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Home Blog Page 283

Spirits of the Forest: Alê Abreu Returns to the Big Screen with ‘Perlimps’

***This article originally appeared in the Sept./Oct. ’22 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 323)***

It’s been 24 years since Brazilian director Alê Abreu’s first animated short Espanthalho (The Scarecrow) put the talented artist on the map. To most fans, he is best known for his charming first movie The Boy and the World, which earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature in 2016. This year, the writer-director makes a triumphant comeback with a new movie titled Perlimps, which premiered at Annecy and will screen in competition at the Ottawa International Animation Festival in September.

The colorful film centers on the adventure of Claé and Bruô, two secret agents from enemy kingdoms who have to join forces despite their differences to save the Perlimps from the Green Slime that threatens to destroy the forest. (The film’s title Perlimps was suggested by the film’s producer Luiz Bolognesi, who was inspired by the word pirilampos, “fireflies” in Portuguese, and refers to what the two main characters are searching for in the movie.)

Perlimps
Perlimps

A Multitude of Muses

When asked about the sources of inspiration for the movie, Abreu says there was a wide variety of drawings, stories and objects that led to what audiences will see on the screen. “The development of a film is never a very rational and clear process for me,” he says during a recent email interview. “I am inspired in many ways, music and painting mainly. I collect notes (loose drawings, bits of story, characters, etc.) over a long period of time before finding connections among them and discovering if there is a film there.”

Ale Abreu
Alê Abreu

“A new universe begins to come to life with this process, and the story itself isn’t quite clear to me at this point,” the director adds. “When I began working on Perlimps, I scattered all these notes over the floor and I watched them for hours. I organized these elements and out of them came the storyline and a selection of drawings that showed me the way for the movie.”

Perlimps executive producer Ernesto Soto adds, “From my point of view, the inspiration comes from a desire of Alê to inhabit the mind of a child. And to get in touch with the freedom we had when we were kids. The Enchanted Forest, where the story takes place, is apparently a physical space, but it also represents a state of mind.”

Abreu notes, “I was born in São Paulo, but I lived part of my childhood in a suburban area of the city — at the time, it was a very green place, with farms, creeks and trails. The forest in Perlimps is also a symbolic place, related to childhood — a place in time, we could say, left behind when we transition to adulthood and the loss of childhood that comes with it.”

According to Soto, it took about nine years to complete the movie. “We had four years of development since Alê’s first sketches, and four-and-a-half years of pre-production and production,” he says. “Alê has drafts and drawings that go back to 2014. In 2016 we had a bible to start our fundraising, which took almost three years. We started pre-production officially in 2018. Overall, adding the different stages, around 80 or 90 people worked on the film. The Brazilian currency has fluctuated much during the years that we have worked on the project, but if we consider today’s exchange rate, our budget would be around $1.85 million.”

Perlimps
Perlimps

The producer mentions that the animation industry in Brazil has been hit hard by the socio-political climate in the country over the past few years. “Brazil had many years of steady investment in the development of an animation industry with a lot of grants and public financing,” Soto points out. “All these incentives made the industry grow; a lot of new talent emerged and independent productions such as ours were possible. Unfortunately, under the current government, culture has not been a priority anymore and many of those talents are now working for studios abroad. But, I firmly believe Brazil will continue to be an important voice in the independent animation scene.”

Perlimps is produced by São Paulo-based Buriti Filmes and co-produced by Sony Pictures International and Globo Filmes. The animation for the film was hand drawn by Abreu and a reduced team which spent four years in a mountain village in Brazil.

Perlimps
Perlimps

As the film’s assistant director Viviane Guimarães explains, “We created a studio and hired our own team to work on the film, but the animation itself was mostly done by Alê Abreu (Claé and Bruô scenes) and animator Sandro Cleuzo (John Ovenbird), with some additional animation by myself. Alê Abreu animated in Photoshop, Sandro Cleuzo in Toon Boom and me in TVPaint, so the software itself didn’t matter at this point. For the John Ovenbird scenes, the cleanup was also done in Toon Boom. For the Claé and Bruô scenes, we did the final art in Photoshop.”

Abreu says as an artist, one of the greatest challenges of the film was to keep the initial feelings of inspiration and ambition alive throughout the years. “I had to hold on to the feelings that motivated me to make it throughout the production process with all its obstacles to overcome,” he admits. “I put a great deal of effort in not losing sight of the emotions that made me dive into the universe of the film, so that they could guide me during the production and finally be reflected in the movie.”

Perlimps
Perlimps

The director also mentions that he cannot pinpoint one particular influence on the visual style of the movie. He explains, “There comes a time when someone’s work is such a mixture of things that it is not so easy to identify the direct influences. But I could mention Roger Dean, Mœbius and René Laloux, not only for the reference to psychedelia that I tried to imprint on the film, but also because of the fond memories I have of these artists in my childhood and youth.”

“With this film I was guided mainly by color, a very powerful tool that brings an important layer to the adventure and is key to the understanding of the film,” Abreu told Variety earlier this year. “Childhood is represented in the film as a physical space where everything is possible, generating an incredible power of transformation through hope.”

Perlimps
Perlimps

A Student of Laloux

He does however mention several films that made a huge impact in his artistic development early on in his life. “I watched two films by René Laloux in a small film club in São Paulo many years ago: Fantastic Planet and Time Masters. In addition to inspiring me to work in animation, those films showed me a path for the kind of film I wanted to make. I also recently reviewed Isao Takahata’s The Tale of the Princess Kaguya, and I believe it is one of the masterpieces of animated cinema.”

However, Abreu says he has been less pleased with what he has seen on the screen in recent years. “As far as feature films go, I think there is a movement that seeks to take animation out of the aesthetic sameness of CGI productions,” he notes. “But very little of what I have seen lately has been pleasing or exciting.”

Perlimps
Perlimps

The filmmakers are hoping that the new movie will connect to both younger and older audiences. “We hope that the audiences will have an immersive experience in a dreamlike fantasy world and that children and adults will be able to connect with their inner child,” says Bolognesi. “We think it’s a film that can please both family audiences and animation fans. In the end, I believe there is a message of hope and cry for peace, added to the urgency of preserving our natural resources.”

Perlimps makes its North American premiere this month at the Ottawa International Animation Festival.

 

New ‘Simpsons’ Short ‘Welcome to the Club’ Teases a Disney Villains Crossover

Another new short from The Simpsons universe will apparently introduce at least one of Disney Animation’s most beloved baddies to Springfield, as revealed in the official poster released today. The Simpsons: Welcome to the Club is slated to debut as a streaming exclusive for Disney+ Day on September 8.

The official logline reads: “Heart set on becoming a princess, Lisa Simpson is surprised to learn being bad might be more fun.”

The poster shows Lisa (voiced by Yeardley Smith in the long-running series) enjoying a Thelma & Louise moment (complete with teal ’66 Ford Thunderbird) riding shotgun with Ursula, the be-tentacled sea witch from Disney’s The Little Mermaid (1989).

Emmy winning actress Pat Carroll, who provided the voice of Ursula for the John Musker & Ron Clements-directed animated pic, passed away in July at age 95. It was not revealed whether Carroll recorded for Welcome to the Club; cast and crew details are yet to be announced.

Welcome to the Club joins other Simpsons specials on Disney+, including When Billie Met Lisa, starring Billie Eilish; Star Wars-inspired The Force Awakens from Its Nap; and Plusaversary, which was released in celebration of the streamer’s first birthday.

See more of the exclusive Disney+ Day programming previously announced here.

People on the Move: Hahn Departs Paramount, Schrier Named Prez of Disney TV Studios, Brazen Animation Bolsters Core Team & More

 

Nina Hahn
Nina Hahn

Longtime Nickelodeon executive Nina Hahn is leaving the kids’ entertainment powerhouse after almost two decades, announcing her exit from parent company Paramount Global this week. Hahn will be pursuing advisory and consulting roles and expanding her executive coaching clientele under Nina Hahn Consulting.

“The end of an era? Well actually it feels more like the journey of a lifetime,” Hahn wrote on LinkedIn. “Today marks my last day at Nickelodeon and what a magnificent run it has been. Walked into the orange towers 18 years ago with the simple mantra of wanting to work with good people on good projects and am now walking out of those same towers having worked with great people on great projects. It’s been a privilege to work hard, have fun, and make some history alongside of so many people building such an iconic brand.”

For nearly two years prior to her departure, Hahn served as Head of VIS Kids (ViacomCBS International), having previously held the post of SVP Production & Development for Paramount Global, a newly created role charged with overseeing a global original content strategy across 170 countries. Since bringing Hahn on in 2005, Nickelodeon has delivered over 2,000 hours of original kids’ animation and live-action content to screens around the world. Hahn prevoiusly held positions at Sunbow, HBO and The Jim Henson Company.

