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Home Blog Page 98

Annecy: What We Learned at the ‘Arcane’ Season 2 Session

Probably the most hotly-anticipated panel at this year’s Annecy Festival — allegedly, people were camping out to get in the queue — Fortiche’s presentation of behind the scenes material on the upcoming season of Arcane showed some fascinating insight to their process behind this atypically prestigious production. The League of Legends adaptation isn’t just popular; it also represents something of a sea change at the studio, sparking a move from creative production (primarily music videos) into original work, with a recent Studio Focus session (the company’s first) announcing their first feature film, Penelope of Sparta.

As for Arcane itself, the second (and final) season, due to be released on Netflix in November, has taken four years to write and produce, the team citing six hours of footage containing over 9,000 shots, produced by 450 people across three studios, with work still ongoing. Fortiche Producer Christine Ponzevera called it “three feature films worth” of footage, but also said that with that in mind their timeline was shorter than it sounds, as “half of what it took to produce season one,” which was produced over seven years (plus extra for preproduction and initial scripts).

The team spoke some about the lessons learned from Season 1, with director Barthélémy Maunoury mentioning a bar scene, noting that it still “felt too nice” and deciding on adding a bit more grit to the environs of season two — demonstrated through mood board references to a club scene from Trainspotting, a fight from Snatch. Most of all though, the Fortiche and Riot creatives emphasized that production on Season 2 was defined by a more collaborative workflow from the very beginning, with scripting closely intertwined with look development and preproduction.

Scriptwriter Amanda Overton from Riot Games spoke about the exchange between her writing process and the visual development at Fortiche: “We got to pitch our story ideas and get their visual input,” she said, able to incorporate the animator’s own ideas back into her work as she wrote. Production designer at Riot Arnaud-Loris Baudry (who previously worked at Fortiche) noted how he had gotten used to his part in production being a little siloed off, while praising the fact that here it was more open across departments.

Arcane
Ella Purnell as Jinx and Hailee Steinfeld as Vi in ‘Arcane’ Season 2. [Netflix © 2024]
Apart from discussion of this more interlocking process between Fortiche and Riot, the Making Of session was mostly structured around a single scene, pulling back the curtain on their production methodology by using this one key character moment as a route in. The scene is from the midpoint of the upcoming season, which Overton said represented Vi (voiced by Hailee Steinfeld) at her lowest point. “We all see Vi as a protector,” she said, “and we wanted to ask, who Vi would be if she had no one left to protect?”

The scene in question was initially teased out throughout the session, broken down into its various moving parts. The complete version that was shown, to intense approval from the audience, was kinetic and exciting even as it envisioned dark circumstances for its protragonist, a continuation of the mix of graphic stylisation and 3D articulation that made the first season so compelling. A montage set to music, it shows Vi now living as an underground fighter, introducing her by laying out her opponent with one punch (the victim is actually a henchmen from Season 1, who Vi has actually knocked out as a kid, then as an adult in episode four, and now here).

The scene moves rapidly, showing Vi going through the motions through repeating shots of her knocking out fighters, going to drink, hallucinating her loved ones screaming at her, before lurching back to her dingy apartment, filling up with bottles in a faux-time-lapse shot, the routine beginning again with her smearing some black face paint on. The sequence was full of gritty texture, with a lot of prominent film grain and VFX that emulated damaged prints.

Arcane
Ellen Thomas as Ambessa in ‘Arcane’ Season 2. [Netflix © 2024]
Before the clip, Maunoury had spoken about how, to them, “the camera should always feel tangible,” with Baudry noting that the camera is “grounded, it feels like you’re seeing through the eye of a lens,” before citing the work of Darius Khondji as one of their cinematographic inspirations.

Before playing the scene later in the session, the presentation started by showing the script, which was displayed alongside some images from the scene, the writing describing Vi’s transformation and new circumstances, stressing how the character has changed to try and erase as much of her old self as possible. Concept art showed off Vi’s new stomping grounds, a ramschackle underground fighting ring and a claustrophobic, cluttered apartment. After showing off some character sheets for a diverse array of the ruffians that Vi would be fighting, the team discussed how the sequence also represented how they learned to be a bit more efficient in a way that complimented their thematic and stylistic choices. For example, the arrangement of the shots in the ring helped cut costs by keeping Vi isolated and the crowd away, reflecting her state of mind but also saving a bit of time.

After a fairly brief demonstration of how they filmed live-action reference for blocking and a quick aside about the blending of 2D VFX work with their 3D animation (“part of the DNA of Fortiche and Arcane,” says Maunoury), before moving onto discussion of the backgrounds. Designed to be “readable but hectic,” the paintings here were meant to emphasize Vi’s alienation from the two worlds of the show, and how “barren” her life is.

Arcane
Reed Shannon as Ekko in ‘Arcane’ Season 2. [Netflix © 2024]
The session flowed into discussion of Vi’s new look – production designer Baudry bringing up a mood board that stressed “postapocalyptic, Viking war paint” in the character’s makeup, with big smears of black paint running down Vi’s face — her hair similarly roughly dyed so to obscure her more recognizable traits. She also dons a chunky biker jacket, a big back patch of a two-headed wolf acting as a nod to the character’s history. Moving on into the incredibly dense storyboards for the scene (not yet shown at this point), Maunoury spoke on the detail of their approach, something that was “time consuming but saves us time in the rest of production.”

After the boards came discussion of music and timing, with Nirvana’s “Territorial Pissings” acting as temp music at the layout stage before being replaced by an original song. Later the sequence was adjusted, retimed for that song — all of the panelists throughout the event having mentioned a “music video” approach to Arcane’s standout set pieces, which especially rang true here. Overall the session made the upcoming season feel like a refinement of the last, from its more efficient production timeline to the creative lessons learned, which Maunoury attributes to being able to retain most of the team from before, all learning the same lessons together. Though the session was based around a rather dark transformation for one of Arcane’s main characters, it represents an exciting new step for the studio as it continues to evolve.

Netflix released the teaser trailer for Arcane S2 on Tuesday.

 


Kambole Campbell is an Anglo-Zambian writer and film/TV culture critic based in London. 

Multi-Emmy-Winning CG Animator Mike Milne Has Died

Oscar-winning creative studio Framestore shared the sad news this week that Mike Milne, a six-time Emmy Award winner who helped usher in a new era of computer graphics in film and television. He was also the great-nephew of English writer A.A. Milne, creator of Winnie-the-Pooh.

Milne formed Framestore’s first computer animation team in 1992, paving the way for the company’s position as a leading studio for creature and character animation. He was a key part of the creative team that brought to life Walking with Dinosaurs — a landmark piece of British television that celebrates its 25th anniversary and was recently announced for renewal by the BBC and PBS.

“Mike was a true one-off,” recalls Framestore co-founder and Chairman Sir William Sargent. “His enthusiasm was contagious, and he was a never-ending source of knowledge, experience and creativity. His work and his vision helped set the standard for our animation work and placed the craft at the core of what we do as a company. His influence can still be felt across the visual effects industry, from the techniques and technologies Walking With Dinosaurs helped establish to the computer animation degrees offered by U.K. universities, for which Mike was a passionate advocate.”

Primeval
Primeval

Prior to embarking on his pioneering career in VFX, Milne worked variously as an artist, graphic designer and park ranger on a remote island. In the 1970s, he became fascinated with computer programming, working from textbooks to learn the underlying principles before taking night classes at Middlesex Polytechnic. An early adopter of computer animation, he was quick to see the potential for merging live action with CG. He won a D&D Award for his work on the iconic, irreverent British puppet comedy Spitting Image before making the move to Framestore in 1992.

Framestore’s animation team grew under his stewardship, and 1999 saw the release of the game-changing Walking with Dinosaurs miniseries, which brought Hollywood-grade VFX to the small screen for the first time. This award-winning success led to further Walking with… projects, the BBC’s 2002 Hound of the Baskervilles adaptation and work on the critically and commercially successful Primeval. He received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from Bournemouth University in 2002 and, in 2008, received the Royal Television Society’s Lifetime Achievement Award for his outstanding contribution to the industry.

“A quarter of a century later it’s easy to forget just how groundbreaking Walking with Dinosaurs was,” noted Fiona Walkinshaw, the studio’s CEO of Film & Episodic. “When you stop and think that the first Jurassic Park film featured something like six minutes of CG, and there was Mike and the team making a six-part, three-hour miniseries in the style of a nature documentary … it’s almost inconceivable. That work really pushed the envelope for visual effects, and many of the show’s innovations are now viewed as industry standard. Mike was a huge part of Framestore’s history and development, but more than anything he was a good, interesting and really clever person who it was always a pleasure to work with and learn from.”

Mike Milne
Photo c/o Framestore, ©BBC

Milne’s work on Walking with Dinosaurs won the Primetime Emmy Awards for both Outstanding Special Visual Effects and Outstanding Animated Program in 2000, as well as Innovation honors from the BAFTA TV Awards and the RTS Awards and a Peabody Award (one of the dinos even graced the cover of TIME). His list of Emmys grew with additional Animated Program wins for follow-ups Allosaurus: A Walking with Dinosaurs Special, Walking with Prehistoric Beasts, Chased by Dinosaurs and Before the Dinosaurs, as well as nominations for Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real and Secrets of the Deep as well as a VFX nomination for Walking with Prehistoric Beasts. Milne also received a nomination for TV VFX from the 2004 VES Awards for Sea Monsters: A Walking with Dinosaurs Trilogy.

