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Disney+ has an exciting holiday gift for fans as Walt Disney Animation Studios’ Strange World is heading to the streaming service beginning December 23. The studio shared new key art and posted a special look at the CG-animated adventureto Twitter to mark the announcement.
Strange World introduces a legendary family of explorers, the Clades, as they attempt to navigate an uncharted, treacherous land alongside a motley crew that includes a mischievous blob called Splat; Legend, the family dog; and a slew of ravenous creatures.
They’re in their element when exploring this world…
Oscar- and Tony-nominated actor Jake Gyllenhaal as Searcher Clade, a family man who finds himself out of his element on an unpredictable mission.
Emmy and two-time Golden Globe nominee Dennis Quaid as Searcher’s larger-than-life explorer father, Jaeger.
Comedian, actor, writer, filmmaker and musician Jaboukie Young-White as Searcher’s 16-year-old, adventure-seeking son, Ethan.
Actress, producer, bestselling author and TIME100 cover honoree Gabrielle Union as Meridian Clade, an accomplished pilot and Searcher’s partner in all things.
Critically acclaimed actress, producer, director and fine artist Lucy Liu as Callisto Mal, Avalonia’s fearless leader who spearheads the exploration into the strange world.
Helmed by director Don Hall (Oscar-winning Big Hero 6, Raya and the Last Dragon) and co-director/writer Qui Nguyen (co-writer Raya and the Last Dragon), with Roy Conli (Oscar-winning Big Hero 6, Tangled) producing, Strange World is in theaters now.
The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (NATAS) presented the first annual Children’s & Family Emmy Awards, across two ceremonies held Saturday, December 10 (Creative Arts) and Sunday, December 11 at the Wilshire Ebell Theatre in Los Angeles. Animation was a major part of the new awards — the first standalone expansion of the Emmy Award competition since 1979.
Netflix Animation really threw its creative weight around in this inaugural competition, taking the top category prizes for animation as across kids’ series (City of Ghosts), preschool (Ada Twist, Scientist), special class (Hilda and the Mountain King) and short-form (We the People), in addition to multiple craft awards for Maya and the Three and Centaurworld.
You can see the previously announced Individual Achievement in Animation winners here and review the animated nominees over here. Without further ado, the animation and related category winners are:
Maya and the Three
Night 1 (Creative Arts)
OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — Maya and the Three (Netflix)
Co-Executive Producer/Writer: Jeff Ranjo
Writer/Producer: Tim Yoon
Writers: Jorge Gutierrez, Candie Langdale, Doug Langdale, Silvia Olivas
OUTSTANDING WRITING FOR A PRESCHOOL ANIMATED PROGRAM — Muppet Babies (Disney Junior)
Writers: Max Beaudry, Hanah Lee Cook, Sarah Eisenberg, Ghia Godfree, Francisco Paredes, Becky Wangberg
Story Editor: Robyn Brown
OUTSTANDING DIRECTING FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — City of Ghosts (Netflix)
Directors: Ako Castuera, Luis Grane, Elizabeth Ito, Bob Logan, Pendleton Ward
OUTSTANDING VOICE DIRECTING FOR AN ANIMATED SERIES — Centaurworld (Netflix)
Voice Director: Kristi Reed
OUTSTANDING MUSIC DIRECTION AND COMPOSITION FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — Cat Burglar (Netflix)
Composer: Christopher Willis
OUTSTANDING EDITING FOR A PRESCHOOL ANIMATED PROGRAM — Trash Truck (Netflix)
Editor: Sally Bergom
OUTSTANDING EDITING FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — Ciao Alberto (Disney+)
Editor: Jennifer Jew
OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING AND SOUND EDITING FOR A PRESCHOOL ANIMATED PROGRAM — Octonauts & the Ring of Fire (Netflix)
Re-Recording Mixer: Ewan Deane
Sound Designers: Jamie Mahaffey, Iain Pattison, J. Martin Taylor
Sound Designer and Sound Effects Editor: Nolan McNaughton
Supervising Dialogue Editor: Dave Peacock
Dialogue Editor: Sarah Faust
OUTSTANDING SOUND MIXING AND SOUND EDITING FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — Maya and the Three (Netflix)
Foley Mixers: Jack Cucci, Tavish Grade
Music Editor: Andres Locsey
Sound Effects Editors: David Barbee, Masanobu “Tomi” Tomita
Foley Artists: John Cucci, Dan O’Connell
Supervising Sound Editor and Re-Recording Mixer: Scott Martin Gershin
Sound Designers: Chris Richardson, Andrew Vernon
OUTSTANDING CASTING FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder (Disney+)
Casting By: Tatiana Bull, Aaron Drown, David H. Wright III
Madrid Noir
OUTSTANDING INTERACTIVE MEDIA — Madrid Noir(Oculus TV)
Producers: Emmanuel Bernard, Antoine Cayrol, Arnaud Colinart, Luke Gibbard, Corentin Lambot, Craig Skerry, Yelena Rachistky, Dash Spiegelman
Director: James Castillo
Writers: Lawrence Bennett, Lydia Rynne
Performers: Godeliv Brandt, Fernando Guillén Cuervo
CG Supervisor: Thomas Flavelle
Animation Director: Aziz Kocanaogullari
Music Composer: Carlos Rodriguez Rodriguez
OUTSTANDING PROMOTIONAL ANNOUNCEMENT — Maya and the Three (Netflix)
Senior Producer: Carly Machlis
Producer: Morgan Russell
Creative Director: Erika Anaya
Director: Katia Temkin
Associate Director: Savannah Bloch
Editors: Mack Lawrence, Julian Petrohilos
Project Managers: Erin Beckner, Ben Tom George, Hannah Gullixson
OUTSTANDING VISUAL EFFECTS FOR A LIVE-ACTION PROGRAM — Endlings (Hulu)
VFX & Animation Executive Producer: Matthew J.R. Bishop
CG Supervisor: Terry Bradley
VFX Producer: Teodora Ilie
On Set VFX Supervisors: Daryl Shail
On Set Data Wrangler: Cody McCaig
VFX Editors: Yulia Kopyttseva, Luba Kukharenko, Alyssa Schmidt, Rachel Wong
Lead Compositors: Steve Lowry, Nial McFadyen
Lead FX Compositor: Stephen Curran
Lighting Leads: Belma Abdicevic, Tom Perry
Animation Directors: Adam Beck, Jeff Robinson
Asset Supervisors: Aravindan Rajasingham, James Wallace
VFX Lead Technical Director: Gustavo Fernandes
Senior Tracking and Layout Artist: Hasanain Rashid
Rigging Lead: Sean Sullivan
Rigging Artist: Michael Johnston
Character Finaling Artist Lead: Pedro Vilas
Rotoscope Artist Lead: Tarl Lambert
OUTSTANDING MAIN TITLE AND GRAPHICS — Hilda and the Mountain King (Netflix)
Graphics Producer: Melissa Buisán
Creative Director: Jay Grandin
Animation Director: Conor Whelan
Title Designer/Illustrator: Eric Pautz
OUTSTANDING ART DIRECTION/SET DECORATION/SCENIC DESIGN —
Muppets Haunted Mansion (Disney+)
Production Designer: Darcy Prevost
Art Director: Kathryn Molenaar
Set Decorator: Jeanine Ringer
Virtual Production Art Director: Mark D. Allen
Virtual Production Art Directors, CG Supervisors: James Dastoli, Robert Dastoli
AND
Fraggle Rock: Back to the Rock (Apple TV+)
Production Designer: Tyler Bishop Harron
Art Directors: Brentan Harron, Bill Ives
Set Designer: Evan Spence
Set Decorators: Paul Healy, Alan McCullagh, Ian Nothnagel
Hilda and the Mountain King
Night 2 Winners
OUTSTANDING ANIMATED SERIES — City of Ghosts (Netflix)
Executive Producer: Elizabeth Ito
Co-Executive Producer: Joanne Shen
Line Producer: Dayla Kennedy
OUTSTANDING PRESCHOOL ANIMATED SERIES — Ada Twist, Scientist (Netflix)