Eric Schrier [ph: Michael Becker/FX]

Eric Schrier has received an expanded role at Disney General Entertainment, moving from his post as President of FX Entertainment to become President, Disney Television Studios & Business Operations. Leveraging his experience built over two decades working with Chairman of FX and FX Productions John Landgraf, Schrier will take a cohesive approach to operations across DGE while shepherding the teams at Disney Television Studios, including 20th Television, 20th Television Animation and ABC Signature.

Since 2002, Schrier has been creatively involved with more than 100 FX original programs, totaling almost 2,000 hours of content, which earned 452 Emmy Award nominations and won 82. This includes hit seires like It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Atlanta, The Bear and animated favorite Archer. Reporting to Schrier are studio heads Karey Burke, Ppresident of 20th Television; Marci Proietto, EVP, 20th Television Animation; Jonnie Davis, President of ABC Signature; and in business operations, Trisha Husson, EVP of Strategy & Finance.

DGE also announced expanded leadership roles for Craig Erwich, now President of ABC Entertainment, Hulu & Disney Branded Television Streaming Originals; and Shannon Ryan, upped to President of Marketing for DGE. Bryan Noon is stepping down from his role as President of Entertainment for Walt Disney Television after less than a year, but will remain on to help with the transition.

Marc Matthews

Dallas-based feature film, series, game cinematic and multiplatform content studio Brazen Animation (brazenanimation.com) announced three senior hires have been brought onboard to help lead the production of the studio’s expanding slate of projects:

As the new VP of Production and Operations, Marc Matthews has worked in feature animation and production for the last 15 years. He spent time with Reel FX Animation working on animated feature films such as Freebirds and Book of Life, then onto Animal Logic in Vancouver where he led production for The LEGO Movie 2 and DC League of Super-Pets for Warner Bros. His production career started in production finance, expanded into content development and producing, and finally into the Head of Production role, overseeing a studio with over 300 staff and artists producing multiple feature films and other ancillary content.

Chris Osbrink

Chris Osbrink joined as a Creative Director. Previously, Osbrink has written, directed or produced for Netflix, Universal, Warner Bros, Riot, Comedy Central, ShadowMachine, Lionsgate and MTV. He has sold multiple features, served as the showrunner for premier animation companies and collaborated with some of the best artistic talent in the business. His latest pilot was produced by SyFy in 2021. He recently worked as a writer/director for Blur Studios, where he created AAA game trailers for Elder Scrolls, Division, PUBG, Fable and League of Legends.

Greg Rizzi

And Greg Rizzi also jumped onboard as an Associate Creative Director this year. He most recently came from Blur where, as Animation Supervisor, he led animation on large cinematic projects including League of Legends: Wild Rift and Valorant. Rizzi’s career began in 2003 when he was hired as a previs artist for Star Wars: Episode III. Along with his fellow Lucasfilm co-workers, he became one of the founding members of The Third Floor previs studio. His prior experience includes stints at Electronic Arts, Reel FX, Lucasfilm Animation, Blue Sky Studios and Disney Feature Animation.

Sue Jung
Sue Jung

Toronto-based children’s content producer Guru Studio announced the appointment of Sue Jung as Head of Talent Acquisition and Community Engagement. The studio is ramping up hiring across a range of new projects, including the new family miniseries Charlotte’s Web (Sesame Workshop), the new CG series for My Magic Pet Morphle (Moonbug Ent.) and new seasons of the global hit PAW Patrol. (See open posititions at gurustudio.com/careers.)

Reporting to VP of People of Culture Babita Jassal, Jung will lead the company’s overall recruitment process including new hires, internal moves and internships across all productions and corporate roles. She will work closely with the studio’s senior leadership team and all hiring managers to attract and nurture top, diverse talent and champion Guru’s internal community initiatives such as mentorship and training programs for artists.

Jung brings over 15 years of experience leading studio operations and talent management for companies such as Soho VFX, Snowball Studios and Toonbox Entertainment, helping to oversee projects such as Muppet Babies, the feature film franchise The Nut Job and most recently Warner Bros.’ Batwheels.

L-R: (top) Gabby Gourrier, Matt Horrocks, Jennie Zeiher, (bottom) Brian Singler, Arek Komorowski, Diana Ibanez

More moves:

  • The Fuse Group of VFX studios has named long-term RSP executive Jennie Zeiher to the role of President of Rising Sun Pictures (rsp.com.au), succeeding Managing Director and Co-Founder Tony Clark. Zeiher will report to The Fuse Group CEO, Sébastien Bergeron. Clark will continue as Managing Director, consulting to both Bergeron and Zeiher.
  • VFX house DNEG (dneg.com) welcomes Gabby Gourrier as Co-President, VFX and Diana Ibanez as Executive Vice President, Film and Episodic VFX. Both execs will be based out of the company’s Los Angeles studio, working alongside President Josh Jaggars and reporting to CEO & Chairman Namit Malhotra.
  • Screen Auckland (aucklandnz.com) has appointed former Screenwest Australia exec Matthew Horrocks as its new Manager. Screen Auckland is New Zealand’s largest regional film office, boasting an extensive creative community spanning production, post-production, gaming, animation and VFX.
  • Framestore (framestore.com) welcomes Arek Komorowski as its newest VFX Supervisor bringing two decades of experience to its Vancouver studio. His credits include Moonfall, Terminator: Dark Fate, Black Panther and Spider-Man: Homecoming.
  • Post-production studio TBD Post (tbdpost.com) as brought on colorist Brian Singler, building on the Austin shop’s appointments of Executive Producer Ron Rendon and editor Evan Linton earlier this year.

Jetpack Lands Worldwide Rights to Samka’s ‘Viking Skool’ & ‘Once Upon a Time…Objects’

Jetpack Distribution has acquired the rights for two 2D animated shows from Paris-based animation studio Samka: Viking Skool and Once Upon a Time…Objects. The new pickups join Jetpack’s brand-new line-up for series ready to hit the market at MIP Junior and MIPCOM in Cannes this October.

The deal sees Jetpack acquire the worldwide rights (excluding France) for 26 x 22′ episodes of 2D comedy animation Viking Skool and 78 x 7′ episodes of 2D edutainment animated series Once Upon a Time…Objects, both targeting six- to 10-year-old viewers.

“At Jetpack we have been ramping up our acquisitions even further, discovering more stand-out shows that really speak to the current needs of the global market. And those we’ll be rolling out for MIPCOM,” said Dominic Gardiner, CEO of Jetpack. “Viking Skool and Once Upon a Time…Objects are two brilliant additions that demonstrate what we’re all about as a business. With incredible and impressive creative leadership from Samka, Cartoon Saloon and Procidis, we are proud to bring these to the market.”

Viking Skool
Viking Skool

Viking Skool is a co-production between Samka and Ireland’s Cartoon Saloon. A comedy series packed with action and adventure, the show is set at a “Viking Skool” that trains the very best to be future Viking leaders.

Ylva, Erik and Arni are three friends brought together at the skool, although any of them becoming a Viking is a long shot! Bound together by their outlier status, their friendship grows as they meet various challenges. The three unlikely heroes show what a true Viking heart and soul looks like and that bravery, while not easy, is necessary. And that loyalty is important, but honesty more so, and that friendship is the glue that gets us through life!

Viking Skool is due to air on Disney Channels and Disney+ across EMEA and on FranceTV in France.

Maestro (Once Upon a Time…Objects)

Once Upon a Time…Objects is a comedy edutainment co-production between Samka and Procidis, the creators of the original IP (Once Upon a Time…). It is currently in development. The series is due to air in France on FranceTV, Israel on HOT, in Switzerland on RTS and in globally on TV5MONDE.

The lead protagonist is Maestro, an animated hero who first appeared on French TV screens in 1978. After seven series that are still on air, now restored in HD, and with an expansive line of educational play products, he returns with a new series. Here children discover everyday objects, such as a football, a fork or a mirror, and Maestro tells them fascinating and often hilarious stories behind each one.

Once Upon a Time…Objects is full of anecdotes and historical characters and blends a wealth of precise scientific information with the humorous tone that determined the success of the original series.

More than 200 million Once Upon a Time… books have been sold as well as 120 million DVDs worldwide.

‘Tara Duncan’ Powers Up for Global Release

Tara Duncan (52 x 13′), the animated fantasy-adventure series from new French/Spanish studio Princess SAM Pictures, is ready to begin its worldwide broadcast rollout soon, having secured fans in France and multiple international partners.

Aimed at kids 6-9 and based on the popular young adult book series by Princess SAM Pictures CEO Sophie Andouin-Mamikonian, Tara Duncan follows an ordinary Earth girl who travels to a magical planet called OtherWorld to learn how to manage her uncontrollable powers and protect her family. Together with her new friends, Tara solves mysteries and faces evil forces on her quest.