“You always knew where you were with Mike, because he was painfully honest and true to what he believed and felt, always acknowledging and valuing people and their abilities,” Global Director of Animation Michael Eames shared. “He had boundless and contagious enthusiasm to find the best way to achieve something, and if he couldn’t do it himself, he’d find the best people he could to do it with him. He was truly visionary in the way he went about creating the Walking With Dinosaurs series, which paved the way for Framestore to become the animation powerhouse it is now. He was, ultimately, the reason I came to Framestore.”

Framestore will hold a memorial for Milne in the autumn.

 

Obituary information provided by Framestore.

Blue Zoo and Tararaboom’s ‘Mojo Swoptops’ Rolls to CBeebies Debut

Young audiences in the U.K. will be the first to check out Mojo Swoptops (52 x 11′), a brand-new, CG-animated comedy-action series from Blue Zoo Animation Studios (The Adventures of Paddington, Numberblocks) and Tararaboom. Premiering this autumn on the BBC’s pre-k channel CBeebies, commissioning broadcaster, the series has pre-sold to eight key territories, and a second season is already in the planning stages.

“We are delighted to premiere Mojo Swoptops on CBeebies this autumn and look forward to our young audience falling in love with Mojo and best friend Bo as they help their local community. Mojo Swoptops is a fantastic example of a British property that appeals to a truly international audience,” said BBC’s Kate Morton, Head of Commissioning & Acquisitions 0-6.

Based on the Ladybird book series by Cindy Black and Rich Ward, Mojo Swoptops follows the everyday adventures of a little truck that swops its top! Together with Mojo’s best friend Bo, a mechanic, they help solve the problems of the friendly inhabitants of Swoppiton.

“I’m thrilled to be involved in bringing Mojo Swoptops to audiences around the world,” said Dominic Minns (Supertato), who is directing the series with Olly Brown. “It’s been such a joy to work on this special series, filled with humor, action and problem-solving. Mojo is a little truck with a big heart who solves problems by switching out its tops for new skills and abilities. I think kids are going to love going along for the ride with Mojo and friends. We’ve assembled a fantastic crew and we are really proud of what we have created. I can’t wait for families to meet Mojo when the show launches later this year.”

Production will be taking place at Blue Zoo Animation Studio in the U.K. and Kazoo, the newly established animation studio in Lille, France. Mojo Swoptops marks the first project to be undertaken at Kazoo, a collaborative venture between Blue Zoo and Paris-based Samka Productions.

 

Catherine Laga‘aia Cast as Moana in Disney’s Live-Action Remake

The live-action version of Disney’s Moana is sailing ahead, with new cast announcements aboard. The stars announced today join Dwayne Johnson, who will reprise his role as Maui from the original 2016 animated feature.

Catherine Laga‘aia (The Lost Flowers of Alice Heart) will be voyaging to Motunui and beyond as the titular adventurous teenager, who sails out on a daring mission to save her people. The coming remake is coming to theaters on July 10, 2026.

“I’m really excited to embrace this character because Moana is one of my favorites,” said the 17-year-old Sydney, Australia, native. “My grandfather comes from Fa‘aala, Palauli, in Savai‘i. And my grandmother is from Leulumoega Tuai on the main island of ‘Upolu in Samoa. I’m honored to have an opportunity to celebrate Samoa and all Pacific Island peoples, and to represent young girls who look like me.”

The newly announced cast also includes Auckland, New Zealander John Tui (Young Rock, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies) as Moana’s no-nonsense father, Chief Tui; Samoan-New Zealand actress Frankie Adams (The Expanse, The Lost Flowers of Alice Heart) as Moana’s playful and strong-willed mother, Sina; and Rena Owen (Siren, The Orville), who hails from Bay of Islands, New Zealand, as the revered Gramma Tala.

“I am thrilled to have met Catherine, Rena, Frankie and John through this casting process,” said director Thomas Kail (Broadway’s Hamilton< Grease Live; Hulu’s We Were the Lucky Ones). “I am humbled by this opportunity, and I cannot wait to all be on set together. And there’s no better pair to be in a canoe with than Catherine and Dwayne — actually, trio: Heihei is ready, too.”

The new movie is produced by Johnson, Dany Garcia and Hiram Garcia via their Seven Bucks Productions and Beau Flynn via FlynnPictureCo. Lin-Manuel Miranda, who wrote the original songs, will also serve as producer. Executive producers include Scott Sheldon of FlynnPictureCo., Auli‘i Cravalho, who voiced Moana in the 2016 film, and Charles Newirth. Disney Animation veteran Jared Bush (2016’s Moana) and Samoan writer Dana Ledoux Miller (The Cave Rescue; co-founder of non-profit Pasifika Entertainment Advancement Komiti [PEAK]) have been tapped for the screenplay.

The live-action adventure will be preceded by Moana 2 from Walt Disney Animation Studios, in theaters November 27.

First ‘Paddington in Peru’ Trailer Kicks Off Another Hairy Adventure

Paddington in Peru poster

StudioCAnal today debuted the first official trailer for Paddington in Peru, the third big-screen adventure featuring English children’s author Michael Bond’s beloved bear. The live-action/animation hybrid film will open in the U.K. on November 8 and in the U.S. on January 17, 2025, through Sony Pictures Entertainment’s Columbia Pictures.

Synopsis: Paddington in Peru brings Paddington’s story to Peru as he returns to visit his beloved Aunt Lucy, who now resides at the Home for Retired Bears. With the Brown Family in tow, a thrilling adventure ensues when a mystery plunges them into an unexpected journey through the Amazon rainforest and up to the mountain peaks of Peru.

The new sequel once again stars Ben Whishaw as the voice of Paddington with the core live cast reprised by Hugh Bonneville as Henry Brown, Emily Mortimer as Mary Brown, Madeleine Harris as Judy Brown, Samuel Joslin as Jonathan “J-Dog” Brown, Julie Walters as Mrs. Bird and Jim Broadbent as Samuel Gruber, joined by, Olivia Colman as The Reverend Mother, Antonio Banderas as Hunter Cabot and Carla Tous as Gina Cabot. Imelda Staunton also returns as the voice of Paddington’s Aunt Lucy.

In his feature film debut, Dougal Wilson (Coldplay’s “Life in Technicolor II,” Goldfrapp’s “Happiness”) takes over directing duties from Paul King, who directed the first two Paddington films and helped write the story for Paddington in Peru. The screen play is by Mark Burton, Jon Foster and James Lamont.

Paddington Bear, an Andean spectacled bear kitted out in an iconic blue duffel coat and red hat, first appeared in the book A Bear Named Paddington in 1958. Bond published 14 collections of Paddington short stories through to the end of his life in 2017; the 70-plus titles in the franchise have sold more than 30 million copies around the world, translated into 30 languages.

The character’s adventures have been adapted for television, films and commercials since 1966, including his own TV show (1976- 1980). The two previous films Paddington (2014) and Paddington 2 (2017) were both nominated for the BAFTA Award for Outstanding British Film, and together earned more than half a billion dollars at the global box office.

[Source: StudioCanal]

Watch: Netflix Dates ‘Twilight of the Gods’ Premiere for Fall

Timed to its big Annecy Festival presentation, Netflix has announced that Zack Snyder’s animated epic Twilight of the Gods will premiere exclusively on the platform on September 19. Inspired by Norse mythology, the series is co-created by Snyder, Jay Oliva and Eric Carrasco and produced by Stone Quarry Animation (part of Zack & Deborah Snyder’s prodco The Stone Quarry), with animation serviced by Xilam.

An official date announcement video was released to spread the word. (Watch below.)

Synopsis: In a mythical world of great battles, great deeds and great despair, Leif, a mortal King, is saved on the battlefield by Sigrid, an iron-willed warrior with whom he falls in love. On their wedding night, Sigrid and Leif survive a wrath of terror from Thor, which sets them — and a crew of crusaders — on an against all odds and merciless mission for vengeance.

This heroic story of love, loss and revenge is a journey to Hell and beyond … across fantastical lands, battlefields fierce and bloody, and wars waged against Gods and demons.

The eight-episode show features the voices of Sylvia Hoeks as Sigrid, Stuart Martin as Leif, Rahul Kohil as Egill, Paterson Joseph as Loki, Jamie Clayton as Seid-Kona, Pilou Asbæk as Thor, Birgitte Hjort Sørensen as Hervor, Kristofer Hivju as Andvari, Thea Sofie Loch Næss as Thyra, John Noble as Odin and Peter Stormare as Ulfr, among others.

Executive producers are Zack Snyder, Deborah Snyder, Wesley Coller and Jay Oliva. Zack Snyder directs the first and final episode, while additional directors including Jay Oliva (episodes 102 & 107), and Andrew Tamandl with Tim Divar (eps. 103 & 105) and Dave Hartman (eps. 104 & 106).