Executive Producers: Andrea Beaty, Mark Burton, Tonia Davis, Cathal Gaffney, Chris Nee, Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Darragh O’Connell, David Roberts, Priya Swaminathan
Co-Executive Producer: Kerri Grant
Creative Producer: Alex Pitz
Supervising Producer: Gillian Higgins
Producers: Nayanshi Shaw, Peedee Shindell
Consulting Producer: Jean Herlihy
OUTSTANDING SPECIAL CLASS ANIMATED PROGRAM Hilda and the Mountain King (Netflix)
Executive Producers: Kurt Mueller
Co-Executive Producers: Luke Pearson, Stephanie Simpson
Supervising Producers: Andy Coyle, Bryan Korn
Producers: Steve Jacobson, Chantal Ling, Rachel Simon
Associate Producer: Emerald Wright-Collie
Line Producer: Victor Reyes
OUTSTANDING SHORT-FORM PROGRAM — We the People (Netflix)
Executive Producers: Kenya Barris, Tonia Davis, Chris Nee, Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Priya Swaminathan
Producers: Ada Chiaghana, Erynn Sampson, Peedee Shindell
Directors: Peter Ramsey, Tim Rauch
Writers: H.E.R. , Ronald Colson, Jeff Gitelman, David Harris, Maxx Moore
OUTSTANDING PRESCHOOL SERIES — Sesame Street (HBO Max)
Executive Producers: Benjamin Lehmann, Kay Wilson Stallings
Supervising Producer: Sal Perez
Senior Producers: Karyn Leibovich, Stephanie Longardo
Coordinating Producer: Mindy Fila
Producers: Michael J. Cargill, Todd E. James, Andrew Moriarty, Ken Scarborough, Matt Vogel, Kimberly Wright, Autumn Zitani
Associate Producers: Christina Elefante, Kelly Ferrara, Bryce-Loren Walker
Line Producer: Aimee Blackton
OUTSTANDING VOICE PERFORMANCE IN A PRESCHOOL ANIMATED PROGRAM —Daniel Ross, as Donald Duck Mickey and Minnie Wish Upon a Christmas (Disney Junior)
OUTSTANDING VOICE PERFORMANCE IN AN ANIMATED PROGRAM — Eric Bauza, as Bugs Bunny, Marvin the Martian, Daffy Duck & Tweety Looney Tunes Cartoons (HBO Max)
OUTSTANDING YOUNGER VOICE PERFORMER IN AN ANIMATED OR PRESCHOOL ANIMATED PROGRAM — Andy Walken, as Young Durpleton Centaurworld (Netflix)
The Hollywood Foreign Press Association is healing from the controversy that barred the prestigious Golden Globes (goldenglobes.com) film and television awards from broadcast, and screen fans will once again get to watch as the year’s best talent are recognized on TV — just in time to celebrate their 80th edition.
Ahead of the Globes’ return to NBC on Tuesday, January 10, the HFPA today announced its nomination picks, including the animated feature film contenders. Nominations were read out this morning on NBC’s Today by George Lopez and his daughter, Mayan Lopez, stars of NBC comedy Lopez vs. Lopez. Facing off for the animation title are:
Best Motion Picture – Animated
Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio. Directed by Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson (Netflix)
Inu-Oh. Directed by Masaaki Yuasa (GKIDS/Science SARU)
Marcel the Shell With Shoes On. Directed by Dean-Fleischer Camp (A24)
Puss In Boots: The Last Wish. Directed by Joel Crawford (DreamWorks/Universal)
Turning Red. Directed by Domee Shi. (Disney/Pixar)
In addition, Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio was also nominated for Best Score (Alexandre Desplat) and Best Original Song (“Ciao Papa”, Music by Alexandre Desplat; lyrics by Roeban Katz, Guillermo del Toro).
Last year, NBC canceled the 2022 Golden Globes broadcast due to heavy industry criticism sparked by allegations against the HFPA of corruption and the revelation that the organization had no Black members.The Association responded a few months later by announcing the addition of 21 new members of diverse backgrounds.
Since the Golden Globes introduced its animation category, Pixar has proven the winningest studio with nine wins, with sibling studio Disney adding three to their combined domination of these awards. Paramount/Nickelodeon Animation, DreamWorks Animation, Sony Pictures Animation and LAIKA have all scored one animated feature Globe each.
So far, Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio and Dean Fleischer-Camp’s Marcel the Shell with Shoes On have emerged as the frontrunners in the end-of-the-year critics award flurry. Marcel has won the National Board of Critics and the New York Critics Circle prizes while Pinocchio just won the L.A. Film Critics prize for Best Animated Feature of the year this past weekend. Missing in the Golden Globe list this morning were other favorite titles such as Henry Selick’s much-praised Wendell & Wild, Disney’s Strange World, Pixar’s Lightyear, DreamWorks’ The Bad Guys, Cartoon Saloon/Netflix’s My Father’s Dragon, Netflix’s The Sea Beast and Richard Linklater’s Apollo 10 1/2.
GKIDS was able to land the indie/Japanese feature spot with Inu-Oh, Masaaki Yuasa’s well-received 14th century animated musical, based on the Tales of the Heike, which centers on the friendship between a dancer born with unique physical characteristics, and a blind musician. The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival and was released in Japan this past May, and holds at 90% scored on Rotten Tomatoes.
The Golden Globes have a strong correlation record for best animated feature with the Academy Awards, only misaligning their top choices four times since both races have been part of the awards season animation circuit.
Director Alain Ughetto’s stop-motion feature No Dogs or Italians Allowed (France, Italy, Switzerland) and Urska Djukick and Emilie Piegard’s short Granny’s Sexual Life were the big animation winners at the European Film Awards today (Dec. 10).
Ughetto’s feature, which was nominated for a Cristal and took home the Jury Prize at Annecy in June, was able to beat four other high-profile nominated titles in the Best Animated Movie category—Little Nicholas: Happy as Can Be, My Love Affair with Marriage, My Neighbors’ Neighbors and Oink.
No Dogs or Italians Allowed centers on how Ughetto’s family left their home in northern Italy in order to find a better life in France and the challenges and hardships they encountered in their new country. As the five films competing in this category were all either 2D animated or stop-motion projects, it certainly feels like there is less appetite for CG-animated features in Europe.
Watch the trailer below:
Granny’s Sexual Life also faced tough competition from four other global favorites, which include Ice Merchants, Love, Dad, Techno, Mama and Will My Parents Come to See Me. The 2D-animated short, which was nominated for a Cristal at Annecy and won the top prize at Animateka Film Festival, focuses on the true memories of four older women who look back at the relationships between men and women, and provides a glimpse at the status of Slovenian women in the first half of the 20th century.
Here’s the trailer:
The 35th European Film Awards took place at the Harpa concert hall in the Icelandic capital of Reykjavik. The awards were voted on by the 4,400 members of the European Film Academy. Ruben Ostlund’s Triangle of Sadness was the big live-action winner of the evening, taking home the top European Film Awards for Best Feature, Best Director, Best Actor and Best Screenwriter. Last year, Jonas Poher Rasmussen’s Flee won for Best Animated Feature and Best Documentary.