The production will be fully completed in October 2022; however, the first episodes of this magical adventure-comedy have already been broadcasted in select territories, including France. Disney Channel France has supported the proect from the beginning, and launched the series this spring to a warm reception as Tara Duncant reached a No. 1 ranking (kids 4-10 / April). Disney Channel Japan and Benelux will follow the French debut with upcoming broadcasts in their respective territories.

The first ratings of Gulli France were also very promising, Princess SAM notes, and indicate a very good public response, leading the channel to add the title to its weekly schedule.

Tara Duncan has sold in more than 80 countries, with top broadcasters on board such as RTS (Switzerland), DeAKids(Italy), Télé-Québec (Canada), RTÉ (Ireland), NRK (Norway), Nelonen (Finland), RTBF (Belgium), TVNZ (New Zealand), SIC K (Portugal), Gulli Africa, and more to be announced.

“As the series is an entertainment program based on a literary work with strong values, we can approach a wide profile of broadcasters. At this stage, we have a good balance between the number of commercial and public channels,” said Frederic Gentet, Senior Content Sales Manager.

Lead by the books’ creator and IP holder Audouin-Mamikonian, Princess SAM Pictures owns the rights to the Tara Duncan license. You can hear more about the series project from the author in the video interview available here.

princess-sam-pictures.com

Exec Producer Brooke Patterson Introduces Us to ‘The Great Wolf Pack’

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure

Great Wolf Entertainment’s charming new animated project The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure centers on five woodland friends (Wiley Wolf, Violet Wolf, Oliver Raccoon, Sammy Squirrel and Brinley Bear) who are magically transported to whimsical worlds via the Great Wolf Geyser. The animated special, which will premiere at the Great Wolf Lodge resorts on September 3, will also be available for viewing on Great Wolf Entertainment’s YouTube channel beginning September 5.

The film was executive produced by Julia Pistor (The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie The Rugrats movie franchise, Jimmy Neutron ) and Kent Redeker (Doc McStuffins, Spirit Rangers). The film was directed by Chris Bailey (Alvin and the Chipmunks, Kim Possible, Despicable Me: Minion Mayhem 3D), who led an award-winning team of artists from L.A.-based animation studio Six Point Harness.

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure
The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure

We had a chance to chat with the film’s exec producer Brooke Patterson about this entertaining new family enterprise:

Animation Magazine: Can you tell us a little bit about the development history behind this lovely Wolf Pack project?

Brooke Patterson
Brooke Patterson, SVP – Brand for Great Wolf Lodge

Brooke Patterson: Storytelling is a key aspect of the Great Wolf Lodge resort experience, and many of our family entertainment offerings center around the stories of our characters, such as StoryTime and Yoga Tales, so this was a natural next step. There is already great affinity for our characters, but now by branching out into animation, we’re able to further develop our characters as well as introduce new characters, new stories and a new world for them to explore.

When did you start working on it and how long did it take to produce?

We discussed further fleshing out our character IP a little over three years ago, but about two years ago we really started getting things in motion. Once we had the team assembled, the overall production of the animated content took about 18 months.

Where was the animation produced?

We partnered with animation studio Six Point Harness on the animation.

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure
The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure

What was the visual inspiration for the project? How would you describe the animation style?

We wanted the characters to be bold and modern, with an environment that had more of a hand painted, hand drawn esthetic. Chris Bailey and the team at Six Point Harness did an outstanding job of capturing that vision — giving our characters a unique and distinct look, with dramatic and whimsical worlds for them to explore.

What do you love best about this special?

I love the sense of adventure and exploration the content offers, and how the stories we’re telling and the character interactions touch on meaningful themes — such as the importance of kindness, compassion and diversity. There’s some real positive energy that comes from the animated content we developed, and the characters reflect modern families and real kids — so while they have strengths there are also flaws and challenges they need to overcome.

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure
The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure

Where will it be shown?

We’re excited to officially debut The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure at all of our 19 resorts across North American starting on Saturday, September 3. We will also have a premiere event on our YouTube channel on September 5.

What were the biggest challenges for the team?

We assembled an amazing team to help us overcome any challenges, but what took the most time was character development. We wanted to make sure we got every element right for each character, from the attitude, look, movement and voice. It was important that we explored every last detail as we brought the characters to life. I think it really paid off, and our vision was fulfilled.

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure
The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure

What do you hope audiences will take home from this special?

I hope families find the content entertaining, and that they are able to identify with some of these meaningful themes woven in. I would love if after watching the film together, families open up and have a conversation about the importance of listening, kindness, compassion, overcoming issues, acceptance – the themes we encounter in our everyday lives.

Are more specials/series in the works for the Great Wolf Pack?

I’m excited because we created a world for the characters that we can continue to explore, providing the backdrop for new adventures and stories. We already have some 22-minute episodic content in development and some five-minute character shorts that we will look to debut in the coming months.

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure
The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure

The Great Wolf Pack: A Call to Adventure will be available to watch at youtube.com/c/GreatWolfPack on September 5. Watch the trailer here and check out a new behind-the-scenes video below.

CAKE Joins Forces with Kukua for YouTube Hit ‘Super Sema’

London-based kids’ entertainment specialist CAKE has announced its partnership with London/Nairobi-based female-led studio, Kukua on Super Sema, the groundbreaking African animated kids’ superhero franchise.

Super Sema encourages and inspires children to reach their potential and make the most of their abilities,” said Ed Galton, CEO of CAKE. “We are thrilled to be working with the talented team at Kukua on this fun and entertaining series and we are looking forward to being part of the next step in the journey bringing Super Sema to more children around the world.”

Executive produced by Oscar-winning actor Lupita Nyong’o, (12 Years a Slave, Black Panther, Us), Super Sema is written by four-time BAFTA winner Claudia Lloyd (Charlie & Lola, Mr. Bean, Tinga Tinga Tales). CAKE comes on board as international distributor.

Kukua CEO Lucrezia Bisignani added, “We are thrilled to be partnering with CAKE to help bring Super Sema and all of her STEAM-powered adventures to even more kids around the world. It’s so important for kids everywhere to see themselves reflected on screen and feel empowered to believe that they too can be change-makers, just like Sema.”

Super Sema follows the world-changing, STEAM-fuelled adventures of a brave and heroic 10-year-old girl named Sema and her twin brother MB as they protect their African village from the villainous Tobor and his bungling robot army. A heartless artificially intelligent ruler, Tobor meets his match in Sema, who learns that with determination, creativity and a helping hand from the amazing worlds of science and technology, anything is possible!

A YouTube Originals series with over 50 million views and an NAACP Image Award nomination, Super Sema (20 x 5’) first launched on International Women’s Day in March 2021, with a second season (12 x 11’) premiering in June this year. Complementary STEAM educational videos explore the science behind the series with fun, kid-accessible experiments and crafts.

Toys inspired by the series, including talking dolls and plush, are set to be released by Just Play in North America later this year, with additional publishing (Penguin Random House and Bendon) and apparel (Bentex) deals previously announced.

Lizzie & Wendy Molyneux Sneak Peek the Lone Moose Magic of ‘The Great North’ S3

***This article originally appeared in the Sept./Oct. ’22 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 323)***

The wonderfully talented and hilarious sisters Wendy Molyneux and Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin have a big place in the hearts of animation fans (and this magazine’s staffers) for being writers on Bob’s Burgers and creating FOX’s charming show The Great North (with Minty Lewis), which begins its third season this month. We had a chance to have a Zoom chat with the Emmy-winning duo, who just extended their overall deal with 20th Television Animation, about what to expect to see on their show this fall. Here is what they told us:

 

Congrats on the new season of your popular show. We know you just went back to a real writers room to start working on the fourth season for 2024.

Wendy Molyneux
Wendy Molyneux [ph: Jeff Drake]
Wendy: Yes, we haven’t worked in a room for over two years, so it’s been very exciting. I had to adjust my deodorant level for working in groups. In fact, I have one in my backpack and I’m ready to go! This year, we have 15 writers including Lizzie and myself.

What can we expect in the third season?

Wendy: We have a lot of Tobin-based episodes and we’re going to learn more about the traditions of the town of Lone Moose, Alaska, including the Moose Poop Festival based on a real one held in Talkeetna. We also find out about a sausage-based boys’ pageant in which Ham [voiced by Paul Rust] and Moon [Aparna Nancherla] participate, and we find out a dark history for their dad Beef [Nick Offerman] and his dad.

We have some really fun only-in-Alaska episodes coming up and also some great guest stars new and returning, including the return of Guy Fieri in a very special Halloween episode.