WB, Cartoon Network & Hanna-Barbera Announce ‘Adventure Time’ Spin-Offs & More New Shows at Annecy

Warner Bros. Animation (WBA), Cartoon Network Studios (CNS), and Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe (HBSE) announced three series greenlights and previewed a slate of projects currently in development during their Studio Focus presentation at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival. Highlights include new projects based on the award-winning Adventure Time franchise, the return of Regular Show, the first Scooby-Doo anime series, and more.

 

Series Greenlights

Foster’s Funtime for Imaginary Friends
(Preschool series, Cartoon Network)

A young group of preschool imaginary friends learn from an immature elder friend, Bloo, who unintentionally gets things wrong. Foster’s Funtime for Imaginary Friends! is a spin-off preschool series of Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends, Cartoon Network’s award-winning, highest rated original from 2004–2008. Throughout the years, Foster’s has remained a global fan favorite, and the original 6–11 audience have grown up to share this imaginative, hilarious, and relatable series with their own children.

    • Creative Talent: Craig McCracken
    • Studio: Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe

 

Adventure Time: Side Quests 
(Kids series, Cartoon Network)

Adventure Time: Side Quests takes the Adventure Time franchise back to the early days when Finn was just a kid, excited to fight monsters and go on epic quests with his best buddy Jake. In stand-alone episodes, our heroes take on classic Adventure Time villains like The Ice King and re-connect with stand-out side characters from the original series.

    • Creative Talent: Nate Cash
    • Studio: Cartoon Network Studios

 

Untitled Regular Show Project
(Kids series, Cartoon Network)

Oooooooh! A new Regular Show series!

    • Creative Talent: J.G. Quintel
    • Studio: Cartoon Network Studios

 

In-Development Projects

Heyo BMO

Adventure Time: Heyo BMO 
(Preschool series, Cartoon Network)

In the fantastical Land of Ooo, the little robot BMO is on a new adventure! Now settled in a new neighborhood with new friends, BMO approaches each challenge he faces with his unique brand of enthusiasm and curiosity in a quest to learn and fill his database.

    • Creative Talent: Adam Muto, Ashlyn Anstee
    • Studio: Cartoon Network Studios

 

Barbara

Untitled Barbara Throws a Wobbler Project
(Preschool series)

Based on the popular children’s book, Barbara is a little cat with bigfeelings. Most days Barbara feels like every other cat — she likes chasing a ball of wool, playing hide & seek, watching TV with her comfort blanket or reading a story before bedtime. But some days are different, Barbara gets a big feeling, and sometimes it’s so big she can’t keep it inside

    • Creative Talent: Joris Van Hulsen
    • Studio: Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe

 

Go-Go Mystery Machine

Go-Go Mystery Machine 
(Kids series, Cartoon Network)

While visiting Japan on the ultimate foodie adventure, Shaggy and Scooby-Doo unwittingly unleash hundreds of mischievous mythical monsters that are now causing trouble all over the country. With the help of Scooby’s uncle, Daisuke-Doo, and magical friend Etsuko and gadget wiz Toshiro, Shaggy and Scooby have new mysteries to solve and monsters to catch!

    • Creative Talent: Francisco Paredes
    • Studio: Warner Bros. Animation

 

The Adventure Time Movie
(Family/Co-viewing long form)

Jake and Finn embark on their greatest adventure yet

    • Creative Talent: Rebecca Sugar, Patrick McHale, Adam Muto
    • Studio: Cartoon Network Studios

 

Bad Karma 
(Family/Co-viewing long form)

An exciting and epic tale about courage, loyalty and an unlikely friendship between a young demon princess, Chandra, and the legendary demi-god Veer set in a dark mythological world of magic and fantasy.

    • Creative Talent: Sanjay Patel, Rajesh Devraj, Vikash Shankar, Katie Rice
    • Studio: Warner Bros. Animation

 

Lovey Dovey

Lovey Dovey 
(Adult, long form)

The story of an optimistic wedding dove on the hunt for his one true love, who gets stuck with a bunch of streetwise pigeons who only have one goal in life: screwing the large bird from a popular kids TV show.

    • Creative Talent: Ava Tramer
    • Studio: Warner Bros. Animation

Netflix Animation Flies Its Preview Extravaganza to Annecy

Days after its bumper upfront presentation in Hollywood, Netflix brought the show to Annecy Festival on Wednesday. “Next on Netflix Animation” played to a packed house in Bonlieu’s big screen, unveiling new footage and details of key films and series due later this year and in early 2025.

There was a strong British flavor to the presentation: two of the three key projects are based on famous IP from the UK (and being produced in the country). The first was Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl, a spin-off for Aardman Animations’ iconic duo, which — like last year’s Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget — revives a famous villain from the studio, in this case the ludicrous penguin thief Feathers McGraw. Aardman is brilliant at parodies, and a first-look clip that showed Feathers being incarcerated in the zoo channeled the noir dread of Cape Fear. Another clip introduced Norbot, the “smart” garden gnome developed by Wallace; the scene ended on a neat punchline, with Wallace inviting the mute Gromit to voice-activate the gnome.

Vengeance Most Fowl was discussed onstage by directors Nick Park (the franchise’s creator) and Merlin Crossingham, while concept art and behind-the-scenes images — including footage of Park performing live-action reference — played behind them. “We live in a world of pet lovers,” declared Park, by way of explaining the enduring popularity of his characters. “People read human emotions into their pets all the time.” Crossingham went on to describe Feathers’ minimalism: “His design is so simple. His strength is in his stillness.” This is precisely what makes him so hard to animate: “As an animator, you want to move things. With Feathers, you just have to back off.” In the clips we saw, the penguin’s acting nicely offset the staccato robotic movements of Norbot, who the directors strongly implied ends up in Feathers’ hands. Park summed up the premise as follows: “Technology is good, but who’s controlling it?”

‘Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl’ debuts on the BBC this Christmas and later on Netflix.

“Wallace and Gromit’s world has really got to a point where Wallace is just on a big inventing spree, and he decides that what Gromit really needs is another new invention, as if he didn’t already have enough inventions already, and he invents Norbot,” said Crossingham. “Norbot is a nifty, odd-jobbing robot… he is very efficient, probably one of Wallace’s best inventions ever, ruthlessly efficient. And actually, what it does, is really upset Gromit, and gets right in the way. Walllace doesn’t really understand this. He thinks it’s the best thing ever. And things rapidly get out of control.”

The second British-based production was The Twits, the first animated film to come out of Netflix’s acquisition of the Roald Dahl Story Company. In the footage we saw, the grotesque characters of the title, who run a violent theme park and generally cause malicious havoc, were brought to life with snappy cartoonish animation (which is being produced at London’s Jellyfish Pictures) that exploited the bold shape language of their designs. An art direction heavy in lurid pinks and greens completed the picture.

Director Phil Johnston (Ralph Breaks the Internet) and his crew were not present, but supplied a behind-the-scenes package which revolved around the joke that Johnston is an irritating egotist. One reason he related to the story, he quipped, was because “I’m a liar and a sociopath myself.”

‘The Twits’ is slated to debut on Netflix in 2025.

The presentation also lavished time on the series Twilight of the Gods, a reimagining of Norse mythology created by Zack Snyder, Jay Oliva and Eric Carrasco. The show pits mortal warriors against the gods in a quest for revenge. We were shown two clips — one in which the mortals negotiate with the Vanir gods in a royal court, and a vigorous action scene which pits the warriors against a dragon — as well as a teaser edited by Snyder. Many of the characters have a tall and elongated design; they are animated in 2D, with 3D used for crowds. The palettes were rich in yellows and golds, and the lighting — dappled, diffuse or dramatic, depending on the scene — was emphasized throughout.

Taking to the stage alongside Oliva and other key personnel, Snyder sang the praises of animation as a vehicle for storytelling. The show’s “gods and scale and insanity” made it a good fit for the medium. “I would love to do some more [animation],” he said. The animation is handled by Xilam, which hasn’t done many adult works in the past, said animation supervisor Slimane Aniss. But, he added, it does have one major title to its name: Jérémy Clapin’s feature I Lost My Body, which created a pool of animators at the studio who were well equipped to tackle the show’s sophisticated, action-heavy style.

‘Twilight of the Gods’ will premiere on Netflix this fall.

Footage was also shown of director Vicky Jenson‘s Spellbound from Skydance Animation, with which Netflix set a multi-year feature deal last year, and Asterix & Obelix: The Big Fight, which got a particularly big cheer. The series is directed by Alain Chabat (who also helmed the hugely successful 2002 feature Asterix & Obelix: Mission Cleopatra) and Fabrice Joubert. The brief footage we saw was gag-ridden and action-packed, with impact frames and onscreen onomatopoeia — TCHRÂÂÂÂÂC and suchlike — heightening the show’s zany energy. The animation is by France’s TAT Productions.

The event was rounded out by a package of clips from other productions in the pipeline, including new seasons of Blue Eye Samurai and Arcane — both of which also proved very popular with the audience.