Cameo, the marketplace that connects global talent with fans and brands, has launched Cameo Kids — offering personalized videos for children from their family entertainment favorites. The product launched in partnership with Candle Media, which last year acquired Moonbug Entertainment. At launch, Cameo Kids features a host of animated characters including the stars of Moonbug’s most popular global kids’ franchises, Blippi and CoComelon.
Cameo Kids allows consumers to book personalized videos built around key moments — from birthdays and the holidays to daily routines like bedtime and general messages of love and encouragement. In the coming months, the product experience will expand to add even more seasonal holidays, daily routines and new milestones.
“We’ve seen jaw-dropping fan reactions to Cameo videos over the last few years including truly wowed children, so we’re excited to spread even more of that joy with this new offering,” said Steven Galanis, Cameo Co-Founder and CEO. “Candle Media and Moonbug helped bring this to life by partnering with us to launch some of the biggest names in children’s entertainment and create endless possibilities for new characters and creative product use cases. We’re building a platform where families can get their kid’s favorite star to not just know their name, but share support for every important moment in their child’s life – big and small.”
The launch offers Cameos starting at $25 from popular animated Moonbug stars including Blippi from Blippi Wonders and JJ, Cody, Cece and Nina from CoComelon, the #1 preschool entertainment franchise in the world. Also available will be Mattel’s Thomas the Tank Engine, True from Netflix’s True and the Rainbow Kingdom and an animated Santa Claus. Cameo plans to work with existing and new partners to continually add new characters and franchises to Cameo Kids on a rolling basis.
The brand’s first major investment in family entertainment since setting up in 2017, Cameo Kids launched official support in the form of external APIs, quality control tools and a dynamic booking form to allow existing and future partners to seamlessly onboard and manage animated Cameo Kids characters. The new destination aims to unlock a brand-new audience and provide IP partners a new platform to offer exclusive, personalized content.
Candle Media Co-Founders and Co-CEOs Kevin Mayer and Tom Staggs said, “The creator economy is driven by opportunities for fans to engage directly with their favorite personalities, and we are thrilled to partner with Cameo to allow parents and loved ones to create personalized Cameo videos featuring many of our most popular animated characters from Moonbug, and over time, additional Candle brands and franchises.”
The Amazing Maurice, based on the Carnegie award-winning novel by Terry Pratchett, has earned the rare animated feature distinction as a selection for the 2023 Sundance Film Festival, where it will mark its U.S. premiere. Established in 1978 by Robert Redford’s Sundance Institute, the prestigious event’s next edition will be held January 19-29 in Park City, Utah.
“Adapting Pratchett is an honor and a challenge, one that must not be taken lightly. His work brings a complexity of tragedy and humor,” said director Toby Genkel. “He tells stories that are about something and this resonates with me. We aimed to be faithful to the themes of the novel as well as make it work as an animated movie for families. We do go to some dark places and I hope we take the audience along with us because there’s a lot of fun to be had along the way. And, of course, it ends with a mighty celebration.”
The film tells the story of a talking cat who teams up with a clan of “educated rodents” to run pied-piper scams in the towns of Discworld. All goes well until they come to Bad Blintz and meet a mysterious enemy who has his own nefarious plans for the inhabitants of the town. Maurice and the rats team up with two humans, Malicia and Keith, to take on the enemy. But first they have to retrieve the real pied-piper’s pipe…
The Amazing Maurice
“The Amazing Maurice has many lead characters, including one wily cat, two humans, five intelligent rats, Death, a demented pied piper, and a bad guy who is an embodiment of the collective fury of all the rats. We procured a top-tier cast, and their voices, applied to our art director’s colorful vision for the film, plus the work of the animators, framed through director Toby’s ability to portray the fun and the depths of the story, brought the film to life in an exceptional way. It is its own unique thing,” noted producer Robert Chandler.
A Germany-U.K. co-production, the film is produced by Emely Christians at Ulysses Filmproduktion and Andrew Baker and Robert Chandler at Cantilever Media, stars Hugh Laurie, Emilia Clarke, David Thewlis, Himesh Patel, David Tennant, Ariyon Bakare and Gemma Arterton, and was directed by Toby Genkel from a screenplay by Terry Rossio.
Producer Baker added, “We worked alongside Narrativia, the company that looks after the Terry Pratchett literary estate, from the get-go. They were involved at every stage and could see the sheer passion and experience we brought to the film. I myself am a huge Terry Pratchett fan — I’ve read everything — and this was important. The estate could see we had put together a team of producers, directors, artists and animators who cared greatly about the responsibility of delivering something good and true to Terry’s voice. I am really proud of this film.”
The Amazing Maurice
Animation studios on The Amazing Maurice are Studio Rakete (Hamburg) and Red Star 3D (Sheffield).
“We made this film at the height of the pandemic lockdowns. We had to reconfigure our pipelines in Hamburg and Sheffield with the teams working remotely, but we did it, we got it made and remained true to our budget and schedule,” said Christians, producer at Ulysses. “What was really important, though, was the way the teams worked together, especially with many of the artists and animators not being able to meet in advance. Our collective passion for the film and its characters pulled us through. We think we have delivered something really special.”
The film’s international sales agent is Global Screen. Viva Kids is handling U.S. distribution, and will release the movie in theaters across the U.S. and Canada on February 3. The film will make its U.K. debut on December 16 as a Sky Original from Sky Cinema and in independent cinemas nationwide.
A passion project long in development for action star Dwayne Johnson, Black Adam follows the adventures of a DC Comics antihero — a slave in ancient Egypt, who is granted the powers of the Wizard Shazam. The movie, which was released in October, passed the $352 million mark at the global box office only after a month in theaters.
Johnson was reunited with filmmaker Jaume Collet-Serra (Jungle Cruise) to make the blockbuster adventure. The project also used the talents of VFX supervisor Bill Westenhofer (Life of Pi) who worked on the movie for three years. About 2,700 of 3,500 visual effects shots appear in the film’s final cut: Wētā FX worked on the third act; Digital Domain looked after the mine sequence where Black Adam tries to rescue Amon Tomaz; Scanline VFX did some of the fly-by chase and Black Adam fighting the tanks and armies in the desert, Effetti Digitali Italiani produced a flashback sequence, while UPP and Rodeo FX extended the impressive sets for the movie.
Black Adam
Previz Wizards
Bill Westenhofer
While the production was shut down a couple of times during the pandemic, the previz kept on being produced by visualization company Day for Night. “We used Unreal Engine and the DP [Lawrence Sher] sat through the previz process with us, helped to pick cameras and set the lighting,” notes Westenhofer. “We went so far with the previz before we even got to set that it could be used as a lighting guide. If you look at the sequences as they are in the film and at the original previz, for the most part they are one to one.”
On Instagram, Johnson posted a series of shots of him sitting inside a specialized lighting rig called ‘The Egg’ for 10 hours to create the slave Teth-Adam before he gets transformed into Black Adam. “We had a body double there for the performance and then Dwayne’s head gets put on top of that,” he says. “To do that there were arrays of cameras and little markers that he has to look at while he’s doing the shot so that Lola VFX can have the head match the movement of the double.”
A different methodology was implemented for the flying shots of Black Adam. “A lot of the shots were not filmed with greenscreen but by a process called volume capture, which was handled by Eyeline (a division of Scanline),” explains Westenhofer. “Dwayne is lying on a bed surrounded by a wall that is about eight and a half feet in diameter. There’s a mix of about 80 cameras and then little LED panels around for lights. Then we can run the scene through the LED walls to get interactive light on him while these cameras capture his face. You have a fully 3D model with projected photography. You can have him flying through the scene and the camera can do whatever it wants. A lot of that stuff was during the fly-by chase sequence.”