We have a line-up of today’s favorite comics like John Early, Patti Harrison (Debbie), John Gemberling and Nicole Byer as our guest voices. Murray Bartlett (The White Lotus) guest voices on the premiere episode.

What were your favorite episodes and the most challenging ones to date?

Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin
Lizzie Molyneux-Logelin [ph: Matt Logelin]
Lizzie: The most challenging was the water park episode in season two. It’s always hard to animate water, and we built a whole episode full of water, but it turned out beautifully. It was such a fun episode and it turned out so great to see it all come together.

Wendy: I am a real holiday freak and I just enjoy seeing Beef and Jerry [Ron Funches] spend time together. In the holiday episode, Jerry’s costume gets stolen and they go on a Big Lebowski-esque journey through the underbelly of Lone Moose, which also includes meeting Lone Moose’s villain, Dick Chateau, played by Tony-nominated British actor Adam Godley. It is always great to con these fancy actors to do some animation. He really brought that character to life. I also enjoyed our first musical episode, seeing Ham join a punk band was also a lot of fun, but I enjoy all our episodes. They’re all our children.

Were you just totally starstruck with any of your guest stars?

Lizzie: I would say in the waterpark episode (the “Slide & Wet-judice Adventure”), It was so much fun to record with Pam Grier. She is such a legend and was so hilarious.

Wendy: I definitely am an absolute freak for musical theater people, so when we got Patti LuPone on the “Tasteful Noods Adventure” episode of Season Two, I told her, “Patti, you are lucky we are recording on Zoom, because if we worked together, you wouldn’t be safe! I would steal your scarf or purse, just to have something of yours!” It’s good that we were at a distance, because I have worshipped Patti LuPone ever since I was a child … After speaking to her, I should have just walked into the ocean because basically, that was probably as good as it gets!

The Great North
The Great North will dig deeper into the traditions of Lone Moose and offer an all-fantasy triptych this fall.

Which episode generated the most response from viewers and which ones were you most touched by?

Lizzie: We definitely got a lot of response from the episode in Season One in which Ham and Crispin [Julio Torres] first get together (“Pride & Prejudice Adventure”) and the episode in Season Two where Ham tries to redo his coming out with more drama (“Say It Again, Ham Adventure”). I think maybe it’s unusual to see a young gay male couple who are in their teens and are accepted by the people around them. And, they’re also very funny. I know that growing up in the ’80s and ’90s, it was tough to find super positive, stable representations of LGBTQ+ youths on air. A lot of the contributions on our staff have been from our writer Charlie Kelly. It’s been great to see young people watching that are connecting with that, because cartoons can’t save the world, but at least maybe we can make it .0005 percent better!

Any advice for young people who want to work in animation?

Wendy: I think it’s a really exciting time in animation. All boats rise together, so when you see something cool and exciting on another show that inspires you do something more within your own show and to push yourselves. Our amazing artists at Bento Box show us stuff that we never would have thought of. I know there are always expansions and retractions in the business, but I think we have limitless possibilities for new voices today. We’ve seen a huge increase in representation for females, POC and non-binary creatives. Everyone used to think about animation as a mostly male industry, but we have many new faces and voices now, and as that continues, it just keeps getting better.

Lizzie: The great thing about animation is that there is no limit to what you can do. It’s an exciting world to work in, and to those who are interested in it, I’d say, “Go for it!.” The more, the merrier!

The Great North
The series features the voices of (L-R) Paul Rust as Ham, Jenny Slate as Judy, Will Forte as Wolf, Dulcé Sloan as Honeybee and Aparna Nancherla as Moon, as well as Nick Offerman as Tobin family patriarch, Beef.

Which toons made a big impact on you when you were growing up?

Lizzie: I grew up on The Simpsons … I remember coming home early from trick or treating to watch the “Treehouse of Horror” episodes. When I was in elementary school, it was so exciting to see an animated show that was so funny and my older siblings and parents could also enjoy it with me.

Wendy: Our dad always showed us what he had liked, so he got VHS copies of the Rocky and Bullwinkle show and Mr. Peabody and Sherman shorts, and I used to love those as a kid. In high school and college, my brother and I were big fans of Space Ghost Coast to Coast and Dr. Katz, which was our introduction to Loren Bouchard. We would get home early and watch those shows, just vegging out on the couch — totally sober, for the record! There had been no marijuana and alcohol use when we enjoyed those cartoons!

One thing about animation is that it creates its own fandoms and because it’s fun to share it’s fun to watch together and have those inside jokes. I know Bob’s Burgers has certainly produced those groups of fans, so it’s just fun to be part of that tradition, knowing that there are other kids coming home late from college and watching some animation before they hit the hay.

Season Three of The Great North premieres on FOX on September 25.

WildBrain Greenlights New ‘Slugterra’ Shorts, Extra ‘Summer Memories’

Canadian kids and family producer WildBrain Television announced that Family Channel, its flagship broadcast network, has greenlit three new content projects across live-action and animation, in partnership with independent Canadian producers. Exclusive to WildBrain Television in Canada, the new content will begin rolling out across the company’s broadcast and digital channels this September, continuing into 2023. WildBrain has also acquired global distribution rights for all three properties.

The animation lineup features Slugterra: Ascension, produced in partnership with Epic Story Media. The shorts will premiere exclusively on WildBrainTV in Canada in a sneak peek on September 5 at 2:50 p.m. ET, with new episodes beginning September 18 at 11:45 a.m. ET, before rolling out globally across WildBrain Spark’s Slugterra YouTube channels.

Also newly greenlit is an expanded order of five half-hours to the popular new series Summer Memories, produced in partnership with A&N Productions, Aircraft Pictures and Yeti Farm Creative. The series debuted on Family Channel this summer, and the new stories will begin airing on Family Channel in 2023.

WildBrain Television’s live-action slate is headlined by Life with Luca, a 90-minute feature spun off from the long-running Life with Derek franchise, which is due to debut on Family Channel in 2023.

“We’re proud to further support Canadian independent producers with these original commissions. Family Channel, and WildBrain Television as a whole, play an integral role in our strategy to drive distinct Canadian content and stories that resonates globally,” said Deirdre Brennan, WildBrain’s COO. These shows have universal appeal, and we look forward to sharing them not only with our audience at home, but with kids and families worldwide.”

Slugterra: Ascension
Slugterra: Ascension

Slugterra: Ascension (20 x 4’) – coming to WildBrainTV and Family Channel fall 2022

The wait is over! For the first time in six years Eli Shane, Trixie Sting and the slugs are back with more comedy, action and exciting escapades in Slugterra: Ascension.

After a rockslide leaves them trapped alone with only a few of their slugs, Eli and Trixie have to be smart and strategic to outwit and outrun villainous twins Locke and Lode and their deadly gattler blaster — that is until they find the legendary Universal Slug! At first glance “Uni” looks like any derpy little flopper. But once transformed, this powerful creature can imitate any slug’s strongest move! Too bad it comes with a price Eli and Trixie won’t be happy about paying.

The 20 brand-new, four-minute CG-animated shorts will join the classic library of Slugterra episodes, the fan-favorite adventure series set deep underground where fierce opponents collect, train and battle it out with their arsenals of fantastical transforming slugs.

Slugterra was created by Asaph Fipke, and Slugterra: Ascension is produced in association with Epic Story Media’s Ken Faier, acting as executive producer, along with showrunner Nancy Lees. The new series was animated at Island of Misfits (IOM) in Halifax. Additional executive producers include WildBrain’s Josh Scherba, Stephanie Betts and Anne Loi, and IOM’s Meaghan Clark. The series was directed by IOM’s Don Urquhart and produced by Epic Story Media’s Christine Cote and Marlene Schmidt.

Summer Memories
Summer Memories

Summer Memories (5 x 30’) – new episodes coming to Family Channel in 2023

Five half-hours are being added to the popular new series Summer Memories, which launched this summer on Family Channel.

The new stories dive further into the world and characters, following the adventures of best friends Jason and Ronnie as Jason looks back on the most pivotal summer of his life (which was just a few weeks ago). This is Jason’s summer of change … and he fears change. Lucky for him, he has charismatic, life adventurer Ronnie at his side. Summer Memories transcends time, space and memory — the good and the bad — as it chronicles Jason and Ronnie’s sweet, fun-filled relationship.

Summer Memories was created by veteran animator/producer Adam Yaniv and produced by A&N Productions, Aircraft Pictures and Yeti Farm Creative, with the financial support of the Canada Media Fund and Shaw Rocket Fund.

Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Pinocchio,’ ‘My Father’s Dragon’ Set BFI London Film Fest World Premieres

The 66th BFI London Film Festival (which takes place Oct. 5-16) has announced that it will premiere Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio and director Nora Twomey’s new feature My Father’s Dragon (Cartoon Saloon) at the event this year. Also on tap is Creature, a new collaboration between acclaimed choreographer Akram Khan and Oscar winner Asif Kapadia and the previously announced opening night gala, the big screen adaptation of the smash-hit, Olivier-winning stage musical Roald Dahl’s Matilda the Musical.