‘Spellbound’ debuts on Netflix this November. (Skydance/Netflix)

 


 

Alex Dudok de Wit is an animation journalist, consultant and festival programmer. He is the author of the BFI Film Classics book on Grave of the Fireflies and Miyazaki’s Shuna’s Journey.

Award-Winning TV & Film Exec Alyse Rosenburg Tapped a SVP Content for Elf Labs

Transmedia animation company Elf Labs announced today the appointment of accomplished screenwriter, showrunner and director Alyse Rosenberg as Senior Vice President of Content. She brings diverse experience creating, writing, directing and executive producing the award-winning youth series Ready or Not (Showtime/Disney Channel); writing and executive story editing for classic animated series, including Braceface (ABC Family) and Little Bear (CBC/Nickelodeon); and many more credits as an entertainment executive.

Elf Labs launched with a hefty IP portfolio of over 400 copyrights and over 100 trademarks for classic and reimagined renditions of characters like Sleeping Beauty, Snow White and Peter Pan to transform immersive entertainment. The company intends to leverage Rosenberg’s expert educational storytelling for children’s series to develop new content for these properties.

Rosenberg’s hire follows Elf Labs’ April launch-to-market and precedes the upcoming launch of its first full animated series, RoboStars, which depicts a new type of hero — transforming favorite faces like Cinderella, Rapunzel and Pinocchio into robot protagonists.

The new SVP will oversee the entire Content Division and work hand in hand with Mike De Seve, Head of Kids Content at Elf Labs and an Emmy Award-winning DreamWorks alumnus with credits including Shrek 2 and Shark Tale. The two will work in close concert with Elf Labs’ writing and production teams to finalize the first full season of RoboStars and expand the studio’s award-winning franchise Once Upon a Zombie.

“With our iconic IP and transformative technology, Elf Labs is the future of animated entertainment media,” said CEO David Phillips. “We need leaders who have shaped the industry, but share our vision as to what is possible in this new era. Alyse brings decades of industry-transforming experience and robust creative insight to our team. We are thrilled to welcome her as we look ahead to our first major series launch, RoboStars, and continue our project pipeline to shape the future of modern, meaningful media.”

Rosenberg’s versatility can be seen in her extensive credits across children, youth, adult and non-fiction as a writer and producer. Her career in TV and film includes credits on Virtual Mom (CBC/Nickelodeon), Harriet the Spy (Protocol Entertainment/Discovery), Lives That Changed the World (Discovery Channel), Forensic Factor (Discovery Channel), Four in the Morning (CBC), Frankie Drake Mysteries (CBC) and Majority Rules (CBC). She also founded and serves as president of The Coachworks Studio, which provides creative consulting services for the entertainment industry and career coaching for youth and young adults. Other titles include Vice President of Development for the Toronto-based, award-winning television and feature film studios Serendipity Point Films and Story Hawk Pictures/Boat Rocker Media.

As the newest Elf Labs team member, Rosenberg will support the company’s go-to-market strategy, including exclusive web series content, animated feature films, and Wi-Fi-enabled immersive experiences. Her expertise in children’s narratives will shape the company’s wholesome message-driven content as she lends her creative vision and executive oversight to the studio’s project slate. She is committed to crafting empowering youth storylines centered around self-expression and positivity. Elf Labs is pleased to expand its team of forward-thinking industry executives with her perspective.

“Elf Labs is at the forefront of animation, contemporary storytelling, and technology-powered content distribution. This company is the natural next stage of the industry and of my career. I am grateful to join its star-studded team, and beyond excited to be working with such an incredible character IP portfolio to modernize favorite and familiar faces for all audiences,” said Rosenberg.

elflabs.com

‘A Bear Named Wojtek’ Director Iain Gardner Discusses His Lovingly Crafted Annecy-Selected Project

A Bear Named Wojtek
A War Hero: Iain Gardner’s beautifully mounted short is based on the true story of a bear (pictured here) who was enlisted as a solider in the polish army to provide for his rations.

A beautiful, 2D-animated film about the true story of a friendship between a bear and a Polish soldier during the World War II might be one of the timeliest projects unspooling at Annecy this year. Directed by Scottish animation veteran Iain Gardner, who previously directed the shorts The Tannery, The Loch Ness Kelpie and Akbar’s Cheetah and has worked on such features as Ethel & Ernest and The Thief and the Cobbler, A Bear Named Wojtek touches upon timely subjects, such as refugees, nationalism and xenophobia, while filling the screen with stunning handcrafted visuals.

The origins of the short go back to when Gardner was a student at the Glasgow School of Art and he enjoyed drawing at Edinburgh Zoo. “I sketched and animated a polar bear for my degree show,” he tells us during a recent interview. Unbeknownst to me at the time, the enclosure the polar bear inhabited used to be Wojtek the Bear’s. One of my tutors at the time, Dave Harding, sculpted Wojtek during the ’70s, having drawn him from life in the 1960s — presumably from the same spot I stood. Currently, my studio is located at Edinburgh University’s former veterinary school, and Wojtek’s remains were brought here for examination after he passed!”

True Labor of Love

Gardner says he has been working on A Bear Named Wojtek for over a decade, but the actual production for the animated project began in 2021. “I did the ‘Writing for Animation’ residency program at the Abbaye de Fontevraud back in 2012 and recall discussing the story with composer Normand Roger in 2014, when he and his wife, [animation producer] Marcy Page, were visiting Scotland as part of the Norman McLaren Centenary celebrations I initiated (McLaren 2014). I presented my story treatment to producer Iain Harvey from the Illuminated Film Company, and we subsequently joined forces with Polish producer Włodek Matuszewski to pitch at Cartoon Forum in 2018.”

Before the COVID lockdown, Peter Dodd, animation director on Kensuke’s Kingdom, was asked to prepare some character designs with development money from Screen Scotland. That’s when the core team in Scotland (which included editor Rachel Roberts, animation director Ross Hogg, art director Rachel Bevan Baker and compositor Will Anderson) was put together, along with co-producer Filmograf in Poland. It took the half-hour film about two years to complete.

Concept artwork showing Wojtek in retirement at the Edinburgh Zoo.

It’s not surprising that the short’s lovely animation recalls other acclaimed hand-drawn favorites, such as The Man Who Planted Trees and The Snowman. Gardner says The Man Who Planted Trees is his personal all-time favorite animated film. “Frédéric Back has been a huge influence on me. I met him briefly at the Bristol Animation Festival in 1987, a man of tremendous humility. When I was little, animation was considered a ‘cartoon’ medium due to its predominantly Disney association with the uninitiated. Back’s ‘less is more’ approach to design blew me away when I first saw it. Because I consider it to be an unsurpassable masterpiece, I’ve perhaps set myself up for failure by signaling it as my inspiration — nothing (certainly nothing I can do) can come near it, in my estimation.”

He adds, “Having said that, some contemporary critics have favorably compared Wojtek to Back’s legacy (his centenary being this year) and I’m not going to refute that honor! I’ve always loved the contribution of music to animation and was delighted to collaborate with Normand on Wojtek — aside from my admiration of Normand’s work, I wanted the influence of TMWPT to be transparent to those who recognize the homage!”

 

Iain Gardner

‘The themes of the story and political context into which the film is released presents challenges; the original intent for a young audience was to present a warning from history, but now it feels like a commentary on contemporary events. Context is everything!’

— Director Iain Gardner

 

Like many European animation veterans, Gardner was also influenced by the 1982 adaptation of Raymond Briggs’ classic The Snowman. “Dominating the Christmas schedules in the U.K., The Snowman has always represented a career aspiration,” Gardner notes. “I was fortunate enough to work for the incomparable John Coates (the producer of The Snowman, whose boozy Annecy lunches are a thing of legend) at TVCartoons after graduating and met Iain Harvey, who had been exec producer on The Snowman. The heritage that Normand and Iain brought to the project really helped with the pitch.”

In addition to Back, Gardner name-checks Yuri Norstein, Jan Švankmajer, Michaël Dudok de Wit, Joanna Quinn, Dianne Jackson and Norman McLaren as big influences on his work. “Clare Kitson is also worth mentioning, as without her programming and commissioning role at the beginnings of Channel 4 in the U.K., I wouldn’t have been exposed to many of these filmmakers. Jackie Edwards is also an incredible ambassador for children’s content and animation. I studied animation alongside Rachel Bevan Baker (who art directed on Wojtek), and she’s an exceptional talent — she has such an innate ability for drawing movement! My ‘apprenticeship’ in animation was with Richard Williams on The Thief and the Cobbler, and he was incredibly generous with his knowledge — although it’s taken me a fair while to wean off animating in single frames!”

The filmmaker says the project couldn’t have been realized without the talents of its very large team. “When we had a crew screening in Edinburgh, I was overwhelmed by the number of people who had contributed — and that was just from the U.K. side. On the Polish side, Jana Shypova did wonderful work animating the bear.”

The main production tool used on Wojtek was TVPaint. “In an era of digital aesthetics, it has really liberated my joy for drawing and animating,” says Gardner. “The general color backgrounds are hand-done on watercolor paper and scanned in as a base for the bespoke TVPaint brushes we created, and final image was composited in After Effects. We also had some CGI previz for certain technical shots supplied by Interference Pattern.”