In one of the trailer shots, Black Adam punches a wing of a fighter jet, causing it to crash. “You can say, ‘He’s super strong, so this thing should weigh nothing to him,’” says Westenhofer, “but you want to make sure it feels hard enough. Otherwise, if you make it feel effortless, instead of making him super strong the object feels light. There needs to be enough resistance.”
Noah Centineo as Atom Smasher in ‘Black Adam’
In the movie, the militant leader of Intergang, Ishmael Gregor (Marwan Kenzari), calls upon the six most powerful demons in Hell to transform himself into the supervillain Sabbac. “Sabbac is a full CG character,” reveals Westenhofer. “Marwan did his own motion capture and it was based on his own facial and some of his body performance. For some of the bigger things we had a stunt performer doing motion capture in the volume. Sabbac generates heat, so we had smoke that comes off of his body. He has a lot of similar powers to Black Adam, just with fire instead of lightning.”
The film’s depiction of lightning was inspired by several films. “There is a process where the lightning bolt is seeking out the path of least resistance and travels far less than the speed of light,” says the VFX supervisor. “You can actually see it traversing through the sky. We incorporated some of that in the slow-motion scenes. The glow on the chest of Black Adam was something that we did a lot of playing around with. We wanted to reference Shazam but made it more internal to his body.”
Aldis Hodge as Hawk Man in ‘Black Adam’
Special effects also assisted with the nine-feet-long wings of Hawkman (Aldis Hodge). “The special effects team built a backpack that Aldis could wear [made] with lightweight carbon fiber tubes,” recalls Westenhofer. “It had fasteners so you could pose the wing in a different shape. We only used that for camera lineups, since all the wings in the film are CGI. A lot of work was done at the beginning to make sure we were happy with how he should take off and land, and if we were going to do wirework, that the action we got from it worked with the animation at the end.”
Also featured in the film’s plotline is Dr. Fate (Pierce Brosnan), who has the ability to teleport. “The signature look we developed was a refractive crystalline structure,” says Westenhofer. “We used the ankh as a key element in the design of his powers. Magic is always tricky because it can be anything which makes it a search to try to figure out what you want. By making the magic refractive it ties in with the lighting of the scene rather than slapping it down on top.”
Among the film’s colorful cast of characters is Atom Smasher (Noah Centineo), who can literally alter the size of his body. “It’s always better to make a size change on the move,” says the visual effects master. “You’ll find that Atom Smasher doesn’t stand still and grow. As Atom Smasher runs, every step he takes you see him get a little bit bigger. When Atom Smasher shrinks down in camera, he does it while stepping over an object. Those kinds of things feel more natural.”
Quintessa Swindell as Cyclone in ‘Black Adam’
Colorful Trails
For Cyclone (Quintessa Swindell), Jaume Collet-Serra did not want to have a traditional character who stands and summons the wind. “Cyclone moves through the space and pulls the wind in her wake,” explains Westenhofer. “Production designer Tom Meyer found this reference of ballet dancers motion captured and rendered with a lingering trail of their movements. As Cyclone starts to speed up, her costume extends a little bit and there is this colorful energy of purples and greens that flows from it. This goes with her more whimsical character. She is generating a tornado, much like what happens when you stick a spoon in a glass of water and start spinning faster.”
About 70 percent of Cyclone’s effects are full CG. “For closeups, we did have Quintessa on a wire and bluescreen with a high-speed camera spinning around as much as we could before making her sick!” says Westenhofer. “Her effects are my favorite of the film.”
Black Adam
Spoiler Warning!
Of course, we have to talk about that big cameo that pops up in the credit sequence! “We did a previs of Superman walking up to Dwayne for the end credits,” says the VFX supe. “At the time we shot a body double wearing the Man of Steel costume from the chest down. And that was what it was going to be until late in the game when I was told that we had gotten approval through Warner Bros. to go with Henry Cavill. He was in London on a soundstage with the crew and Jaume and I were down in Los Angeles in our screening room. We had a simulcast of the camera view and a Zoom session going so we could talk to Henry. We had Henry follow the cadence of the shot so we could swap him into the other plate.”
Westenhofer says in addition to the thrill of creating cutting-edge VFX, the real joy comes from witnessing the reaction of audiences to the film. He says, “The most fun is seeing people react to the stuff that you’ve worked on for the first time, and to have them cheer and laugh when they’re supposed to.”
Black Adam is currently playing in theaters all over the world. The film will debut on HBO Max on Friday, December 16.
China Bridge Content, a New York-based content and consulting firm founded by 12-time Emmy Award-winning creator Josh Selig (Wonder Pets! Small Potatoes, Super Wings, P. King Duckling), has been selected by the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Asian Art in Washington, DC, to create original animated characters to help enhance the museum experience for families.
China Bridge and the Department of Conservation and Scientific Research at the National Museum of Asian Art will be working together to create family-friendly original characters who will both entertain and educate museum visitors about the various aspects of conserving works of art. The project team is developing potential future uses for the characters, like appearances in animated videos, books, games, toys and graphic novels as well as on the museum’s website and outreach materials.
The initiative is part of a new museum focus on preschool–12th grade learning that combines art and science. The educational focus of the new characters will help families understand the behind-the-scenes world at the museum, learn about art from different angles, and gain insights into the museum’s conservation and scientific research activities. The new project will also help kids and families appreciate the unique ways that conservators, scientists and curators work together with other museum staff to study and care for works of art, and to prepare for works of art to be on view in the galleries at the National Museum of Asian Art.
The project is being headed up by Selig and is supported by his team members Ye Chao, the former head of Shanghai Toonmax and a cultural advisor for Shanghai Disneyland; Emilie Blezat, founder and former CEO of Studiocanal China, who runs Dark Riviera AB and has extensive experience developing and producing original content for museums, films, TV, games and graphic novels; and Bob Holmes, CEO of Sudden Industries, a New York-based studio which creates innovative and educational digital experiences for leading U.S. channels including Nickelodeon and PBS Kids.
The new characters will be inspired by art from the National Museum of Asian Art, whose extensive collections feature many of the world’s premier Asian artworks. These include objects dating from Neolithic times to the early 20th century, including paintings, sculptures, scrolls, pottery, jades and bronzes.
The museum’s team of conservators and scientists, led by conservator Ellen Chase, and other experts will co-develop and guide the project at every step to ensure that the new characters and all other related media are historically and technically accurate.
“Our new partnership with the Smithsonian is a unique opportunity to bring China Bridge’s international brand of storytelling into the rich environment of the National Museum of Asian Art,” said Selig. “We believe our original characters will bring a whole new level of engagement with the museum and we think families will love them!”
After many long days at work on her self-taught animation project, budding author Lorna Gibson will get to see her story light up screens around the U.K. when Mr. Bear’s Christmas debuts on BBC this month.
The stop-motion special is adapted from her self-published storybook The Tales of Mr. Bear, and explores the importance of friendship through a cast of woodland character gathering to enjoy the holiday.
“Watching animations at Christmas was a big part of my childhood. I’m thrilled that children will be doing the same with Mr. Bear this year, thanks to the BBC,” Gibson shared.
Mr. Bear’s Christmas
Gibson’s 11-minute amateur production — crafted from felt, wool and foam and shot on an iPhone in the spare bedroom at her parents’ house using a £5 stop-motion app — is being unwrapped for a wider audience thanks to the attachment of celebrated author, actor and presenter Stephen Fry (Wilde, Gosford Park, The Hobbit).
Stephen Fry
After teaching herself to needle felt the puppets and props, followed by six months of shooting and editing, Gibson was inspired to contact Fry’s voiceover agent by a dream in which the former QI host signed a back-of-envelope contract to do the project. Fry watched the short, and recorded the storybook text at home for Gibson.