Netflix has just announced the release dates for its upcoming feature animation slate, including these two LFF premiere titles.

As part of its mission to spotlight the impressive range of creative talent within the U.K., BFI London Film Festival will help launch a rich selection of homegrown world premieres. In addition to the three U.K. productions World Premiering as part of the episodic strand, the Festival will present the claustrophobic whistleblower comedy Klokkenluider, the directorial debut of actor Neil Maskell (Kill List) which stars Amit Shah, Tom Burke and Jenna Coleman, and Welsh filmmaker Jamie Adams’ bittersweet part-improvised love story She Is Love, starring Sam Riley (Control) and Haley Bennett (Cyrano). Award-winning short filmmaker Dionne Edwards delivers on the promise of early work with her heart-swelling debut, Pretty Red Dress, which investigates Black masculinity and family dynamics.

Other U.K. debuts launching at the Festival include: Andrew Cumming’s wildly inventive Palaeolithic low budget horror, The Origin; Fridjof Ryder’s dark thriller Inland, starring Mark Rylance and acclaimed British-Kenyan artist, Grace Ndiritu’s long-form debut, Becoming Plant.

U.K. Documentary cinema is also well represented with world premieres including the rapturous Name Me Lewand by Edward Lovelace (The Possibilities Are Endless) that explores the experience of a deaf Kurdish boy, If the Streets Were on Fire, an exhilarating portrait of London’s BikeStormz community which was featured in LFF’s Works-in-Progress showcase as part of U.K. New Talent Days 2021, and two new films Kanaval: A People’s History of Haiti in Six Chapters and Blue Bag Life, produced by Natasha Dack-Ojumo, co-Founder of Tigerlily Films (Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché). Yemi Bamiro also returns to LFF with his follow up to Michael Jordan portrait, One Man and His Shoes, with Super Eagles ’96, about the Nigerian football team.

You can find details on the previously announced XR selections and Short Films in Competition on the BFI London Film Festival website.

www.bfi.org.uk/bfi-london-film-festival

My Father's Dragon
Boris (Gaten Matarazzo) and Elmer (Jacob Tremblay) in ‘My Father’s Dragon’ [Netflix © 2022
My Father’s Dragon
BFI LFF WORLD PREMIER (On Netflix November 4 & in Select Theaters)
From five-time Academy Award-nominated animation studio Cartoon Saloon (The Secret of Kells, Song of the Sea, Wolfwalkers) and Academy Award-nominated director Nora Twomey (The Breadwinner), comes an exquisite film inspired by the Newbery-honored children’s book from author Ruth Stiles Gannett. Struggling to cope after a move to the city with his mother, Elmer runs away in search of Wild Island and a young dragon who waits to be rescued. Elmer’s adventures introduce him to ferocious beasts, a mysterious island and the friendship of a lifetime.

Directed by Twomey and written by Meg LeFauve, who both executive produce alongside Tomm Moore, Gerry Shirren, Ruth Coady and Alan Maloney, My Father’s Dragon voice stars Jacob Tremblay, Gaten Matarazzo, Golshifteh Farahani, Dianne Wiest, Rita Moreno, Chris O’Dowd, Judy Greer, Alan Cumming, Yara Shahidi, Jackie Earle Haley, Mary Kay Place, Leighton Meester, Spence Moore II, Adam Brody, Charlyne Yi, Maggie Lincoln, Jack Smith, Whoopi Goldberg and Ian McShane.

Pinocchio Poster

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio 
BFI LFF WORLD PREMIERE (On Netflix December 9 & in Select Theaters)
Academy Award-winning director Guillermo del Toro and award-winning stop-motion legend Mark Gustafson reimagine the classic Carlo Collodi tale of the fabled wooden boy with a whimsical tour de force that finds Pinocchio on an enchanted adventure that transcends worlds and reveals the life-giving power of love.

Del Toro helms the project as director with Gustafson, writer with Patrick McHale and producer with Lisa Henson, Gary Ungar, Alex Bulkley and Corey Campodonico. The voice cast features Gregory Mann, Ewan McGregor, David Bradley, Tilda Swinton, Christoph Waltz, Finn Wolfhard, Cate Blanchett, John Turturro, Ron Perlman, Tim Blake Nelson and Burn Gorman.

‘Harley Quinn’ Renewed for Smashing 4th Season on HBO Max

Critically-acclaimed Max Original adult-animated series Harley Quinn has been renewed for a fourth season, ahead of the season three finale on September 15.

“Three seasons down and I can’t even begin to think about the new levels of chaos and trouble that Harley, Ivy and the gang can get into with a fourth season,” said Peter Girardi, Executive VP of Alternative Programming for Warner Bros. Animation. “But, I’m grateful to our partners at HBO Max for continuing this insane ride with us so we can all find out.”

Sarah Peters (Workaholics, Master of None, Nathan For You), who has written on the series since Season 1 and currently serves as consulting producer, will be elevated to executive producer and serve as showrunner for Season 4.

Based on characters from DC, Harley Quinn is produced by Delicious Non-Sequitur Productions and Yes, Norman Productions in association with Warner Bros. Animation. The series was developed by Justin Halpern and Patrick Schumacker and Dean Lorey.

“We are ecstatic that HBO Max wants the story of Harley and Ivy to continue. And we are equally thrilled that this next season will be in great hands with Sarah Peters as our showrunner and Ceci Aranovich overseeing animation production, as they have both greatly influenced the show with their brilliance since the beginning,” commented Halpern and Schumacker.

Billy Wee, Senior Vice President of Comedy & Animation, HBO Max, said, “Patrick Schumacker, Justin Halpern and their incredible team of artists and writers have created something so explosively funny and original and we are thrilled to continue this journey with them and the show’s legion of fans. It has been amazing to watch the show grow and evolve this season and we could not ask for a more talented and dedicated team of collaborators.”

In Season 3 of the biting and uproarious adult animated comedy series, Harley Quinn (Kaley Cuoco) and Poison Ivy (Lake Bell) wrap up their “Eat. Bang! Kill. Tour” and return to Gotham as the new power couple of DC villainy. Along with their ragtag crew — King Shark (Ron Funches), Clayface (Alan Tudyk), Frank the Plant (JB Smoove) — “Harlivy” strives to become the best version of themselves while also working towards Ivy’s long desired plan of transforming Gotham into an Eden paradise.

Harley Quinn also features the voices of Matt Oberg (Kite Man), Christopher Meloni (Commissioner Gordon), Andy Daly (Two-Face), Diedrich Bader (Batman/Bruce Wayne), James Adomian (Bane), Sanaa Lathan (Selina Kyle), Briana Cuoco (Batgirl/Barbara Gordon) and Harvey Guillen (Nightwing).

Ranked with a 100% critics’ score on Rotten Tomatoes, the series is executive producers are Halpern, Schumacker, Kaley Cuoco, Sam Register, Jessica Goldstein and Chrissy Pietrosh.

Seasons 1-3 of Harley Quinn are available to stream on HBO Max. 

Harley Quinn S4

Hulu Picks Up ‘The Paloni Show! Halloween Special!’ from Justin Roiland

Hulu is strengthening its partnership with creator Justin Roiland (Solar Opposites), announcing the pickup and premiere date for The Paloni Show! Halloween Special!, which will offer viewers a seasonally spooky treat on October 17. The show is exec produced by Roiland and Ben Bayouth (Blark and Son).

In this special, Leroy, Reggie and Cheruce Paloni have been given the opportunity of a lifetime to be the hosts of an unforgettable Halloween Special full of “spooky” shorts from a group of up-and-coming animators:

  • David Firth – “Slaughter Café”
  • Jaime Rodriguez – “Bet it Was Becca”
  • Joel Haver – “Rightbehindyouton”
  • Lee Hardcastle – “An Alien Halloween Claymation”
  • Myke Chilian and Jordan Harris – “Shitty Beetlegeuse”
  • Jacob Hair and Josh Petrino – “Slashtronaut”
  • Daniel Cole – “Banana Party”
  • Brian Wysol – “The Dreston”
  • Michael Cusack – “A Creek Down the Street”
  • Rafillo – “Killer Bathtub”
  • Echo Kellum and Nate Caywood – “Camp Death Lake”
  • Syd Heller and Olivia DeLaurentis – “Plopsie and Friends”
  • Simon Hanselmann” – “Megahex, Devil’s Night”
Justin Roiland | Ben Bayouth

The Paloni Show! Halloween Special!, executive produced by Roiland (Solar Opposites, Rick and Morty) and Ben Bayouth (Blark and Son), comes from 20th Television Animation. Starring:

  • Justin Roiland voices Leroy, the oldest sibling in the family, Leroy is an optimistic, hard working guy who’s only dream for as long as he can remember has been to make and host his own variety show. He and his brother Reggie are very close and are usually on the same page creatively.
  • Zach Hadel (Smiling Friends) plays Reggie, the short-fused, fast-talking little brother of the family with a foul mouth and a tendency to let his temper get in the way of doing his job as a host.
  • Pamela Adlon (Better Things) plays Cheruce, the alienated middle child who has her own ideas for how the special should have gone. She’s bitter and holds a grudge against her brothers for not embracing her ideas.
  • Vatche Panos voices Little Long Legs, the Paloni’s long-legged young cousin who seems to care only about candy and having fun.
  • Kari Wahlgren voices Aunt Stephanie, the Paloni’s selfish and gullible aunt who feels that motherhood has robbed her of her best years.