When asked about toughest challenge of the job, Gardener says he had to make sure the main character wasn’t infantilized, as was done in previous literary interpretations. “It was key for me not to have a film depicting ‘Baloo the Bear in the trenches,’” he replies. “My interest has always been in how humanity projects itself onto the natural world as a method of understanding and contextualizing ourselves, creating our own mythology; so, the bear had to feel authentic in my telling. The themes of the story and political context into which the film is released presents challenges; the original intent for a young audience was to present a warning from history, but now it feels like a commentary on contemporary events. Context is everything!”

The director mentions that he loves Normand Roger’s soundtrack. “Without detracting from the wonderful contributions from across the whole creative crew, I am still moved to tears by his evocative soundtrack,” he says. “There’s a temptation when making a film set around the time of World War II (or any major conflict for that matter) to go for militaristic themes, but I knew with Normand that he would capture not only the emotion but the culture of the people caught up in and displaced by war.”

As Wojtek gets ready to capture the hearts of wider audiences at festivals and screenings around the world, Gardner says the most important lesson he took away from the project was how crucial it is to work with the best people. “I feel so blessed with the core creatives behind this film … I’m very proud of the exposure the film is giving to Scottish animation and would love to grow and enhance the talent base we have here. With good fortune, Wojtek may leverage opportunities to do so!”

 


A Bear Named Wojtek will screen at Annecy Festival in the TV Film competition category.

For more info, visit abearnamedwojtek.com.

BBC Children’s Debuts New Animation Commisions

BBC Children’s and Education has today announced its latest animation commissions for CBeebies, CBBC and BBC iPlayer. The new titles include the first commission from the BBC’s Ignite animation program and three new animated series for CBeebies.

Ignite was launched three years ago by BBC Children’s and Education as an initiative to develop U.K. animation and find ideas anchored in British culture. Sam Shaw’s Duck and Frog was one of the projects that was chosen to take forward and it becomes the first Ignite commission to go into production after Mediawan Kids & Family came on board as a co-producer.

Duck and Frog is a 50  x 7′ series is a dialog-free slapstick comedy with a modern British setting, aimed at seven- to 12-year olds, from prodco Sun & Moon.

Duck is just trying to make rent and accepts a new job each episode but his dreams of keeping a job for longer than a day inevitably crumble before him thanks to over-bearing Frog’s ‘help’ and interventions.

“We are thrilled to partner with BBC Children’s & Education and Sun & Moon to bring Duck & Frog to international audiences,” said Julien Borde, President of Mediawan Kids & Family. “Mediawan Kids & Family’s mission is to empower creativity by supporting talents and innovation. Duck & Frog is exactly that, a fresh new slapstick series created by Sam Shaw a growing star of U.K. animation. It’s an honor for Mediawan Kids & Family to join forces with the creative teams at CBBC on Duck & Frog to bring fun and joy to kids and families around the globe.”

A second round of Ignite was launched in November last year. It received over 1,600 entries from U.K. creators, and after the final selection stage, up to 15 will enter the Ignite 2 scheme next month.

In addition, CBeebies have commissioned three brand-new animated series — BeddyByes, Piripenguins and Piggy Builders — which blend imaginative storytelling with high-quality animation techniques that bring preschoolers and their families together by engaging and entertaining.

“These brilliant titles each bring something unique to young audiences across CBBC and CBeebies and we’re pleased to be working with such talented partners both in the U.K. and internationally to bring our animation strategy to life,” commented Patricia Hidalgo, Director of BBC Children’s and Education. “Whether it is through our Ignite Animation partnership or our commissions, we constantly strive to deliver content we know our audiences will love and we’ve brought plenty of joy to audiences across the years with animated hits. It’s a real pleasure to announce even more vibrant, imaginative and enriching animations that will bring families together.”

BeddybyesBeddyByes

BeddyByes, created and produced by JAM Media, is an innovative new format designed specifically for the youngest demographic: toddlers to preschoolers. This enchanting series takes young children on a gentle, undulating journey to Bedtime.

Audiences will join the delightful characters MeMo and BaBa as they encounter a host of fantastical beings that encourage good nutrition, mindfulness, and creativity, all while winding down towards sleep. The series features a unique aesthetic with a focus on tactility, engaging children through visually rich and touch-friendly animation.

BeddyByes is produced by U.K. and Irish-based JAM Media, with offices in Belfast and Dublin. Executive producers and creators are John Rice and Alan Shannon, with Beth Gardiner serving as the Commissioning Editor for CBeebies.

This series promises to offer a captivating and calming experience for young viewers, supporting their development and promoting healthy bedtime routines.

“We are delighted to introduce BeddyByes to CBeebies and the world,” said John Rice, CEO of JAM Media. “This series is crafted to offer a magical and calming experience for toddlers and preschoolers, guiding them gently towards bedtime with enchanting stories and a soothing aesthetic helping them drift off to sleep happily.”

Piripenguins
Piripenguins

Piripenguins

Piripenguins is a brand-new children’s animated series about a cheerful, funny colony of penguins enjoying life to the fullest on a remote iceberg. The funny, pacy comedy series is aimed at five- to eight-year olds and centers on five lively penguins, each with distinctive personalities voiced by a diverse cast. Life on the iceberg throws up lots of challenges and funny situations for Nugget, Pancake, Looph, Brinicle and Flutter, who learn about life, friendships and themselves along the way.

Piripenguins is made by Eaglet Films, with international co-production partners RAI and Red Monk Studio and in partnership with Wild Child Animation in Scotland. Eaglet Films is behind the animated boxset Quentin Blake’s Box of Treasures for CBBC. Massimo Fenati is the series director for Eaglet with Tess Cuming executive producing; the commissioning editor for CBeebies is Beth Gardiner.

“This project is very dear to my heart, so I’m tremendously excited to be working on it,” Fenati noted. “One day years ago I randomly sketched a little penguin on a sticky note and since then I’ve been dreaming of bringing to life what has now become the very blueprint of the Piripenguins, so I’m hugely grateful to the BBC and Rai for making that possible.”

Luca Milano of RAI Kids added, “Piripenguins is a series that celebrates imagination and fun, perfect for an audience of young children who are open to discovering the world, which will succeed in engaging their families as well. As RAI, we are delighted to be partners in the project along with the BBC and the talented producers Eaglet Films from London and Red Monk from Milan.”

Piggy Builders
Piggy Builders

Piggy Builders

Piggy Builders follows Cornelia, Cesar and Charlie, a trio of charismatic and curly-tailed piggy siblings who live in Fine Forest. Whilst they are very different to one another in nature, they have many things in common: they all love building, they all love solving problems, they all love their community and, most importantly, they all love each other. There’s one more thing they have in common: they all have a lot to learn about working together. When these three little piggies don’t function as a team, the projects they’re working on go wrong in very silly and funny ways. But when they manage to work as a team, the impossible becomes possible!

Piggy Builders is made by Academy Award®-nominated French animation studio Xilam Animation. France TV and ZDF are commissioning partners.

Marc du Pontavice, CEO of Xilam Animation, commented, “We are honored to partner with the great BBC Children’s & Education team on Piggy Builders, our new preschool CG series that brings endearing characters and humorous stories of teamwork.”

[Source: BBC]

Ketchup Ent. Bringing Eco Tale ‘Ozi, Voice of the Forest’ to NorAm Theaters

With the pic making its World Premiere at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival, Ketchup Entertainment announced it has acquired North American Rights to Ozi, Voice of the Forest. The deal was brokered by Fred Hedman (GFM).

The indie animated feature hails from Leonardo DiCaprio’s Appian Way Productions, multi-Oscar-winning producer Mike Medavoy and GCI Film, with animation serviced by Mikros (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, Thelma the Unicorn, Orion and the Dark) , and is due to begin its wide theatrical release later this year.

Directed by Tim Harper (Fifi and the Flowertots, Roary the Racing Car), the film aims to raise awareness about the threat of deforestation on our world and the issues facing rainforest ecosystems. The story centers on Ozi, an orphaned orangutan who uses her influencer skills to save her home habitat. The screenplay is written by Ricky Roxburgh (Master Moley, Saving Santa) from an original story by Rodrigo Blaas (Star Wars: Visions, Tales of Arcadia) and Keith Chapman (Bob the Builder, PAW Patrol).

The pic is intended to kick off a film franchise that brings climate issues to light. The second installment, Ocean, is now in development.

Ozi, Voice of the Forest boasts a star-powered cast led by Amandla Stenberg (The Acolyte, The Eddy, upcoming Wildwood), Dean Charles Chapman, Djimon Hounsou, Donald Sutherland, Laura Dern, RuPaul Charles and Urzila Carlson. The pic also features a title song by Honorary Oscar winner Diane Warren.

[Source: Deadline]

‘Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim’ First Look Wows Annecy; Peter Jackson & Fran Walsh Named EPs

The prestigious Annecy International Animation Film Festival was host to another warmly received first-look reveal today, as Warner Bros. Animation and New Line Cinema unveiled their anime Tolkien epic The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim. The feature film project is being animated by Sola Entertainment (Blade Runner: Black Lotus, Ultraman, Ghost in the Shell: SAC_2045) in Tokyo, and is due in theaters December 13 through Warner Bros. Pictures.