“When this project first came to my attention, I see I replied ‘this sounds lovely,’ and indeed it is,” Fry recalled. “I am delighted that Mr. Bear’s Christmas shall reach a wide audience during its broadcast over the festive season.”
Gibson, a 40-year-old illustrator and head of Toots Design (tootsdesign.co.uk), sent the result in to the BBC and caught the eye of programming executives, who agreed terms with Gibson and Fry to schedule Mr. Bear’s Christmas to air on CBeebies on December 13, 17 and 23, and stream on iPlayer. The special will also receive a screening alongside The Snowman, to their respective soundtracks played live by the Halle orchestra, at Manchester’s Bridgewater Hall on December 22 and 23.
“Bringing Mr. Bear to life from pencil sketch to BBC screening has been a labor of love, a great passion and worth every challenge along the way,” said Gibson, who hails from Tarporley in Cheshire. “I was delighted when Stephen agreed to do the voiceover for Mr. Bear’s Christmas. and having the BBC show my animation of the story is a dream come true.”
Mr. Bear’s Christmas
Kate Morton, Head of BBC Children’s Commissioning 0-6 years, said, “We thought the film was really lovely and the story was delightful. We loved the animation style; it feels really warm and cozy, and perfect for Christmas.”
Mr. Bear’s Christmas was enhanced by the work of Buckinghamshire composer Andrew Pickering, who wrote and performed its soundtrack, and local Cheshire lighting professional Dan Beckett, each of whom agreed to support the project at no cost.
Tune into CBeebies December 13, 17 and 23 to watch Mr. Bear’s Christmas, also available on iPlayer this holiday season.
About three years ago, Charlie Mackesy’s charming illustrated book The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse won the hearts of millions of readers around the world. The book, which follows the simple tale of a friendship between the four protagonists as the young boy searches for his home, also inspired a half-hour animated film, which will premiere on Apple TV+ (worldwide) and BBC (U.K.) this Christmas.
The project, which is directed by Peter Baynton (The Tiger Who Came to Tea) and Mackesy himself, is completely faithful to the original illustrations. It features the voices of Tom Hollander (The Mole), Idris Elba (The Fox), Gabriel Byrne (The Horse) and newcomer Jude Coward Nicoll (The Boy). It’s produced by Emmy-winning and Oscar-nominated Cara Speller (Love, Death + Robots), Matthew Freud, J.J. Abrams and Hannah Minghella.
Peter Baynton
Baynton says he was quite taken by the way the book balances levity with gravity. “It has a truthfulness to it,” he says. “The book has a timeless quality; in some ways it’s old fashioned, like you could have just discovered it from 80 years ago, despite it being only a few years old now. Something about the landscape they’re in made me excited, too; it is almost a fifth character playing a steadying and peaceful presence. And thematically, friendship, togetherness, questioning the big things and small things in life with openness and fragility — what wonderful things to explore in animation.”
According to the directors, from the very beginning, there was a big push to keep the production as traditional and 2D as possible. “We didn’t do any CG previz or layout work, and committed ourselves to a 2D pipeline, with 2D layouts followed by a rough character animation pass,” says Baynton. “Tim Watts and Gabriele Zucchelli supervised the animators, helping with performance and modeling. We used live-action reference footage wherever possible to make sure the performances were as naturalistic as possible, either of the children of our crew who generously acted things out for us, or of the horse we filmed in set-ups taken from our storyboard, or indeed of footage of foxes we’d found online.”
An Inspirational Tale: Based on the international bestseller by Charlie Mackesy, ‘The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse’ is remarkably faithful to the original ink-based drawings.
Details in Ink
The team would act out human performances for The Mole — except for his walk, which was based on a waddling penguin. “We then did key ink drawings for each shot, where some refining of the models took place as well as the addition of the thin ‘thinking’ lines that feature so characteristically in Charlie’s work,” says Baynton. “The ink drawings were then in-betweened to create our finished ink pass, all supervised by our HOD Setareh Erfan. Then 2D mattes were hand-drawn for our compositing team. The backgrounds were hand-painted in Photoshop by the background team under the guidance of our art director Mike McCain.”
TVPaint was used to create the special’s stunning 2D animation, while the compositing was done in Nuke and After Effects depending on the needs of the shot. “There was also a lot of 2D effects work in the film, from snow piles and footprints to the rushing water in the river,” says Baynton. “We determinedly wanted to find 2D solutions to these effects that felt painterly and true to the spirit of Charlie’s mark-making.”
According to producer Cara Speller, the production took about two years to complete, from the day they started working on the script to the final day of post-production. “Across the whole production, we had 120 artists from 20 different countries — and nine different time zones!” she says.
Book illustration
The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
Baynton says the visual design team looked at lots of photography of Northumberland in Northern England, and landscapes under snow and in various weather and lighting conditions for inspiration. “We wanted to capture a truthfulness of light and landscape that Charlie would recognize from his childhood growing up there,” he points out. “We also looked at Impressionist paintings of landscapes in snow. For the character animation, huge amounts of footage of foxes and horses, as mentioned above, inspired the performances of the animators.”
Co-directing with Mackesy, who hadn’t worked in animation or film before, meant a lot of learning had to happen at each step of the way. “To have the creator sitting next to me (on Zoom at least…) and to have his vision for his characters, his landscape, his story, feeding in to every moment, was completely invaluable and, I suspect, a rare privilege,” says Baynton. “Charlie is a visual artist who can micro-focus on a single image to make sure it’s perfect to a remarkable degree, whereas I am a filmmaker who is concerned with how single images work in the storytelling context of several-thousand others and those two perspectives had to meet. That’s why I think we worked so well together, coming at it from both angles.”
Charlie Mackesy [ph: Charlie Gray]“My biggest lesson was really, how to make a film because I’d never made one before — and being part of that process, whether it was adapting it, writing it, co-directing it, auditioning the cast for it,” says Mackesy.
“I was sort of involved in so many different sides of the film and for the first time in my life. So I feel like I was on a very steep learning curve and I learnt the patience of others was a valuable thing. I learnt that for things to work well we have to listen, and put our egos down and, you know, discuss things through … even if we really see things differently … and come to healthy conclusions. I loved that journey working with others, and a team, and being part of something much bigger than myself. I loved being part of the process and learning what it takes to make an animated film. There were many lessons, and I’ll always be grateful for the opportunity, really.”
Baynton echoes the author’s thoughts as well. “The biggest lesson I learned is probably the importance of collaboration,” he mentions. “Work with the best people you can, the best producer, the best HODs, and canvas their opinions and listen to them. But then, be decisive! This film is really the result of a huge pool of the crew’s accumulated skill and application.”
The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse
Spreading Hope
Book illustration by Charlie Mackesy
Baynton also admits that this project was the most ambitious thing he had directed. “So far, my short films and music videos have been small teams of 10 or 12 people and the longest duration has been 13 minutes,” he notes. “This film is telling a bigger story, with a bigger team, on a bigger screen!”
“Obviously when you make a film or write a book or do anything of that nature, people will take all manner of things you never intended to or couldn’t foresee or even imagine — and everyone responds differently to everything,” says Mackesy. “My hope from where I sit is obviously that people will enjoy it and feel better for watching it … feel more hopeful, more comforted, more loving towards themselves and others. But I largely hope that they feel different afterwards in a good way.”
Baynton agrees. “I hope the short film offers comfort for anyone who needs it, joy, happiness and a sense of togetherness,” he says. “And hopefully, they’ll feel they’ve watched something beautiful and honest!”