‘Bee and PuppyCat’ Makes Highly Anticipated Return on Netflix Sept. 6

The wait is over! From its start as a two-part, 10-minute short that became an immediate hit amassing millions of views, to a record-breaking Kickstarter campaign that brought the series to its first full season, fans have driven the breakout success of cult animated web series Bee and PuppyCat, and keep wanting more.

Now, the hit series created by Natasha Allegri (Adventure Time) and produced by Frederator Studios (Adventure Time, Castlevania) is ready to delight fans once again with new adventures throughout the all-new season, Lazy in Space, dropping September 6 on Netflix.

Bee and PuppyCat follows a 20-something temp worker named Bee and her mysterious companion PuppyCat as the two travel on fantastic adventures across space while taking on various intergalactic odd jobs to help make rent. The first season of the original web series quickly became not only a fan obsession, but a critical sensation. Polygon said, “Bee and PuppyCat fills a niche that’s been relatively unexplored, not just on Netflix, but
in Western animation as a whole.”

With its stylistically distinct look and feel, outlandishly original characters and storytelling, Bee and PuppyCat shares creator Allegri’s unique creative mastery and vision in this new season featuring 16 new half-hour episodes.

The new season will kick off with a re-introduction to the beloved characters and a re-imagining of the original storyline, before launching into the all-new story arc that further showcases the charm and originality of the show’s voice and its comic, yet dreamy, appeal.

“When I think about making stuff, I think about who I’m making it for,” says Allegri. “The person I made Bee and PuppyCat for is someone who is chaotic, who likes entertainment and cute stuff, maybe a little bit socially unaware, who wants something comforting.”

“The incredibly talented team on the series are truly outstanding,” adds executive producer Kevin Kolde. “It’s a rush to see that early buzz has already pushed the new series to trend on Twitter and TikTok with millions of views, and we know fans will love what’s coming as much as we do.”

Bee and PuppyCat was created by Natasha Allegri and produced by Frederator Studios in partnership with OLM, Inc. with executive producers Allegri, Kolde, Eric Homan, Michael Hirsh, Toshiaki Okuno, Fred Seibert, Junichi Yanagihara and Art Directors Hans Tseng and Efrain Farias. Series animation was done by OLM, Inc., with Allegri, Tseng and Farias relocating to Japan during production to oversee creative direction.

Bee and PuppyCat debuts on Netflix on September 6. 

Trailer: ‘Sago Mini Friends’ Joins Apple’s Animated Preschool Lineup Sept. 16

Hot off Apple TV+’s big fall family slate announcement, the streaming platform has debuted the official trailer for its newest preschool toon Sago Mini Friends, premiering Friday, September 16.

Produced by Daytime Emmy Award-nominated Spin Master Entertainment and animated by 9 Story Media Group’s Emmy Award-winning studio Brown Bag Films – Toronto, the Sago Mini Friends series is based on the charming characters and artful designs featured in the award-winning Sago Mini World app, developed by Sago Mini.

The series is an adorable nod to gratitude, featuring Harvey the floppy-eared dog and his best friends, Jinja the cat, Jack the rabbit and Robin the bird. Along with a unique cast of residents as colorful as their own whimsical world, the four friends play, explore, imagine and celebrate daily in their joyful town of Sagoville.

In each episode, Harvey and all his friends express their true thankfulness for all things, big and small, through optimism, kindness, preschool-friendly humor and unforgettable original songs!

Sago Mini Friends is executive produced by Daytime Emmy Award nominees Jennifer Dodge (PAW Patrol), Ronnen Harary (PAW Patrol), Tone Thyne (Wonder Pets!) and Dustin Ferrer (Esme & Roy). Daytime Emmy Award nominees Laura Clunie (PAW Patrol) and Toni Stevens (PAW Patrol) serve as executive producers, with Chad Hicks (Kingdom Force) as series director.

Dr. Sonja Lyubomirsky, distinguished professor of Psychology at the University of California, Riverside and expert in the science of happiness, serves as the gratitude expert on the series through Apple TV+’s changemakers initiative.

The Sago Mini World app, which the Sago Mini Friends series is based on, features over 40 games for kids ages two to five years old. Sago Mini World has received accolades from the Parents’ Choice Gold Awards, the Webby Awards, the Academics’ Choice Media Awards and the Kidscreen Awards. The app encourages children to play, build, create and pretend with digital games that spark imagination and curiosity.

The award-winning slate of original animated series and film for kids and families on Apple TV+ includes the recently premiered and critically-acclaimed El Deafo, Duck & Goose, Pinecone & Pony, Harriet the Spy (The Jim Henson Company) and the star-studded animated adventure film Luck (Apple Original Films/Skydance Animation), Peabody Award-winning series Stillwater, Helpsters (Sesame Workshop), Academy Award-nominated animated film Wolfwalkers, Wolfboy and the Everything Factory from Joseph Gordon-Levitt (HITRECORD/ Bento Box Ent.), Get Rolling with Otis, new series and specials from Peanuts and WildBrain including Snoopy in Space S2, It’s the Small Things, Charlie Brown and For Auld Lang Syne, and Daytime Emmy Award-winning Here We Are: Notes for Living on Planet Earth, based on the New York Times best-selling book and TIME Best Book of the Year by Oliver Jeffers.

‘Rick and Morty’ Creators Discuss Season 6 of the Beloved Sci-Fi Toon

Ahead of the sixth season premiere of Rick and Morty on Adult Swim on Sunday, September 4, show creators Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon and exec producer Scott Marder participated in a round-table press event in which they answered a few of our questions. What follows is an edited version of what they shared with select trade publications about the entertaining and unpredictable new season of the multi-Emmy-winning series.

 

The Season 5 finale saw Evil Morty unveiling a new world before jumping into a yellow portal and possibly finding release from Rick. It was quite an episode and left the door open for many possibilities… Can you tell us a bit about what brought us to the new season?

Dan Harmon & Justin Roiland

Justin Roiland: Every season’s got its own different, crazy, behind-the-scenes story, right? Like I mean, every single season has something insane. But I think this one has been the most stable, and then because of that and because of [Scott] Marder now being [showrunner] — he obviously was here for Season 5, you know. But it was just a crazy time. The whole thing was just insane. It was such a transitional kind of period of time. I think now we’re kind of all back to a bit more of stable footing and normality and consistency, just quality across the season. There’s a few dips here and there, but like, overall I think it’s a pretty solid season that will rank up there in what are the best seasons, I’m hoping.

Dan [Harmon] and I and the writers, we never know which ones are going to be the big popular episode. Like we never thought Pickle Rick was going to be some huge, jump out thing. I swear to god. We had other episodes that we thought would be more popular. I mean, we loved the episode, don’t get me wrong. But we didn’t know, we had no clue, so when that thing blew up, we were like, “Holy s—t, okay.”

You mentioned the difficulty of getting a sci-fi animated show greenlit back when Rick and Morty first premiered. Can you elaborate on that?

Justin: We’re very, very lucky with the cast we have, and I think that’s also part of it is just having the chemistry right out of the gate with our cast and the performances we have right out of the gate, from even Season 1. I can tell you we were having a hard time getting a sci-fi concept through the gate. This was around the time that Futurama was canceled. Sci-fi was not profitable, it was not doing as well. Executives saw sci-fi and they were like, “Eh-eh, nope, that’s a no — it’s a dirty word.”

So that, for sure, was the climate at the time and then we were able to get one past the goalie. Obviously, it was a very smart goalie who knew what they were doing and let us make the show we wanted to make and here we are. But yeah, I’m just a big sci-fi fan, so anything that’s well-crafted, well-written, that has stakes, has consequences and takes, takes its canon and things that have happened seriously and plans things really well, doesn’t just fly by the seat of its pants — I’m not referencing anything specific here, but, um…

Rick and Morty
Rick and Morty

How do you find the balance between off-the-wall sci-fi concepts and the normal rhythms of the show where we have these regular characters interacting with each other?