Director Kenji Kamiyama (Blade Runner: Black Lotus) and Andy Serkis, the iconic mo-cap portrayer of Gollum in the Lord of the Rings and Hobbit movie trilogies, took to the stage to showcase a 20-minute preview of the new movie, which was applauded by a full house at the Grand Bonlieu. An early look at footage was presented at Annecy last year.

Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
Héra, Helm Hammerhand, Haleth and Hama

WB also distributed first-look imagery, featuring shots of the characters Hèra (voiced by Gaia Wise), Helm (Brian Cox) and Wulf (Luke Pasquialino).

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim is set 150 years before the events of the original trilogy, exploring the untold story behind the fortress of Helm’s Deep and delving into the life of one of Middle-earth’s most legendary figures: the mighty King of Rohan, Helm Hammerhand. It marks the first LOTR adaptation led by a female protagonist: Hammerhand’s daughter, the clan’s lone survivor of the devastating war between Rohan and the Dunledings, who has been dubbed Hèra for the animated epic.

Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
Héra

The presentation also announced that Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh, the director/writer/producer duo behind the blockbuster live-action LOTR and Hobbit trilogies, have boarded Rohirrim as an executive producer, as has

The film’s voice cast also features Lorraine Ashbourne, Benjamin Wainwright, Laurence Ubong Williams, Shaun Dooley, Michael Wildman, Jude Akuwudike, Bilal Hasna and Janine Duvitski. Miranda Otto reprises her role as Eowyn from the Jackson movies to narrate the bloody history.

Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
Wulf

[Sources: Deadline, People, The One Ring]

Goya Winner Salvador Simó & Final Frontier Studio Craft Rubber Hose Animated Short for ‘Honkai: Star Rail”

Final Frontier has launched a new retro-toon-inspired animated short film Tick-Tock! Let’s Dream Together! to promote the sci-fi/fantasy video game Honkai: Star Rail, from Chinese developer/publisher MiHoYo (Honkai Impact 3rd, Genshin Impact). The global animation and film prodco teamed up with Appetit Studio in Lyon, France, and tapped Goya Award-winning Spanish animation director Salvador Simó (Buñuel in the Labyrinth of the Turtles, Dragonkeeper) to create a mad-cap “Rubber Hose” adventure.

The game’s storyline follows the amnesiac Trailblazer traveling across worlds on the Astral Rail, resolving disasters caused by the Stellaron. The story of Tick-Tock! unfold on Penacony, the fourth world on this tour, and unfolds as a fictitious tourism promo for the magical planet, guided by the charismatic NPC Clock Boy.  The host unveils Penacony’s must-see destinations, such as The Dreamville Hotel, the Oti Mall and Clock Studios Theme Park.

“We brought in Salvador Simó — with an outstanding background in features and short films and his latest experience directing Dragonkeeper, a co-production between China and Spain — being the perfect fit culturally, process-wise, and in terms of storytelling, too. To execute his vision, we worked with Appetit Studio, our sister company in Lyon, France,” notes Juan Manuel Freire, Executive Producer at Final Frontier. “Due to the complexity of the animation, we knew they would be the perfect studio to achieve this ’40s cartoon style. The execution level has been challenging, and the client was seeking a short film that could showcase state-of-the-art quality.

“… [Then we] have the MiHoYo team, with their unique culture and process; after working for the Chinese market for seven years, we knew how to manage the culture and process and make this intercontinental set up work. They are a great video game developer with high standards, that also helped us push ourselves further.”

Freire executive produced the project for Final Frontier alongside Eric Zheng, Gabriel Murgue and Gus Karam; Xiao Liu exec produced for MiHoYo. Appetit was the production services studio. The Tick-Tock! creative team included visual development artist Charlotte Cousquer, character designer Océane Payan and background designers Diego Cambrian, Alexane Rich, Charlotte Cousquer and Edouard Pitula. Iman Kaguirova and Desi Garrido Romero handled storyboard and animatic duties for the project, which was animated by Louis Holmes, Lae Appollonia, Florian Perron, Fernando Corrales Linares, Julien Marret, Peter Lowey, Lise Legiers, Mario Serrano and Océane Payan.

Simó is a film director and scriptwriter, known for Buñuel in the Labyrinth of the Turtles (2018), which premiered and was awarded at the Animation Is Film festival in L.A., and went on to win Best European Animated Feature Film from the European Film Awards and Best Animation Film at the 34th Goya Awards as well as shortlist honors from the Academy Awards in 2019. That same year, Simó was awarded the Cartoon Tribute as Best European Director at Cartoon Movie. He recently premiered his latest animated feature film, Dragonkeeper, the largest Spanish-Chinese co-production, based on the novel by Carole Wilkinson, opening the 27th Malaga Festival. Viva Pictures released Dragonkeepers in the U.S. last month and will offer the film on DVD in August.

With offices in Los Angeles, Madrid, Shanghai, Singapore and Buenos Aires, Final Frontier has helped create a number of notable campaign shorts through its partnerships with top brands, including the Doritos Rainbow shor Dia de los Muertos (with Landia Mexico, Zombie Studio and agency Slap Global) and their last video game project, Naraka: Bladepoint – Crimson & Winter (with Le Cube).

The studio has also provided production services for TV and film including Adult Swim’s Common Side Effects, Disney’s Descendants: The Royal Wedding and Alberto Vázquez’s Unicorn Wars. Original IP in the works include Beca & the All-Phone, Gilgamesh City, The Harriets and animated biopic Maradona.

finalfrontier.tv

Annecy: DreamWorks Presents ‘The Wild Robot’ Sneak Peek, Launches 2nd Trailer

DreamWorks Animation took the stage at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival to introduce the audience to its tender-hearted mechanical hero, The Wild Robot, coming to theaters  September 27.

Based on author Peter Brown’s award-winning, #1 New York Times bestseller, The Wild Robot follows the journey of ROZZUM unit 7134 (“Roz” for short), a robot shipwrecked on an uninhabited island who must learn to adapt to the harsh surroundings, gradually building relationships with the animals on the island and becoming the adoptive parent of an orphaned gosling.

The film stars Academy Award winner Lupita Nyong’o (Us) as Roz, Emmy and Golden Globe nominee Pedro Pascal (The Last of Us) as fox Fink; Emmy winner Catherine O’Hara (Schitt’s Creek) as opossum Pinktail; Oscar nominee Bill Nighy (Love Actually) as goose Longneck; Kit Connor (Heartstopper) as gosling Brightbill and Oscar nominee Stephanie Hsu (Everything Everywhere All at Once) as Vontra, a robot that will intersect with Roz’s life on the island.

The voice roster is filled out by Emmy-winning pop-culture icon Mark Hamill (Star Wars franchise, The Boy and the Heron), Matt Berry (What We Do in the Shadows, The SpongeBob Movie franchise) and Golden Globe winner and Emmy nominee Ving Rhames (Mission: Impossible films, Pulp Fiction).

The Wild Robot is written and directed by three-time Oscar nominee Chris Sanders (How to Train Your Dragon, The Croods, Lilo & Stitch) and is produced by Jeff Hermann (The Boss Baby 2: Family Business; co-producer, Kung Fu Panda franchise).

Annecy: Disney TV Announces New ‘Prep & Landing,’ ‘Moon Girl’ Shorts, ‘Kindergarten: The Musical,’ ‘Big City Greens’ S5 & Much More

Today, during the Annecy International Animation Film Festival, Disney Branded Television (DBT) announced a lineup of new animated projects and shared first looks from its preschool and kids slate. The announcements were made by Ayo Davis, President of Disney Branded Television, alongside DBT animation leaders Meredith Roberts, EVP of Disney Television Animation; Alyssa Sapire, SVP of Development, Series and Strategy, Disney Junior; and Orion Ross, VP, International Animation.

Additionally, Disney Television Animation commemorated its illustrious 40-year anniversary at the festival with a special panel highlighting the studio’s dominance in kids’ animation over four decades — with beloved titles like Phineas and Ferb, Mickey Mouse Clubhouse, Monsters at Work, The Proud Family: Louder and Prouder, Sofia the First and more — as well as current and future hits ranging from Kiff to Big City Greens, ZOMBIES: The Re-Animated Series, Hamster & Gretel and StuGo.

Disney Junior, Disney Television Animation and International Animation teams will feature several additional panels throughout the week, including one that highlights the power of storytelling through music and features Disney Junior’s Ariel, Kindergarten: The Musical, ZOMBIES: The Re-Animated Series, Kiff and Big City Greens, as well as a panel for the upcoming global series The Doomies.

“Disney Branded Television is proud of our four-decade legacy of creating magical and visually stunning animation beloved by young audiences around the world,” said Davis. “It’s a momentous year at Annecy, as we celebrate our studio’s milestone anniversary and showcase some of our most exciting new projects and creative talent that are ushering us into a new era of storytelling.”