The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse premieres on Apple TV+ and BBC on Christmas.
The classic story of “the boy who cried wolf” is refitted into a modern, CG-animated tale of unlikely friendship and tragic loss in Canary, one of the year’s Oscar-qualified shorts. Centering on a child coal miner in 1922, the film has screened at festivals all over the world, competing at TIFF, SPARK Animation and picking up awards at the Warsaw Film Festival, Images en Vues, BIAF, Piccolo Festival Animazione and Pontarlier.
Canary is produced by Quebec’s Rodeo FX, where the team was led by directing duo Benoit “Ben” Therriault and Pierre-Hugues “PH” Dallaire — experienced animators whose work has featured at Annecy (IGA spots Share The Joy, Vraiment Frais and Aide Gourmet) and earned accolades including Vimeo Staff Picks (Share The Joy), an Honorable Mention at the Queen Palm International Film Festival (Lotto Max – Bear) and a CREA Award (MSSS – Smoke). Here is what the directors had to say about their decade-long passion project:
Pierre-Hugues Dallaire [ph: Richmond Lam]Animation Magazine:Can you tell us a bit about how this animated short project came about?
PH Dallaire: The idea appeared over 10 years ago (August 12, 2012 — thank you iPhone notes). We’d been directing animated commercials and short shorts for about 15 years at that point, but our passion had always been inventing our own original stories. Once we got talking about Canary, we knew we had to make it, and luckily we found a home for our talents, and our story, at Rodeo FX. We gathered a team of our best long-term collaborators to help make the film (some of them even left their jobs to join us) and here we are today, screening at festivals across the world. The film is the culmination of many people’s trust and belief in what we were trying to build and say.
What were your inspirations for the piece?
PH: The fact that canaries were used in underground coal mines as late as 1986 was certainly a starting point for the idea. But the seed wasn’t truly planted until we thought of also having a child miner caring for the canary because they both want the same thing: to be free and play above ground in the sunlight. Individually they are very vulnerable, but together they have a fighting chance. For Ben and I, at its core, Canary represents that friendship and it’s the heart of the film.
Canary
How long did it take to make and how many people worked on it?
PH: Production took about 15 months with approximately 15 artists as part of the core team. At the very start it was just Ben and myself, but over the course of the production, nearly 50 artists made contributions to the final result. Technically, it would have been possible to accomplish the film faster, but we were implementing a completely new pipeline and gradually growing the team which meant slower results but a solid structure.
Benoit Therriault [ph: Jean-Francois Masse]Which animation tools were used to create the animation?
Ben Therriault: The majority of the film was created with Houdini software using Solaris, which allowed us to create a USD pipeline: scene assembly, shading, groom and feathers, lighting and renders were done in Houdini, including some rigging prototyping. Character rigging and animation were done in Maya, with animBot as a popular tool for the animators.
What do you love best about the final results?
PH & Ben: We love that we created a story that would otherwise not exist. We love that when people see the film, they believe in these characters and we’ve contributed to the longstanding magic of animation.
We love that people are deeply touched by this story. We love that there’s an appreciation for the level of craftsmanship in the film. We love that during the creative process, there are compromises to be made but we trusted the process and trusted our team of gifted artists, and our little idea became a reality.
This is a very biased take of course, because it’s our film, but we would have loved to see this film when we were kids! We think that just means we stayed true to what attracted us to the idea in the first place.
Canary
What were your biggest challenges?
PH & Ben: Our biggest challenge was finding a way to make Canary. It was a 10-year journey from initial concept to screen. During that time we were always keeping an eye out for any opportunity, any way to make it happen. We want to sincerely thank [executive producer and studio CEO] Sébastien Moreau and Rodeo FX from the bottom of our hearts for finally giving it to us —filmmaking is not an exact science, but there was tremendous mutual trust and respect from the very start.
Then there was the challenge of building a cutting-edge pipeline while simultaneously making the film, a bit like building a plane in mid-flight.
Canary
Who are your animation heroes?
Ben: I’ve been a fan of Disney films as far back as I can remember. I would draw all the characters when I was a kid. Comic books were my other passion, and for a while I drew superheroes. Miyazaki’s work is an inspiration to me as an artist and has influenced my drawing style. Seeing the film My Neighbor Totoro made me realize I wanted to tell my stories using animation, that I wanted to direct films just like him one day.
PH: On my end, it started with the National Film Board (NFB) short films in Canada, which I first discovered at a museum as a child. The Cat Came Back by Cordell Barker, Bob’s Birthday by Alison Snowden and David Fine — these are animated classics that everybody can enjoy. The classic Pixar shorts and films. Miyazaki, particularly Porco Rosso and Spirited Away present such eye-opening imagination and a pacing and style which felt so different, in the best of ways.
Canary
What would you like audiences to take away from the short?
PH: I believe that anyone’s interpretation of the film is as valid as mine, but the meaning of the film has evolved. For a long time it was about hope, but it also deals with loss and recovery from it. During the journey of getting the film made, both Ben and myself lost loved ones — my cousin, my best friend and my uncle…
Ben: …My childhood friend, Pete. Some of our early supporters, who believed so strongly in what we were trying to do with this film.
PH: So for us, it was important that the film dealt with that grief in a way that felt real, because we wanted to make sure we properly honored those we had lost and we wanted our characters to be genuine and true to life.
Ben: The friendship we see onscreen between the boy and the canary is special and, as filmmakers, there are always parallels between our films and our lives. PH and I know each other so well and have been working closely together for many years. We know firsthand what it means to support and to inspire one another, and appreciate how we push each other out of our comfort zones.
What are you working on next?
PH & Ben: We’re going to keep telling stories together through animation. Unfortunately there isn’t much we can reveal beyond that at the moment, but we definitely look forward to telling a longer story next time.
Canary
Any tips for young animation fans who would like to make their own shorts?
PH & Ben: There’s a lot to be said about persistence. We took a big detour along the way, but we persisted and remained focused on our goal, and eventually we made it happen.
There’s also practice, even if you’re not doing your own film immediately, there’s so much to learn about animation and storytelling that will help you make your best film when you get a chance. We directed commercials for 15 years and it was difficult, but we learned a lot and it kept us sharp for when the time finally came.
Finally, there’s just going ahead and simply doing it. CG animation can be daunting because there’s so much to master, and it can be very time consuming as it often involves larger teams. But what about stop-motion animation? Or hand drawn? There’s simpler ways to get started and get better right now. Why not shoot a live-action short film with your friends and your phone’s camera? It’s a great way to get started today.
Learn more about Canary, the filmmakers and Rodeo FX at rodeofx.com/canary.
As the Guardians in Marvel Studios’ The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special undertake a mission to create an unforgettable holiday for Peter Quill, aka Star-Lord, animators at acclaimed Stoopid Buddy Stoodios brought their talents to the Marvel Studios’ Special Presentation to make it equally unforgettable for viewers.
In striking, hand-drawn sequences that bookend the wildly popular new special, which debuted November 25 exclusively on
Disney+, animators at Stoopid Buddy helped create a previously unknown story in a style that echoes nostalgia for late 20th century pop-culture that’s a Guardians of the Galaxy hallmark.
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special
“Right from the start, James Gunn said he hoped to emulate the Ralph Bakshi style that was popular in the 1960s and ’70s, and there was no way to cheat it — it had to be hand-drawn rotoscoping,” explains Mac Whiting, lead animation supervisor on the project.
“After seeing the animation test, Marvel arranged for us to be involved with the live-action shoot in Georgia. James and the Marvel team made the experience a real bucket list item for any animator and fueled our desire to make the animation in this project as special as it deserved to be.”