Justin: [Laughs] We’re all so morose when it comes to life. Or maybe we’re healthy, I don’t know, maybe we’re really healthy. But yeah, I think that in performing them, it’s like just having fun and making sure that the performances are grounded and real. We’ve got a really phenomenal cast that delivers it all, on every line, it’s just phenomenal. Then there is the silliness, for Rick and Morty in particular sometimes, where I’ll go off script and improv a little bit between the two of them, and you kind of sometimes can notice that stuff. Sometimes you don’t notice it; it integrates in pretty well sometimes.

That’s always a fun component to the show, but by and large, when the s–t hits the fan and it needs to feel real and the characters give a s–t, like yeah, then it’s like, “Okay, we’ve got to sell that with our performances,” and that’s any good show that cares. But a lot of cartoons, that isn’t their number one, that’s not a pillar or a parody, their primary focus is comedy and jokes, jokes, jokes — which we try to do too, but we also have consequences and stakes and stuff that will ripple across seasons. Not every show has to do that to win me over, but I do appreciate the ones that try, ‘cause it’s just more interesting.

But I mean, I f—–g love South Park, it might even be my No. 1 favorite animated show. They’ll do it a little bit here and there, play with that in a season. Clearly, nowadays, they’re doing these crazy serialized seasons that are just f—–g incredible.

Rick and Morty
Rick and Morty

How does an episode’s tone evolve during the production of an episode?

Dan Harmon: You try to control that, you try to recognize from the premise forward. I’ll say things like, if a writer wants to do something that’s like, “Oh, what if multiple versions of Rick do this or that?”, then I might say something like, “Look, if we’re gonna do this, the challenge is going to be that it needs to be incredibly emotional, because we’ve plundered this concept. No one’s going to be — including the characters on screen — no one’s going to have their mind blown by the idea of multiple Ricks.”

So, I’ll say something like that, but you may as well just be saying — like, you’re an airplane pilot and you’re going like, “Look, this flight has to be smooth.” It’s like, “Well, yeah, okay,” and then what happens, happens. The way it really goes is you kind of — I’ve never parented, but it’s the easiest metaphor, because your job has to be to let it fly and then watch and make adjustments to what’s happening — I mean, we do so much re-breaking, sometimes, when we see the first version of the episode as drawn by artists.

It’s got to be very frustrating for them, but at the same time it’s a better way to figure things out than writing endless drafts. I used to sit there until I felt it was Citizen Kane on a keyboard while everyone was like, “Dude, we have to draw something.” And I’d be like, “You don’t have to draw it if it’s bad. You’ll thank me when you don’t have to change it.” But we would still have to change it. That was my big revelation, like, “Dude, I’m not doing anybody any favors, I need to let stuff go when it’s good enough for now, and then have the writing process be less like it’s a blueprint and more like it’s a memo. It’s a conversation starter, and then we have to work together as 200 people going around and around and let this thing develop like a child.”

Scott Marder

Scott Marder: Yeah, I don’t think it’s a goal of like this next one, the third one, we’re going to make this more of a blah, blah, blah. Normally, there’s always a lot of ideas on the table and just the good ones spark more joy than the less good ones, and those are the ones that we just gravitate towards and start slotting in as the next one in the season.

Can you talk about how you were able to deal with the consequences of the Season 5 finale?

Dan: We knew we didn’t have to undo it, but we knew we had to answer for it. When you see a cliffhanger like the end of Season 5, it’s kind of like buying on a credit card — that means when we were at the end of Season 5, we were kind of like, “How do you end this season?” and sometimes the answer is, “Well, we can exchange debt for credit. We can basically put ourselves on the hook, and it’ll be a good finale, but only because it’s making people wait, which is a tough thing to decide to do. Honestly, it’s more of a survival response. I’m like, “Okay now what do we owe? We have to pay this bill.” That’s how I look at it, which isn’t as romantic, but I don’t know, Scott, do you have a different [take]?

Scott: We were excited to tackle it, it was very high pressure, we put a real big episode out there with a lot of loose ends. It made it really challenging in Season 6, because I feel like we actually took a swing at a few versions of it that just didn’t feel like it lived up to the finale yet, until I feel like in the eleventh hour, we found what is now 601, that kind of felt like it did everything in the middle of a season. But, yeah, it was a lot of work, but I’m really grateful for the one that we ultimately found and landed for you guys, because it feels like it does everything.

Rick and Morty
Rick and Morty

What is it like to build these elaborate worlds and then have to immediately burn them down and then move on to the next one?

Dan: For me, what that is is symptomatic of an aversion to commitment. It’s not so much a challenge that’s put upon us — unless ‘us’ can be separate, like, it might be a challenge that I have put upon some of the writers. I’m too scared to just start telling stories in a consistent environment.

I think it’s better to just set fire to the stuff, because to not do so is to say, “This is precious,” and if you say this is precious, you might be wrong, and then you suck, and I can’t suck, so I’m just gonna introduce these characters that, on any other show, might be like, “Hey, let’s keep these guys around.” But then there’s the part of me that is incredibly, like, “I don’t want to let people down,” so I’m like, “Uh, whatever, that’s stupid, then they all die.” I think the show kind of inherits that from me, maybe, that’s like an ancestral psychological illness.

Scott: Yeah, I felt like a combo of that and just our general excitement just keeps us always going to new worlds and new locations, just because the show is so limitless, you bring in a new writer, who’s been a fan of the show for the last 10 years who just wants to play in this sandbox, and that’s why every episode feels like it’s a completely different sort of movie.

Rick and Morty
Rick and Morty

Can you talk about the future of the show? What do you see beyond the 70-episode order?

Dan: Well, in my opinion, yeah, I very much expect the show to go beyond that order. I don’t think that’s jinxing it, I mean, it just seems like, “Okay, we’ve got a certain amount of momentum here.” The 70-episode order, to me, was like, “Well, how much can we commit to?”

It was a two-way street between us and the network saying we’re going to take this very seriously, right? We’re not going to go develop a bunch of stuff unless we hire, like, a Scott Marder to run the shop. But in any case, it’s a commitment to professionalism and stuff, and it was an important one. It’s like, “Oh, we got tenure, we’re told that we have a job tomorrow no matter what we do.” The result of that a couple of steps later is now Scott has got the show on such a schedule that, for the first time in the show’s life, we’re looking at doing a season every year. It worked great, getting that order was exactly what we needed to grow up.

Scott: I plan to work on it until I’m like a nano-mist, like Morpheus in that last Matrix movie. Just like not in normal form anymore, kind of move in and out of rooms, always breaking the show.

Rick and Morty Season 6 premieres on Adult Swim on Sunday, September 4 at 11 p.m.

 

A Boy and His Fire Truck: Craig Gerber’s ‘Firebuds’ Is Ready to Roll on Disney Junior

***This article originally appeared in the Sept./Oct. ’22 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 323)***

Creators of stand-out animated shows for younger kids have to make magic happen on many levels. They have to deliver engaging animation, present solid stories that can be quickly grasped and weave a meaningful message through all of it. Craig Gerber, executive producer and creator of Disney Junior’s Firebuds, comes to this new show with years of experience of doing just that.

Craig Gerber
Craig Gerber

Gerber was executive producer and creator of Elena of Avalor and executive producer of Sofia the First. He’s also an Emmy winner for the Sofia the First theme song. After many seasons of working on shows geared toward the preschool set, he found himself inspired once more by his own sons to create a new series that would speak to them.

“My youngest son is now seven, but when he was three he was obsessed with fire trucks,” says Gerber. “He would carry around a fire truck, almost like you would carry a puppy, and put on a fire chief outfit. It got both me and my wife thinking that we should do a show about a family of fire trucks. I always want to try to do something that I haven’t seen before so I thought about a show with a kid and his best friend that is a fire truck. So, that led me down the road to kind of come up with a world of Firebuds, where there are people and they’re talking to vehicles and they live as equals.”

Firebuds
Bo (Declan Whaley) and his friends save the day with the loving support of their first responder parents, including co-Fire Chief Bill (Lou Diamond Phillips).

Lifesaving Adventures

The main human character, Bo, is the son of two first responders and the show focuses on the life-saving work done by them. Gerber wanted to show children the heroic nature of first responders who put others first and come to the rescue of people in their community. Gerber’s own grandfather was a police detective in New York and he feels a special connection to first responders through him. Bo is also part of a blended family that includes a Filipino father, and Gerber worked closely with cultural consultants to include representation of Tagalog in Firebuds.

