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Sunday,
October 1, 2000
"The
Lost World" Animated Series in the Works
Publivision Inc. announced the conclusion of an $11.5 million co-production
agreement between its animation subsidiary, Vivatoon Ltée, and Neuroplanet
France, to produce a new animated series entitled "The Lost
World." Inspired by the novel "The Lost World" by
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the father of Sherlock Holmes and the Jules
Verne of early 20th-century English literature, this science fiction
series consisting of 26 episodes of 26 minutes each targets young
people ages 9 to 12.
In
a work originally written for adults, Vivatoon and Neuroplanet France
have introduced characters who are 10 and 12 years old. The co-producers
thereby hope to introduce the young public to one of the great classics
of modern literature, bringing to the screen the adventures of Lord
John Roxton, in a world where science, adventure and tolerance stimulate
the characters.
Moreover,
"The Lost World" animated series will provide young people
with "captivating role models they can identify with, while
promoting values that include loyalty, friendship, self-confidence,
going beyond one's limitations, a taste for adventure, openness
to others and non-violence," according to the producers.
Monday,
October 2, 2000
New
Animated DVD Releases for Tomorrow
The following animated and anime DVDs will be released tomorrow:
The
Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949) - Disney
The
Black Cauldron (1985) - Disney
Cartoon
Crazys: Comic Book Heroes
Cartoon
Crazy's Spooky Toons
Escaflowne
- Dragons and Destiny (Vol. 1 - 1996)
James
and the Giant Peach - Special Edition (1996)
Jubei-Chan
the Ninja Girl Vol 02
The
Nightmare Before Christmas - Special Edition (1993)
The
Nightmare Before Christmas/James and the Giant Peach (2 Pack)
Scooby
Doo & Alien Invaders (2000)
* * *
BBC News
Discusses Animation Oscar Category
According to BBC News:
"An Oscar
for feature-length animations is to be established for the first
time, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has announced.
The new category,
the first for almost 20 years, will cover animated features of more
than 70 minutes, giving Disney films and the feature film work of
Nick Park, who made Chicken Run, the chance of Oscar success.
The first Oscar
for animation is likely to be presented at the Academy Awards ceremony
in March 2002. But the award will only be handed out when eight
or more eligible films are released a year, which could be mean
the statuette for animation is seen rarely..."
Click
here for the full story.
Tuesday,
October 3, 2000
Box
Office Results for Animated Films
Here are the Box Office results for last weekend's animated
films:
Chicken
Run
$200,996 ($388 per screen average - 31% drop)
32nd at the Box Office (down from #28 last weekend)
Total to Date: $105.5 Million
Pokemon
2000
$64,496 ($223 per screen average - 43% drop)
50th at the Box Office (down from #40 last weekend)
Total to Date: $43.7 Million
Dinosaur
$61,092 ($407 per screen average - 45% decrease)
51st at the Box Office (down from #42 last weekend)
Total to Date: $136.5 Million
* * *
Cartoon
Girl Plays Influencial Role
According to The Times:
"She is
eight and speaks more than a dozen languages, yet the world's most
powerful child welfare agency is about to turn her into a domestic
labourer.
Meena, a cartoon
character, is a key weapon in the battle against female and social
inequality across the Indian subcontinent.
For the past
two years children in India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka have followed the 13 video and storybook adventures of South
Asia's longest-suffering pre-teen as she and her best friend, Mithu,
a talking parrot, tackle social issues such as child marriage, illegal
dowry demands and parents refusing to send daughters to school.
Even Aids has touched Meena's carefully anonymised "Everytown" life,
where the names are neither Hindu nor Muslim.
Now the United
Nations children's agency Unicef, which created Meena, has decided
it is time for her to meet stiffer challenges..."
Click
here for the full story.
Wednesday,
October 4, 2000
CyberWorld
3D Opens Friday!
The highly anticipated IMAX 3D animated film, CyberWorld
3D, opens this Friday in IMAX theaters across the nation. The
adventure lasts for 45-minutes and requires that audience members
wear special 3D glasses.
The
84-page CyberWorld 3D Teachers Guide recommends seven sites
for students to learn more about animation, with Animation
Artist Magazine being one of the seven sites featured (others
include Warner Brothers site and the official site for SIGGRAPH).
Also
opening this Friday is Digimon: The Movie, which may have
trouble finding its audience because of its PG rating. Parents have
largely ignored PG rated animated features in the past two years,
including the highly acclaimed The Iron Giant. Fox is copying
Warner Brothers marketing efforts by offering free trading cards
to those who see Digimon in its opening weekend.
* * *
Spriggan
Goes on Tour
ADV Films is has announced the fourth-quarter film festival run
of their latest animated movie, Spriggan.
On a fragment
of a message plate, a warning from an ancient civilization that
was ruined by over-development was written. It says, "Protect our
legacy from evil." Arcam is an organization, which takes this message
seriously and plays an active part in trying to seal the secret
of the ancient civilization whose remains are scattered around the
world. The agents in the organization are called SPRIGGAN.