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special
Whiting and his Stoopid Buddy team used the live-action footage to draw each frame by hand — a feat they were able to achieve in just over two months.
While Stoopid Buddy is widely known for its stunning stop-motion animation work, which has included Marvel’s M.O.D.O.K. as well as its Emmy Award-winning Robot Chicken series, traditional hand-drawn animation is a growing field for the company. Still, The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special represented a singular challenge that Stoopid Buddy co-founder Matt Senreich says they couldn’t resist.
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special
“James entrusted us with a tremendous vision,” Senreich says. “When we produced an initial eight seconds of test footage with Michael Rooker as Yondu, we knew we could match that vision, and, through animation, bring something entirely new to Guardians of the Galaxy. Stoopid Buddy is incredibly proud to be associated with it.”
Stoopid Buddy produced the animation for The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special in association with Victoria, Australia-based Studio Moshi, ensuring a round-the-clock production pipeline to meet the deadline that would get the special to Disney+ in time for a very special holiday for Marvel fans.
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special
“This has been one of the most exciting and creatively challenging projects I’ve ever been a part of, especially due to the demanding nature and high volume of hand-drawn animation, but the results are more than worth it,” Whiting says. “Fans are going to be watching this holiday special for many years to come, like so many of the specials we grew up with.”
The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special is now streaming exclusively on Disney+.
This month, we pay a visit to director Hillary Bradfield, whose new animated short Reflect (part of the Short Circuit experimental shorts anthology available on Disney+) has gained a lot of attention on social media for its plus-size main character and its underlying message of body positivity.
Here I am drawing with my story assistant, Hashtag the dog.
These are the beat boards, vis dev and inspiration for the short; trying to keep structure and mood in mind at all times.
Heather, our ballet expert, helps us get reference for the perfect tombé.
I’m dancing in my brother’s apartment for animator reference (while he changes my nephew’s diaper offscreen)!
We were very thorough when it came to animating dance technique.
Here is the team, patiently watching me accidentally knock things off my desk while trying to describe a dance move.
Editing with Brian Millman.
Checking color in the nice theater with Heather and Winston.
We celebrated the final sound mix with a victory dance!
Adult Swim returns to the weird world of Wollongong this winter, unveiling the official trailer and a new release date for YOLO: Silver Destiny. The new season of misadventures down under debuts Sunday, January 22 at midnight on Adult Swim with two back-to-back episodes, streaming the next day on HBO Max.
From Michael Cusack, the co-creator of Smiling Friends, the follow-up to YOLO: Crystal Fantasy sees the return of Australia’s rowdiest party girls, Sarah (voiced by Sarah Bishop) and Rachel (Todor Manojlovic).
Their continued quests kick off when a chance encounter at a Sausage Sizzle nudges the girls in pursuit of their destinies — Sarah want s to grow a beautiful garden, and Rachel wants to become a dark Empress. Meanwhile, Lucas the Magnificent embarks on a mysterious new quest to overcome Sarah’s repulsion and win her heart.
Hey, you only live once!
YOLO: Silver Destiny is a quarter-hour animated comedy produced by Laura DiMaio with line producer Paul Moran. Executive producers include Cusack, Mike Cowan and Emma Fitzsimons. The series is produced by Australia’s Princess Pictures with animation services provided by Monkeystack.
As the end of the year draws near, groups of film critics around the world are surveying the cinema landscape to make their calls on the best movies to grace screens in 2022.
Emerging as an indie underdog favorite is the much-lauded mockumentary Marcel the Shell with Shoes On, which today added “Best Animated” recognition from the National Board of Review (which picked Top Gun: Maverick as Best Film) to last week’s win from the New York Film Critics Circle Awards (which gave Tár the top honor).
Marcel‘s status as a quirky and emotional independent effort, expanding on director Dean Fleischer-Camp’s hit short film of the same name and distributed by A24, adds to its stand-out shine in a year that has seen quite a few critically acclaimed animated features from major studios (such as Oscar favorite Pixar’s Turning Red, DreamWorks Animation’s The Bad Guys and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish) and celebrated filmmakers (like Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, Chris Williams’ The Sea Beast and Nora Twomey’s My Father’s Dragon, all from Netflix).
Marcel (voiced by Jenny Slate) is an adorable one-inch-tall shell who ekes out a colorful existence with his grandmother Connie (Isabella Rosselini) and their pet lint, Alan. Once part of a sprawling community of shells, they now live alone as the sole survivors of a mysterious tragedy. But when a documentary filmmaker discovers them amongst the clutter of his Airbnb, the short film he posts online brings Marcel millions of passionate fans, as well as unprecedented dangers and a new hope at finding his long-lost family. A beloved character gets his big-screen debut in this hilarious and heartwarming story about finding connection in the smallest corners.
Another warmly reviewed Netflix original, animation legend Henry Selick’s Wendell & Wild, also earned a prestige nod today as the sole animated title on the African American Film Critics Association’s list of the Top 10 Films of 2022. The stop-motion supernatural adventure came in at No. 9 (the top spot went to The Woman King).
From the delightfully wicked minds of Henry Selick and producer Jordan Peele comes Wendell & Wild, an animated tale about scheming demon brothers Wendell (voiced by Keegan-Michael Key) and Wild (Peele), who enlist the aid of Kat Elliot (Lyric Ross) — a tough teen with a load of guilt — to summon them to the Land of the Living. But what Kat demands in return leads to a brilliantly bizarre and comedic adventure like no other, an animated fantasy that defies the law of life and death, all told through the handmade artistry of stop motion.
Adman turned animation hitmaker George Newall, one of the creators of the iconic educational cartoon Schoolhouse Rock!, died on November 30 at a hospital near his New York village of Hastings-on-Hudson. News of his passing at age 88 due to cardiopulmonary arrest was shared with The New York Times by his wife, Lisa Maxwell.
The original Saturday morning Schoolhouse Rock! shorts aired from 1973 to 1984. The concept arose when advertising executive David McCall of McCaffrey & McCall tapped the agency’s creative director, Newall, to put multiplication tables to music to help McCall’s son memorize them. With the help of songwriters Ben Tucker and Bob Dorough and the agency’s art director Tom Yohe providing illustrations, the idea evolved into a series of animated short films.
McCaffrey & McCall presented the cartoons to Michael Eisner, who was director of children’s programming at ABC at the time. Informing young viewers about a range of topics from science, history and grammar to ecology and civics, Schoolhouse Rock! birthed iconic edutainment tunes like “I’m Just a Bill” and “Conjunction Junction” into the pop culture landscape of the ’70s and ’80s.
George Newall and Tom Yohe (1994) [c/o the Everett Collection]
Schoolhouse Rock! won four Daytime Emmy Awards over the course of its original run, with several more nominations for both the early toons and the 1990s revival. A home video tie-in titled Schoolhouse Rock! Earth was released in 2009, featuring 11 all-new songs. The show also spawned a live musical theater show in 1993. The Walt Disney Company (then headed by Eisner) acquired the franchise in 1996; Newall and Yohe co-wrote Schoolhouse Rock! The Official Guide the same year.
Newall is survived by his wife, a stepson and three sisters. He is predeceased by his collaborators McCall (1999), Yohe (2000), Tucker (2013) and Dorough (2018).
D23: The Official Disney Fan Club is celebrating Disney fans across the country as Disney100 kicks off. Members of D23 will be able to enjoy exclusive experiences as Disney honors its past and looks to its future:
DESTINATION D23. D23 returns to The Most Magical Place on Earth for the biggest Disney fan event of 2023 at Disney’s Contemporary Resort, September 8–10, to celebrate 100 years of The Walt Disney Company. Fans will be among the first to hear exciting announcements and see sneak peeks from the many worlds of Disney — and relive favorite memories with behind-the-scenes stories, special guests and so much more at this epic event.