The cast of the show includes Lou Diamond Phillips, Yvette Nicole Brown, Lily Sanfelippo, Jecobi Swain and Declan Whaley as Bo. The show’s impressive list of guest stars and recurring cast for Season One also includes Padma Lakshmi, Oscar Nuñez, Patton Oswalt, Lisa Loeb and “Weird Al” Yankovic.

Gerber was sure to invest time developing the design of the fire trucks and their backgrounds as well. He knew they needed a distinct look for all of the elements to fall into place for their audience.

Firebuds
Firebuds

“It’s been a huge design challenge, to be honest, to create a world where we’re a tiny little kid and a giant fire truck can actually be in the same room together,” says Gerber. “We have a great design team and when you get to give the designers and the artists that challenge to create a new world, that’s half the fun. To have the windshield wipers (of the fire trucks) be the eyebrows was really a special moment for me because it helped create that eye frame and make the fire trucks really feel like characters.”

“A lot of different folks contributed to the look and design of everything,” he continues. “We actually looked at a lot of vehicles that were out there and there were very intentional decisions made to try to create our own look for these vehicles. Ultimately, we decided in the case of the cars, we need to put the eyes on the windshield because that was the most pleasing place to put it. That happened early on.”

The staff of the show is made up of five writers who write the 11-minute episodes. Locally, there are also 40 to 50 crew members at Walt Disney Television Animation working on the Firebuds. ICON Creative Studio, one of the largest independent animation studios in Canada, also works on the show. Due to the pandemic, Gerber hasn’t been able to travel to Canada to meet their crew, but hopes to do so soon.

Firebuds
L-R: Jayden (JeCobi Swain), Bo (Declan Whaley) and Violet (Vivian Vencer) are ready to roll with their vehicle pals Piston (Caleb Paddock), Flash (Terrence Little Gardenhigh) and Axl Lily Sanfelippo.

All the Right Notes

Gerber, who is a pop music fan, wants the music and songs in the series to be appealing to all ages so he’s incorporating different musical styles and keeping his eye on avoiding anything monotonous. He hopes that parents and older kids will also be able to listen to the music, like the theme song “Firebuds Let’s Roll,” written and performed by Beau Black, multiple times without it being tiring. This philosophy dates back to his work on Sofia the First.

“My goal has always been to create shows that the whole family can enjoy together,” says Gerber. “When it’s time for the younger one to get their choice, I want it to be a fun experience for the entire family across a variety of ages. It makes it a little trickier because you’re trying to include something for everyone. But, the reward is great because it means that the whole family will look at that time as a fun time spent together.”

Firebuds premieres September 21 on Disney Channel, Disney Junior and Disney+.

Trailer: ‘Cyberpunk: Edgerunners’ Plugs into a Psychedellic Sci-Fi Dream Sept. 13

A new mind-shattering animated reality is ready to be unleashed on Netflix viewers this month, as the streamer has dropped the trippy, explosive, NSFW trailer for Cyberpunk: Edgerunners and new images showcasing this violent new neon world. The 10 x 30′ anime arrives on streaming September 13.

In a dystopia riddled with corruption and cybernetic implants, a talented but reckless street kid strives to become an edgerunner: a mercenary outlaw.

Fans also got a fresh look at the brilliant character, Lucy: a skilled netrunner and an important member of Maine’s mercenary crew. Despite her highly sought-after technical abilities, she wants nothing more than to escape Night City and her dangerous past.

CD PROJEKT RED, the company behind the Cyberpunk 2077 video game, is producing the series with Rafał Jaki (The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, Cyberpunk 2077, The Witcher: Ronin) as showrunner and executive producer, with Satoru Homma, Bartosz Sztybor and Saya Elder serving as producers. The team at CD PROJEKT RED has been working on this new series since 2018.

Acclaimed Japan-based animation company, Studio Trigger is the animation studio on the series and bring the world of Cyberpunk to life with their signature, vibrant style. Hiroyuki Imaishi (Gurren Lagann, Kill la Kill, Promare) directs the series along with creative director Hiromi Wakabayashi (Kill la Kill), character designer and animation director Yoh Yoshinari (Little Witch Academia, BNA: Brand New Animal), from an adapted screenplay by Yoshiki Usa (GRIDMAN UNIVERSE series, Promare) and Masahiko Otsuka (Star Wars: Visions ‘The Elder’). The original score will be composed by Akira Yamaoka (Silent Hill series).

Full Trailer ‘Christopher at Sea’ Embarks Ahead of Venice Premiere

Global creative studio Psyop has unveiled the official trailer for Christopher at Sea, director Tom C J Brown’s “queer operatic thriller” on animated waves, ahead of the 20-minute film’s previously announced premiere at the Venice International Film Festival. Co-produced by Psyop, Temple Carrington & Brown and Miyu, the piece will screen in the Orizzonti Short Films Competition.

Christopher at Sea follows Christopher (voiced by James Potter) as he embarks on a transatlantic voyage as a passenger on a cargo ship. A chance encounter with Third Engineer Valentin (Andrew Isar) under moonlight waylays his hopes of finding out what lures so many men to sea and sets him on a journey into solitude, fantasy and obsession.

“After embarking on a crossatlantic cargo ship voyage, I set out to write a love story, but Christopher’s romance soon became entwined with my own struggle with identity, discovering my truth, a dramatic retelling of the communal showers in a Sundance hostel, and my mother’s nightmares set to the score of Schubert’s song cycle ‘Die schöne Müllerin’,” Brown explains in his director’s statement.

Produced in cinescope, the digital 2D animated drama was written by Brown and Laure Desmazières, and received additional production support from Crooked City.

The short blends Schubert’s classic work with the contemporary music of Casey Spooner, Walt Disco and composers Brian McOmber and Judith Berkson. To give audiences an experience that “bursts with emotion and fantasy,” Brown directed the animation team to strive for aesthetic ideals over realism:

“’If you have to choose between what is correct and what is fashion, choose fashion,’ I frantically explained to the wonderful animators as I described how we were attempting to portray the most beautiful mohair jumper ever seen on the silver screen. Twenty minutes of sumptuous hand-drawn animation awaits the viewer, the combination of thousands of hours, years of love, and an incredible team of artists and collaborators bringing Christopher to life on open waters,” Brown writes. “My enduring thanks to everyone — and there have been many — who have lent their time, money and talents to this project.”

Brown is a British artis and filmmaker known for his shorts t.o.m. (2007), teeth (2015) and Cousin John – The Arrival (2020), which have collectively won over 50 awards at festivals including Sundance, SXSW, Annecy and AFI Fest.

Organized by La Biennale di Venezia, the 79th Venice International Film Festival will ltake place at Venice Lido from August 31 to September 10. Learn more at www.labiennale.org.

The second Psyop Origina, following Bottle CapChristopher at Sea has also been selected for Korea’s prestigious Bucheon International Animation Festival (BIAF2022), taking place October 21-25. Psyop is a completely cloud-based studio, maintaining locations in New York and Los Angeles while working with directors and creative partners all over the world. For more info, visit psyop.com.

New ‘Tom and Jerry’ Movie to Land on Digital/DVD on Nov. 15

Tom and Jerry: Snowman's Land

Just in time for the holidays, everyone’s favorite cat and mouse duo are back in action as Tom and Jerry: Snowman’s Land releases on Digital and DVD November 15, from Warner Bros. Home Entertainment. Produced by Warner Bros. Animation, the all-new, full-length animated family holiday film is filled with 72 minutes of toe-tapping tunes and hilarious hijinks and three classic episodes.

Tom and Jerry: Snowman’s Land will be available to own on Digital for $14.99 SRP (U.S. and Canada) and on DVD for $19.98 SRP ($24.98 in Canada).

Synopsis: It’s time to chase that holiday spirit with Tom and Jerry! With magic in the air, Jerry and his nephew, Tuffy, make a snow mouse that miraculously comes to life! To keep their new friend, Larry the snow mouse from melting, Tuffy and Jerry must race him to the fabled Snowman’s Village. In hot pursuit, Tom and devious Dr. Doublevay have their own plans for Larry’s magic. Get ready to go dashing through this epic tale filled with songs, snow, thrills, laughs and even a bit of holiday magic!​

Tom and Jerry: Snowman’s Land features the voice talents of Kevin Michael Richardson as Larry, Kath Soucie as Tuffy, Laraine Newman as Mrs. LePage, Stephen Stanton as Doctor Doubleyay and Lightning, Rick Zieff as Meathead and Narrator, Carlos Alazraqui as Floyd, Kimberly Brooks as Snow Cop and Little Girl, Joey D’Auria as Butch and Regi Davis as Snow Mayor.

The film is produced and directed by Darrell Van Citters (The Tom and Jerry Show); story by Will Finn (The Tom and Jerry Show) and Jase Ricci (Teen Titans Go!, DC Super Hero Girls: Mayhem in the Multiverse), teleplay by Ricci.