand-alone, 50th anniversary edition of The 7th Voyage of Sinbad. Listing at $28.95 on Blu-ray and $19.95 on DVD, the disc features commentary by Ray Harryhausen, visual effects experts Phil Tippett and Randall William Cook, author Steven Smith and producer Arnold Kunert. Also included are a documentary and six featurettes.

Stop-motion fans can also pick up the Jack Frost Deluxe Edition on DVD. The 1979 Rankin & Bass holiday special features the voices of Buddy Hackett, Robert Morse and Larry Storch, as well as songs by Mel Torme, Al Jolson and others as it tells the tale of how brave winter elf Jack Frost became human. Extras include ‘Totally Cool Crafty Creations,’ a feature that teaches kids how to make their own holiday crafts, and ‘Snip’s Snowy Sing-a-long.’ The Warner Home Video release carries a suggested retail price of $19.98.

Watership Down, Charlie Brown, TV Faves on Disc

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Warner Home Video celebrates the 30th anniversary of the classic animated fantasy film Watership Down and Charlie Brown tries to get elected in this week’s batch of home video releases. Also hitting disc are episodes of the hit animated primetime series The Simpsons, South Park and Robot Chicken.

Based on British author Richard Adam’s bestselling novel of the same name, Watership Down revolves around a community of rabbits nestled among the rolling hills and peaceful meadows of England. When their warren is threatened, a small group of brave bunnies illegally escapes into the unknown countryside in search of a safer home. Led by the visionary Fiver, the courageous Bigwig, the clever Blackberry and the honorable Hazel, they embark on a dangerous journey that will require all of their strength and cunning. The voice cast includes such celebrated British actors as John Hurt, Richard Briers, Harry Andrews, Simon Cadell, Nigel Hawthorne and Roy Kinnear.

Listing at $19.97, the deluxe edition film is accompanied by all-new extra features including Watership Down: A Conversation with the Filmmakers, a conversation with producer/director Martin Rosen and editor Terry Rawlings. There’s also a featurette titled Defining a Style, as well as a storyboard-to-animation comparison.

The animated television special You’re Not Elected, Charlie Brown comes to DVD with a re-mastered, deluxe edition from Warner Home Video. In this enduring tale, Charlie wants to be student body president, but polling information gathered by Lucy doesn’t look good for his chances. He decides instead to back Linus, who runs on a pro-recess, anti-homework platform. He’s looking like a shoo-in, until he starts talking about the Great Pumpkin.

Included on the disc is a behind-the-scenes featurette titled The Polls Don’t Lie: The Making of You’re Not Elected, Charlie Brown. The feature offers viewers an in-depth look at the eighth Peanuts television special, and explores the political leanings (or lack thereof) of its producers as they set out to create a politically-themed piece within the realm of Peanuts. The DVD carries a suggested retail price of $19.98.

The Simpsons: The Complete Eleventh Season arrives as a four-disc set with 22 episodes of the long-running FOX series. Retailing for $49.98, the set features episode commentary, an introduction by series creator Matt Groening, an animation showcase, deleted scenes, The Many Faces of Krusty featurette, original sketches and A Star on Hollywood Boulevard featurette.

South Park: The Cult of Cartman is a two-disc set with 12 episodes featuring Cartman at his very worst. The Warner Home Video release lists for $26.99. There’s more irreverent, adult-oriented animated comedy to be found in Warner’s release of Robot Chicken: Season 3, a double-discer packed with 20 episodes of the Adult Swim series for $29.98.

3DX Opens with a Bolt

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Two days before it opens in the U.S. Disney’s Bolt will premiere at the inaugural 3DX: 3D Film & Entertainment Technology Festival in Singapore. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the animated family flick will be honored as the opening movie, kicking off the fest on Nov. 19. The screening will be preceded by a rundown of Disney’s hefty slate of upcoming 3-D pics, which includes the Pixar adventure Up, the live-action/CG hybrid G-Force and the mo-cap pic Disney’s A Christmas Carol.

3DX is a five-day event being produced by Jim Chabin Partners of Los Angeles and the Media Development Authority of Singapore. The keynote address will be delivered by DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg, filmmaker James Cameron and Twentieth Century Fox filmed entertainment chair Jim Gianopulos. All three have vested interests in 3-D entertainment. DreamWorks Animation has committed to designing all of its animated features for stereoscopic exhibition starting with next year’s Monsters Vs. Aliens, and Cameron is working on the highly anticipated, CG-laden sci-fi adventure Avatar, which will be distributed by Fox in 2010. Fox also has the animated sequel Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs set for release in July of 2009, and is preparing to re-release George Lucas’ Star Wars films in 3-D.

Directed by Chris Williams and Byron Howard, Bolt tells the story of a canine TV star (voiced by John Travolta) that is inadvertently shipped from Hollywood to New York City. During his cross-country journey home to his owner, Penny (Miley Cyrus), he makes the surprising discovery that his TV super powers don’t work in the real world. He his joined in his adventure by a jaded, abandoned housecat named Mittens (Susie Essman) and a TV-obsessed hamster in a plastic ball named Rhino. The film will open in North America on Nov. 21.

Other stereoscopic pics to be screened at 3DX include New Line Cinema’s CG-laden Jules Verne adaptation, Journey to the Center of the Earth, which opened in theaters over the summer, and nWave Pictures and Illuminata Pictures’ animated family adventure-comedy, Fly Me to the Moon.

Toons Breakthrough at MIPCOM

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Breakthrough Ent. will premiere two new animated series at MIPCOM in Cannes next week. International buyers will have the opportunity to check out the adult-oriented comedy Producing Parker, as well as the children’s show Fishtronaut. Located at booth # 00.01, the company will also debut the live-action kids’ show Think Big, which focuses on young inventors.

Producing Parker (13×30) is described as an edgy send-up of daytime talk shows. Kim Cattrall (Sex and the City) provides the voice of Dee, the title character’s self-absorbed, high-maintenance boss and host of The Dee Show, a talk show that sells viewers the myth of having it all. In each episode, Parker has to manage her boss’s delicate ego with the daily behind-the-scenes antics of live TV. The show is co-produced by Breakthrough Animation and Philippine Animation Studio, in association with Canwest Media.

Fishtronaut (52×11 or 26×30) is an animated, adventure series revolving around Fishtronaut, a secret agent fish as he goes on slimy, furry and gooey adventures with his gal pal, Marina, and Zeek, a tween-age monkey. Kids will be encouraged to engage interactively by tapping and clapping along with the colorful characters. Aimed at kids 4-7, the series explores the world’s many mysteries above and below the water. It’s produced by the creative team at Brazil’s TV PinGuim in association with Discovery Kids, and is available in HD.