Due for wide
release in 2001, Spriggan will be playing, with English subtitles,
at the following places:
October 8, 2000
- Spriggan will be shown at the Director's Guild of America
Theatre, during the New York Anime Film Festival. The festival will
be held in New York City, from October 6th though the 8th.
October 22,
2000 - Spriggan will be shown at the AFI (American Film Institute)
Festival, in Los Angeles, California, during the Asian Cinema Series
Gala.
12th Annual
International Film Festival of Wales going on from November 29,
2000 to December 9, 2000 in Europe at Wales' capital city.
The original
Spriggan story was created by Chu Takasige and Ryoji Minagawa,
part of the "Post-Otomo Generation." Spriggan appeared serially
in the monthly magazine "Zokan Shonen Sunday" from 1989 to 1996.
Paperback copies also sold 6 million copies.
Thursday,
October 5, 2000
China
Tries to Become a Cartoon Making Power
According to the Star Telegram and AP:
"In
the struggle for the hearts and minds of China's children, Han Fengfang
is a warrior with a fountain pen.
Han's
post is at a drafting table at the Shanghai Animation Studio. In
slow, sure strokes on clear plastic, the 25-year veteran artist
draws one more frame of a new cartoon. Then she starts the next,
inching the studio closer to its goal: a place alongside Walt Disney
Co. and other leaders of the global animation industry.
Cartoons
are serious business for China -- both a promising export and a
tool to turn back a flood of imported children's pop culture that
stirs deep unease among communist leaders who look on entertainment
as an ideological tool..."
Click
here to read the full story.
* * *
Teacher's
Pet Premieres Tonight on Disney Channel
The premiere episode of "Disney's Teacher's Pet" animated
series will air tonight on Disney Channel at 8:45 p.m. ET/PT. On
Friday, October 6, Toon Disney will spotlight "Disney's Teacher's
Pet" with a four-episode "marathon" from 7:00-9:00 p.m.
Produced by
Walt Disney Television Animation, "Disney's Teacher's Pet" is the
tale of a boy and his dog, "Spot" -- a talking canine that yearns
for the education afforded his master. As voiced by Tony Award-winning
actor Nathan Lane, Spot disguises himself as a boy in order to attend
school and, as the title suggests, becomes the teacher's pet. "Teacher's
Pet" is designated as children's educational and informational programming.
"Teacher's Pet"
is a production of Walt Disney Television Animation. Gary Baseman
is creator and executive producer. Bill & Cheri Steinkellner are
creators and executive producers. Michael Price is co-executive
producer. Timothy Bjorklund is director.
Friday,
October 6, 2000
Wild
Life Takes Wild Ride
Disney's Wild Life animated feature has apparently been
canned according to an Inside Magazine article, which states the
film was canceled because it was "not appropriate for Disney."
According
to Inside Magazine, "Animators familiar with the project said
Roy Disney had declared that the film was not appropriate for Disney.
The project was killed after the studio spent about $20 million,
according to animation sources."
In
a separate article, Inside Magazine claimed, "The shelving
of Disney's computer-generated Wild Life has sent big ripples
through the animation community, as it apparently signals at least
a temporary end to the studio's expensive attempt to launch an in-house
answer to Pixar, the creator of the fantastically successfully Toy
Story and A Bug's Life."
Parental
groups may applaud the decision to cancel the film over its apparent
use of several sexual innuendoes and gay friendly themes deemed
inappropriate for children movies. Still, others point out that
if the film went too far, it could have been released by one of
Disney's subsidiary movie companies as was the case with Tim
Burton's Nightmare Before Christmas.
* * *
Is FOX Giving
Up on Digimon Before it Starts?
20th Century Fox is doing little to promote the new Digimon
film to the press. The official Digimon press kit, sent to
various media to promote the film, only contained two picture sheets
and a three page description of the movie. Most press kits contain
up to a dozen photos/slides and dozens of pages of behind the scenes
information.
Heavily marketed
with Saturday morning cartoon trailers, Digimon opens today
in 1,850 theaters across the U.S. with a trading card promotion.
But it starts with two and a half strikes against it. The first
strike is that many will view Digimon as a Pokemon
wannabee, a fast disappearing "fad" as shown by the Pokemon
sequel (released this summer) which barely made half the money of
the original release. The second strike is the PG rating. Parents
with small children have largely abandoned PG rated animated films.
Titan A.E. was abandoned, The Iron Giant was abandoned,
The Road to El Dorado was abandoned, and even the demographics
for the successful PG-rated Dinosaur showed a mostly older
audience.
So what is the
half of a strike? The reviews. While most parents seem to ignore
reviews (otherwise, The Iron Giant would have been a hit),
some do give credence to reviewers who are being highly critical
of Digimon:
According to
Variety: "It's a shame that a saga full of amusing pop culture
messages (for those able and willing to find them) is ultimately
so marred by the kind of animation that can only be the product
of an assembly line operation. While there are flashes of imagination
in the repeated spurts of action as the Digimons leap into the fray,
the stiff movement and bland color schemes remain a constant, and
finally prove extremely hard to watch for the sustained length of
a feature."