Among the new Disney Junior and Disney Television Animation titles and first looks announced at Annecy are the following:

 

New Series & Specials

Prep & Landing: The Snowball Protocol (22-minute special)
Produced by: Disney Television Animation
Executive Producers: Kevin Deters and Stevie Wermers-Skelton
Story Editor/Co-Producer: Colleen Evanson
Producer: Melissa Kurtz
Director: Shane Zalvin
Writer: Hilary Helding

In this new installment of the Emmy-winning holiday specials, the high-tech team of elves from the elite unit known as Prep and Landing is back! When their holiday missions go awry, Wayne thinks he is in BIG trouble with Santa, which opens a vault of merry mishaps from the past. It’s going to be hard to dig their way out of the snowbank this time in Prep & Landing: The Snowball Protocol. The special will debut next year.

 

Marvel’s Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur: Moon Girl’s Lab (Shorts)
Produced by: Disney Television Animation
Executive Producers: Laurence Fishburne, Helen Sugland and Steve Loter
Co-Executive Producers: Rodney Clouden and Pilar Flynn

Marvel’s Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur: Moon Girl’s Lab is a new musical S.T.E.M.-focused short-form series in which Moon Girl is dropping knowledge and dropping bars as she uses the power of science to take down some serious baddies. Each of the eight shorts will feature a new song by Grammy Award winner Raphael Saadiq, who serves as executive music producer on the series, and a science theme, including adaptations, states of matter, plants, force and motion, light, echolocation and coding.

The shorts will premiere Friday, June 28, on Disney Channel and Disney Channel YouTube. All eight shorts will be available on Disney+ the same day.

 

SuperKitties: Sup-Purr Adventures (Shorts)
Produced by: Sony Pictures Television – Kids in association with Disney Junior
Creator: Paula Rosenthal
Executive Producers: Sarah Mullervy, Kirk Van Wormer and Audu Paden
Supervising Producer: Bryan Korn

SuperKitties: Su-Purr Adventures is a new short-form series inspired by 2023’s No. 1 new preschool series, SuperKitties. It features Bitsy, Ginny, Sparks and Buddy as they showcase their superhero skills and kitty kindness that they use to work together as a team to make their town of Kittydale a great place to live.

The shorts will premiere Wednesday, August 7, on Disney Junior and Disney Channel and next day, Thursday, Aug. 8, on Disney+ and Disney Junior YouTube.

 

 

Series Renewal 

Big City Greens (Season 5)
Produced by: Disney Television Animation
Creators/Executive Producers: Chris and Shane Houghton
Executive Producer: Anna O’Brian
Co-Executive Producer: Stephen Sandoval
Producer: Michael Coughlin

Greenlit for a fifth season today, Big City Greens was the No. 2 most-watched kids animated series of 2023, with more than 2 billion hours watched across linear and streaming since it debuted in 2018.

The series follows the offbeat adventures of 10-year-old Cricket Green (voiced by Chris Houghton), a mischievous and optimistic country boy who moved to the big city with his wildly out-of-place family. The show is heavily influenced by the brothers’ childhood growing up in St. Johns, Michigan, a small rural town north of Lansing, also known as the mint capital of the world. Many of the characters are inspired by real-life family members and childhood townsfolk.

This summer also marks the premiere of Big City Greens the Movie: Spacecation, which will be screened at Annecy as part of the prestigious Le Pâquier lawn screening series. Additionally, Anna O’Brian, director of the movie, has joined the series for season five as executive producer.

 

Premiere Date Announcement

Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures (Season 2) © 2024 Lucasfilm Ltd. & ™. All Rights Reserved.

Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures (Season 2)
Produced by: Lucasfilm in collaboration with Wild Canary for Disney+ and Disney Junior
Showrunner/Executive Producer: Michael Olson
Executive Producers: James Waugh, Jacqui Lopez and Josh Rimes
Supervising Director/Co-Producer: Elliot M. Bour
Consulting Producer: Lamont Magee

Season 2 of Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures will premiere Wednesday, August 14, on Disney+ and Disney Junior.

In the new season, Kai Brightstar, Lys Solay and Nubs are ready for more adventures! Dressed in their new mission gear, the young heroes will embark on even bigger missions across the galaxy as they continue their Jedi training.

 

First Looks at Annecy

Disney Junior’s Ariel
Produced by: Wild Canary in association with Disney Junior
Executive Producer: Lynne Southerland

An exclusive first-look clip from the highly anticipated new series Disney Junior’s Ariel was released today.

Inspired by the beloved story of The Little Mermaid, the series debuts Thursday, June 27, on Disney Junior in the U.S. with an initial batch of eight episodes available on Disney+ the following day, Friday, June 28.

The series follows 8-year-old mermaid princess Ariel as she and her friends embark on fun-filled, action-packed underwater adventures throughout their Caribbean-inspired fairy tale kingdom of Atlantica and beyond.

 

 

Kindergarten: The Musical
Produced by: Oddbot Entertainment in association with Disney Junior
Creators: Michelle Lewis and Charlton Pettus
Executive Producers: Tom Warburton, Michelle Lewis, Kay Hanley, Charlton Pettus and Dan Petty
Co-Executive Producer/Story Editor: Laurie Israel

The main title theme song — performed by Grammy Award-winning and Tony Award-nominated actress and singer Eva Noblezada (The Great Gatsby) — and key art for Disney Junior’s upcoming new series Kindergarten: The Musical was also released today.

The series follows five-year-old Berti, who, along with her new friends, is navigating all the exciting and emotional experiences that come with starting school for the very first time. Taking place in a kindergarten classroom at Porter Elementary, the series features fantastical Broadway-style song and dance numbers that help kids express their big feelings and provide a peek into their incredible imaginations. The series is set to debut on Disney Junior and Disney+ later this year.

 

StuGo
Produced by: Titmouse in association with Disney Channel
Creator/Executive Producer: Ryan Gillis
Co-Executive Producer: Sunil Hall
Story Editor: Craig Lewis

The main title theme song for StuGo was also released today. The series is set to premiere this fall on Disney Channel and Disney+.

The series follows six overambitious middle schoolers tricked into attending a fake academic summer camp by a mad scientist. Now they’re stuck for three months on a wild tropical island with mind-reading manatees, giant fighting fungi and fashion-forward mutants ― less academia than they’d hoped for but a lot more adventure.

 

 

The Doomies
Produced by: Xilam in association with Disney+
Co-Creator/Director: Andrés Fernandez
Co-Creator/Head Writer: Henry Gifford
Co-Creator/Art Director: Rémi Zaarour

An exclusive first look of Disney’s new spooky comedy animated series, The Doomies, was released today.

The chilling series follows best friends Bobby and Romy, who mistakenly open a gateway to the underworld and turn their sleepy coastal town into a hotspot for terrifying creatures of doom. As they try to cover up their mess, they get roped into an epic monster mystery, which will see them battle both literal and inner demons.

‘Arcane’ Studio Fortiche Announces First Original Feature ‘Penelope of Sparta’

Fortiche Production, the award-winning animation studio behind hit Netflix series Arcane (which just unveiled its Season 2 teaser), announced today that it is in the early stages of development on an all-new project,-Penelope of Sparta — the company’s first move into original production and first-ever feature film. The announcement was made by Jérôme Combe, Co-Founder & President of Fortiche Production, during the company’s first Studio Focus session at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival.

Targeting a 13+ audience, Penelope of Sparta is a sci-fi coming-of-age story that charts the untold origin story of the heroine from Homer’s The Odyssey. The project marks the first step in Fortiche’s strategic shift from creative service studio to original content production, focusing on adult and young adult viewers.

Synopsis: In a world inspired by ancient Greece, 17-year-old Penelope attends an elite high school with the other famous heirs of the Athenian Empire — Achilles, Helen, Circe, Agamemnon and, of course, Odysseus. These teen royals are competitive at everything they do, including how they have fun, before they return to rule their kingdoms.

But Penelope isn’t like the rest of them; she’s a dutiful daughter on a secret mission given to her by her father, the King of Sparta — a mission to free her people from Athens’ imperialist grasp. For Penelope, high school isn’t a party, it’s war. What starts as a coming-of-age high school dramedy, shifts to an epic adventure as these teens from opposite worlds must learn to trust each other in order to save their friends from an insidious threat.

Set to be produced and directed by Fortiche, and with Arcane scriptwriter Amanda Overton on board, Penelope of Sparta will utilize the studio’s unique graphic signature — mixing 2D with a painted visual made in 3D — that won over fans worldwide and garnered critical acclaim as showcased in Arcane.

“We are equal parts excited and nervous to be sharing a very first look at Penelope of Sparta during a festival that is right at the heart of the global animation community,” said Combe. “It has long been our ambition to work on a feature film that breaks down the wall between animation and live action, and we strongly believe that Penelope of Sparta has the ingredients to do just that. We really hope the audience at Annecy and potential partners feel as enthusiastic about it as we are.”

As part of its early development priorities, Fortiche has partnered with Parrot Analytics to ensure a strong basis for the development of Penelope of Sparta. Insights gathered have shown substantial growth in global demand for both Greek mythology and science fiction genres, with increases of 113% and 31% respectively, in particular among the 15-24 year-old audience segment.