THE WALT DISNEY STUDIOS OFFICIAL TOUR – PRESENTED BY D23. D23 welcomes guests to The Walt Disney Studios Lot, giving members the opportunity to visit the world-famous studio in Burbank, California. These tours offer fans a unique perspective on historic moments from Disney films, television series, and theme parks — along with the chance to look inside the Walt Disney Archives and draw inspiration from Walt Disney’s office suite.
FAN-FAVORITE MILESTONE ANNIVERSARIES. D23 will celebrate several milestone anniversaries with in-person events in 2023 for fan-favorite films, including Finding Nemo(20th), Mulan(25th) and Who Framed Roger Rabbit (35th). D23 will celebrate these iconic films with extra-special experiences and even more magic for D23 Members. And Halloween will return in phantom fashion, celebrating the anniversaries of monstrously major movies including Hocus Pocus (30th), Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas (30th) and Halloweentown(25th).
WALT’S MARCELINE. Walt Disney frequently cited this charming Missouri town where he spent his early childhood as one of his greatest influences. Its lovely main thoroughfare was an inspiration for Disneyland’s Main Street, U.S.A. D23 Members will have a chance to return in June 2023 for a very special hometown event.
D23 NIGHTS WITH DISNEY THEATRICAL. D23 and the North American tours of Disney’s The Lion King and Disney’s Frozenare excited to offer D23 Members exclusive theatrical experiences, including special ticket packages and post-show Q&As with cast members. D23 will kick off these dazzling theatrical events in Los Angeles with The Lion King and in Costa Mesa, California, with Frozen, and offer an exclusive experience with the cast during the highly anticipated opening of Disney’s Herculesat the Paper Mill Playhouse in New Jersey.
SIGNATURE EVENTS. Fans can look forward to D23 Gold Member previews of Walt Disney Archives traveling exhibitions across the country. D23 Gold Members will enjoy advance and opening night screenings of new Disney films at locations across the country. Walt Disney Imagineering’s exclusive merchandise store, Mickey’s of Glendale, will open its doors to members with both online and in-person opportunities. Look out for the return of the holiday favorite Light Up the Season in December 2023 as part of a very merry D23 Holiday Celebration!
Dates, ticketing information, and more D23 events will be announced throughout the year. Full details on D23’s lineup of 2023 special events can be found on the fan club’s website at D23.com/Events. Additional dates will be posted soon. All events and dates are subject to change.
Learn more about D23’s special offers and events at d23.com.
Animated musical act Gorillaz (gorillaz.com) are taking another groundbreaking step, as they transform the streets of New York and London into stages for two bleeding edge performances of their brand new track “Skinny Ape.”
Gorillaz “Skinny Ape” AR in Piccadilly Circus
Taking place at 2:30 ET on December 17 in Times Square and 14:00 GMT on December 18 in Piccadilly Circus, these first-of-their-kind immersive experiences will allow fans to gather together to witness Gorillaz in a literally larger-than-life performance, as towering avatars of Murdoc, 2D, Noodle and Russel play amid two of the world’s most recognizable skylines.
“We’re always excited when music and entertainment can bust out of the usual to meet fans and tell stories in new places,” said Chris O’Reilly, Co-Founder & CCO, Nexus Studios. “Working with our friends Gorillaz and Google, this was a perfect opportunity to bring our dual passions of real-time animation and immersive tech together. Experiences told on top of cities at this level of visual fidelity is full of exciting promise.”
Directed by artist and Gorillaz co-creator Jamie Hewlett and the Emmy-nominated director Fx Goby, the “Skinny Ape” performances are created by Nexus Studios (nexusstudios.com) and utilize Google’s ARCore Geospatial API, using AR to transforms public spaces with cultural experiences and bringing the world of Gorillaz to life like never before. The performances are presented in collaboration with 21st century advertising operators OUTFRONT Media (NorAm) and Ocean Outdoor (U.K.)
“To all our followers, get ready for the biggest Times Square takeover since that other gorilla smashed the place up. Bigger in fact cos there’s four of us. Thanks to the techies at Google, we’ve created the music video event of the century, so don your pink robes and come see Gorillaz like you’ve never seen us before. The future is nigh!” — Murdoc Niccals
“Skinny Ape” is the fourth single from Gorillaz’s upcoming new album Cracker Island, and is already a fan favorite having debuted live on the band’s hugely successful 2022 World Tour.
Cracker Island, out February 24 on Parlophone, is the eighth studio album from Gorillaz — an energetic, upbeat, genre-expansive collection of 10 tracks featuring a fresh lineup of stellar collaborators: Stevie Nicks, Adeleye Omotayo, Thundercat, Tame Impala, Bad Bunny and Bootie Brown and Beck. Recorded in London and L.A. earlier this year, it is produced by eight-time Grammy Award-winning producer/multi-instrumentalist/songwriter Greg Kurstin, Gorillaz and Remi Kabaka Jr.
Fans of the smash-hit WEBTOON digital comic series Lookismcan now see their favorite characters in action with the debut of the Netflix anime adaptation, which premieres today.
Based on Taejun Pak’s popular drama, which has garnered over 9 billion views on WEBTOON, Lookism marks the latest collaboration between the two companies, following recent adaptations of All of Us Are Dead, Hellbound, The Sound of Magic and Sweet Home.
Synopsis: Daniel is an unattractive loner who wakes up in a different body. Now tall, handsome, and cooler than ever in his new form, Daniel aims to achieve everything he couldn’t before. How far will he go to keep his body … and his secrets?
Watch Lookism on Netflix and catch up with the comics on WEBTOON.
The new Hulu Original animated series Koala Manwill officially be bringing marsupial justice to the streamer on January 9, Hulu announced today. New images from the show have also dropped. The 2D adult comedy series hails form Australian creator/animator Michael Cusack (YOLO: Crystal Fantasy, Smiling Friends).
Koala Man is voiced by series creator Michael Cusack
Synopsis:Koala Man follows middle-aged dad Kevin and his titular not-so-secret identity, whose only superpower is a burning passion for following rules and snuffing out petty crime in the town of Dapto. Though it may seem like any other Australian suburb, forces of evil both cosmic and man-made lie in wait to pounce on unsuspecting Daptonians. On a quest to clean up his hometown, and often roping his frustrated family into his adventures, Koala Man stands at the ready. He’ll do whatever it takes to defeat villainous masterminds, supernatural horrors, or worse: jerks who don’t take their rubbish bins down on the proper days.
Koala Man
The series features the voices of Michael Cusack as Kevin/Koala Man; Hugh Jackman as Big Greg, head of the town council and the most popular guy in Dapto; Sarah Snook as Kevin’s forbearing wife, Vicky, a cafeteria lady; Jemaine Clement as Bazwell, a nerdy and ineffectual dandy who mentors Kevin’s son, Liam (also voiced by Cusack) and Demi Lardner as Kevin’s popularity-hungry daughter, Alison; with Rachel House as Vicky’s coworker Janine and local bowling club owner Louise, Jarrad Wright as Kevin’s neighbor/BFF/super hero sidekick, Spider, and guest roles by Miranda Otto and Hugo Weaving.
L-R: Koala Man (Cusack), Alison (Demi Lardner), Vicky (Sarah Snook) and Big Greg (Hugh Jackman)
Koala Man is executive produced by Solar Opposites and Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland and Pokémon: Detective Pikachu writers Dan Hernandez and Benji Samit. Michael Cowap also serves as executive producer. The series is produced by 20th Television Animation for Hulu.