According to
the Boston Globe: "What is particularly unappealing and troublesome
about the feature is that it is a video game barely disguised as
a movie. The uninspired animation and hackneyed dialogue offer no
cleverness, no distinguishable characteristics to any of the kids
or the Digimon (these creatures talk, unlike the gibberish-spouting
Pokemon, but they have nothing interesting to say). All are simply
a collection of names and sketchy traits."
According to
Screen It (which screens films for parents): "the filmmakers
- from both the Japanese and American camps -- should be chastised
for their choice of copied material. That's because if one's going
to rip off something else, they should at least make sure that the
original product is good since the quality of the duplicate rarely
matches that of the original. As such, if you copy an excellent
film, you might end up with a good one. However, when you copy a
film or idea that's bad or awful from the start - such as the Pokémon
films - you're likely to end up with nothing more than useless wreck.
That's certainly the case with Digimon: The Movie that earns
a rating of just 1 out of 10."
Even with so
much stacked up against it, Digimon does have one thing going
for it that the makers of The Iron Giant and Titan A.E.
may have benefited from - it is coming out at a time when theaters
need "family films". There have been no kid movies released
for months, so the time is ripe for one and even a bad one could
end up with a decent audience.
***
Monsters,
Inc. Trailer Released!
Disney has released the trailer for Pixar's Monsters, Inc.
online, but as of early Friday morning, the Apple servers were technical
difficulties in properly downloading and displaying the trailer.
Click
here to go to the Monsters, Inc. trailer page.
Saturday,
October 7, 2000
CINAR
Discusses Investigation
According to the CBC:
"Cinar
Corp., the troubled children's animation company struggling to survive
a financial scandal and a stock market plunge, says it expects to
reach a tax-fraud settlement with the federal and provincial governments
'imminently.'
In
a letter to shareholders made public Friday, the company said 'resolution
will include the payment of taxes owing and penalties.'
Best known for animated children's TV shows... Cinar is also being
sued by shareholders and subsidiaries while the RCMP probes allegations
the company falsely claimed tax subsidies by crediting scripts to
Canadians that were written by Americans..."
Click
here for the full story.
* * *
"Light
Star Fantasy" World Premiere Set
The world premiere of "Light-Star-Fantasy" (new video version with
composition by Yoshi Ichige) will take place on October 25, 2000
in the music-metropolis Vienna, in the Oberlaa Kurhalle. This musical
fantasy embarks on an interstellar voyage and features the cosmic
paintings of Czech artist Zdenek Hajny. In this presentation his
works are transformed into a glittering experience by the latest
video animation techniques.
In contrast
to movies like Star Wars with a dramatic, heavily loaded
plot, such as scenes depicting war, Starvoice values inner peace
and harmony, through portraying beautiful songs. Through its purity
"Starvoice" can serve as an energy source, which makes inner harmony
possible.
One of the few
Japanese female composers whose works can also be experienced in
performance in Europe is Yoshi Ichige. The "wunderkind composer"
(quotation from a daily Austrian newspaper, 1988), has performed
her compositions world wide.
The first presentation
of Starvoice "Light-Star-Fantasy" took place in Prague in 1995.
It is a total work of art incorporating music, painting, literature
(poetry and legends), astronomy and technology (computer video animation,
16:9 cinema-size).
The astrophysics
consultant to the production is Prof. Dr. Gerhard Boerner from Munich.
The Prague planetarium has also provided support by contributing
astronomical images and advice on astronomy.
Starvoice "Light-Star-Fantasy"
comprises 11 pieces of music (including "Universe," "In the Distance
of Space," "Secret of the Universe," "Promenade of Stars," "Kaleidoscope,"
"Moon Princess," "Milky Way"). The Starvoice Studio has been working
on the images for 5 years using computer-aided processing techniques
to transform them into a highly effective animated format.
In this international
charity event the composer Yoshi Ichige will sing the stars' songs
live.
Sunday,
October 8, 2000
Batman
Beyond DVD Delayed
The release of the new Batman Beyond DVD movie, Return
of the Joker, has been moved from late October to December 12,
2000. Warner Brothers hasn't released an official statement as to
the delay, but speculation has ranged from editing it to be less
violent (due to congress pressure on Hollywood) to simply giving
WB more time to promote it closer to the Christmas holidays (more
gift purchases).
The
DVD will be packed with many extra features, including a "Making
Of" documentary and deleted footage.
* * *
Drawing Dilbert
According to CNN:
"This has
happened to me many times. It gets to be 1 o'clock and I think to
myself, 'God, I'm tired - I'd like a nap.' It's 1 p.m. and the question
is, do you know where your favorite cartoonist is?
If he's Scott
Adams, creator of the corporate comic strip 'Dilbert,' try looking
on the floor of his home office near San Francisco. That's right,
the floor.
'I've literally
gotten out of my chair, lain on the floor and fallen sound asleep,'
Adams says. 'I don't even bother walking to the couch, because there's
nobody going to come in and see me. When I wake up I ask myself
if I feel like working, and if I do, I get back in the chair and
I work. If I don't, I do something else.'
It's a work
environment far removed from the character Dilbert's world of cynical,
conniving, cubicle-dwelling engineers reporting to a dunderhead
boss..."
Click
here for the full story.
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