“Our early testing shows there is a good appetite among our core young adult audience for content that blends sci-fi and Greek mythology elements, as well as significant growth in global demand for these genres,” Combe added. “The Odyssey can be considered one of the oldest intellectual properties in entertainment history, but the story of young Penelope has never been told and these insights offer very encouraging ground to build our project upon.”

Penelope of Sparta

Watch ‘Arcane’ S2 Teaser: Emmy-Winning Series Will Conclude With Second Season in November

Netflix and Riot Games released the Season Two teaser and new images for the second and final season of Arcane this morning, which premieres on Netflix this November.

“Arcane is just the beginning of our larger storytelling journey and partnership with the wonderful animation studio that is Fortiche,” said Christian Linke during a League Dev Update that went live earlier today. “From the very beginning, since we started working on this project, we had a very specific ending in mind, which means the story of Arcane wraps up with this second season. But Arcane is just the first of many stories that we want to tell in Runeterra.”

Arcane Season 2. Katie Leung as Caitlyn in Arcane Season 2. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2024
Arcane Season 2. Ellen Thomas as Ambessa in Arcane Season 2. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2024
Arcane Season 2. Reed Shannon as Ekko in Arcane Season 2. Cr. COURTESY OF NETFLIX © 2024

The trailer shows an epic confrontation between sisters Vi and Jinx. Previously, when discussing Season 2 of Arcane, Jinx voice actor, Ella Purnell (Fallout, Yellowjackets) said, “Nobody will feel good” after watching its ending! According to the press release, in the final chapter, Jinx’s attack on the Council sets the stage for a dire escalation of the conflict between Piltover and Zaun.

The Emmy-winning steampunk action adventures series, created by Christian Linke and Alex Yee. is produced by French animation studio Fortiche under the supervision of Riot Games. The first season (nine episodes) premiered on Netflix in Nov. 2021. We’ll have more from the Arcane session held at Annecy later this week.

Watch the trailer below:

IMPS Rebrands as Peyo Co. with More Smurfs Magic in the Works

Peyo 1975
Peyo, pictured in the publication of ‘La Flûte à six schtroumpfs’ in 1975

IMPS, The Smurfs’ global license holder, announced at MIFA (the International Animation Film Market) in Annecy the launch of a new animation production program and the company’s new strategy of expanding The Smurfs franchise and reviving other original creations from creator and storyteller Peyo. Alongside the world-famous Smurfs, early Peyo characters will be revived using modern animation with new stories inspired by the original Johan & Peewit and Benny Breakiron comics.

This new chapter for Peyo’s creations is accompany by a new name and brand identity for the outfit, which will now be known as Peyo Company.

An Unexpected Success

Before The Smurfs became a worldwide hit, Peyo (Pierre Culliford) had already created an entire fantasy world and other fascinating titles, such as Johan & Peewit and Benny Breakiron. Few people know that Peyo first introduced the Smurfs as a supporting act in a Johan & Peewit story called The Smurfs & the Magic Flute (La Flute à Six Schtroumpfs) in 1958.

Readers from the weekly magazine in which Johan & Peewit was published, were so enthusiastic about how much they loved these blue characters that they returned and, eventually, Peyo created a spin-off fully dedicated to their adventures. This was the start of the globally recognized and beloved property, The Smurfs.

Peyo Company Logo

Peyo Company

To promote and perpetuate the work and the legacy of Peyo, Véronique Culliford, Peyo’s daughter, founded IMPS in 1984. Under her guidance, The Smurfs has become an immensely popular brand across the globe, reaching an incredible 95% global brand awareness. Today, as a tribute to Peyo, Véronique and IMPS have created Peyo Company to regroup all of Peyo’s fascinating universes under one single new banner. This will enable Johan & Peewit and Benny Breakiron to receive the attention they deserve.

“It’s been an honor to be able to build such a success out of the blue characters my father created. And now I hope we will do the same for some of his other creations, Johan & Peewit and Benny Breakiron,” says Véronique Culliford. “To underline our engagement to expand his legacy beyond the Smurfs, we are renaming IMPS as the Peyo Company. It’s a well-deserved tribute to my father, and features his signature, with which he signed thousands of drawings, as our new logo.”

New Projects

The renamed Peyo Company will tell new stories inspired by Peyo’s creations with a touch of modernity that will resonate with new generations.

This effort begins with the launch of two new TV series projects: The Tales of Johan & Peewit and Benny Breakiron. The company is currently looking for key creatives to bring these stories to life on screens.

Tales of Johan and Peewit

More Smurfs: Coming Soon

There are also new projects coming from the Smurfs’ Village: Season 2 of CG-animated series The Smurfs is coming to Netflix on June 30, and Season 3 will launch on Nickelodeon this summer, while Season 4 is in pre-development. Plus, fans can look forward to the new fully-animated musical feature The Smurfs Movie from Paramount Animation next year.

“We are delighted to be working with Paramount Animation on an all-new theatrical production, The Smurfs Movie,” says Nele De Wilde, CCO at Peyo Company. “Paramount pulled together a dream team of filmmakers led by the smurftastic director, Chris Miller, co-director Matt Landon, and producers Ryan Harris, Rihanna, Laurence ‘Jay’ Brown, and Tyran ‘Ty-Ty’ Smith. This fresh take on the beloved Smurfs will see them go on an interdimensional adventure to discover the power within and answer the universal question: ‘What is a Smurf?’ We’re thrilled that Rihanna is on board to voice Smurfette and write, produce, and perform original songs for the film.”

Paramount and the filmmakers are working side by side with the Peyo Company to help carry out the vision of the legendary artist and creator of The Smurfs, and to celebrate the charm of Peyo’s world and the beauty of his artwork, while translating that look for today’s audiences. The film is scheduled for a worldwide theatrical release in February 2025.

LAIKA’s ‘Coraline’ Returns to Theaters with 3D Remaster for 15th Anniversary

Coraline 3D kv

Acclaimed Oregon studio LAIKA will celebrate the 15th Anniversary of its award-winning 2009 stop-motion animated film Coraline with a return to theaters around the world this summer. The film has been newly remastered in 3D for a special limited engagement starting August 15, presenting through partnerships with Fathom in the U.S. and Trafalgar Releasing internationally.  The film will also be available in 2D format.

Tickets on sale date is Friday, June 21 at 6 a.m. PT. For more information about the global release, visit coraline.com.

“LAIKA set the 3D standard with the 2009 release of Coraline,” says LAIKA CMOO David Burke. “This newly remastered version, in the works for three years, brings Neil Gaiman’s enchanting story to life in stunning, stereoscopic 3D detail, and is a love letter to LAIKA fans everywhere. Thanks to our partnerships with Fathom and Trafalgar Releasing, we are thrilled to bring this cinematic jewel to a global audience this year. The release will include an early glimpse of LAIKA’s upcoming film, Wildwood, making it the must-see film event of the summer.”

LAIKA’s Coraline has been announced as part of the 2024 Annecy Classics program, which celebrates magical animated moments of years past during this week’s program. The film was awarded the festival’s prestigious Cristal for feature film when it was released.

Coraline was written and directed by stop-motion auteur Henry Selick (The Nightmare Before Christmas, Wendell & Wild) and stars Dakota Fanning, Ian McShane, Teri Hatcher, Keith David, John Hodgman, and British comedy duo Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders. The film was nominated for the Oscar, Golden Globe and BAFTA for best animated feature; won the Annecy Cristal, British Academy Children’s Award and Annie Awards for music, character design and production design; and was named one of the best films of the year by AFI.

Synopsis: Eleven-year-old Coraline Jones (Dakota Fanning) is feisty, curious, and intrepid beyond her years. She and her parents (Teri Hatcher and John Hodgman) have just relocated from Michigan to Oregon. Missing her friends and finding her parents to be distracted by their work, Coraline tries to find some excitement in her new environment but seriously doubts that her new home can provide anything truly intriguing to her. But when she walks through a secret door in her living room and ventures down an eerie passageway, she discovers an alternate version of her life and existence.

On the surface, this parallel reality is similar to her real life — only much better. The adults, including the solicitous Other Mother (Hatcher), seem much more welcoming to her. Even the mysterious Cat (Keith David) now regards her as the center of attention. She begins to think that this Other World might be where she belongs. But when her wondrously off-kilter, fantastical visit turns dangerous and Other Mother schemes to keep her there, Coraline musters all of her resourcefulness, determination, and bravery to get back home — and save her family.

The voice cast also features Ian McShane as Bobinsky and British comedy duo Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders as April Spink and Miriam Forcible.

LAIKA’s sixth stop-motion feature film, Wildwood, will open in theaters in 2025. The film is based on the novel written by Colin Meloy (The Decembrists) and illustrated by his wife, Carson Ellis. LAIKA CEO Travis Knight (Kubo and the Two Strings) is directing from a screenplay by Chris Butler (Missing Link, ParaNorman, Kubo). The voice cast  is led by Peyton Elizabeth Lee, Jacob Tremblay, Carey Mulligan and Mahershala Ali.