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The
Nicktoons Film Festival
Announces
Screening
10The "Friends & Enemies" Show
The
Nicktoons Film Festival continues
this Sunday with Screening 10a selection of eight
shorts that deal with folks we adore and folks who are a bit
more challenging. A co-production of Frederator Studios and
Animation Magazine for Nicktoons, The Nicktoons
Film Festival airs on the Nicktoons cable channel Sunday
nights 10 p.m. (EST) and 7 p.m. (PST), with a repeat at 1
p.m. (EST) and 10 p.m. (PST). The films featured in Screening
No. 10"The Friends & Enemies" Show
are: The Wild Wild Circus Company from Canadian filmmakers
Jean-Christian Knaff and Claude Micelli for indie-house Nelvana;
Loco Melones from award-winning filmmaker Izabela Bzymek;
Playing Cricket from NASA/JPL robotics engineer Jack
Morrison; Beach Booty from CalArts grad Alex Hirsch;
Fool Throttle from ReelWorks Animation Studio filmmakers
Todd Hemker and Morgan Williams; Monkey, Monkey from
New York-based filmmaker Melissa Jordan; Rustbuckets: The
Last Rainforest from Australian filmmakers Daniel Kouts
and Paul Harmon; and Six Snails Snoring from fine arts
lawyer Charles Danziger.
The
Nicktoons Film Festival:
Screening:
10The "Friends & Enemies" Show
Airdate
& Time: Dec. 26, 2004, 10 p.m. (EST); 7 p.m. (PST), Nicktoons
Film
#1: The Wild Wild Circus Company: Fishy Memories
(Length: 5:00; 3D animation with 2D textures)Jean-Christian
Knaff and Claude Miceli Knaff are a husband and wife team
with expertise in illustration and sculpture. In addition
to running their own studio, Knaff and Miceli, the two some
have created an endearingly different series of shorts for
Nelvana called The Wild Wild Circus Company. The story
of two young acrobats, Nice and Bijou, who meet in a beautiful
park, The Wild Wild Circus is a flight into the imagination.
The episode we picked to show you is called Fishy Memories
and involves performer Bernard as he remembers his unique
childhood. (To find out more about the filmmakers and other
Wild Wild Circus Company shorts produced for Canadas
major indie house, Nelvana, e-mail funpak@corusent.com.)
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Film
#2: Loco Melones (Length: 1:20; 3D animated
in Softimage XSI)Arent you glad you have your
holiday shopping done? Now its time to get back to real
life and the annoyance of little things, like the grocery
store. In Loco Melones, filmmaker Izabela Bzymek turns
a visit to a rather downtrodden little market into a Laurel
& Hardy-esque parody of the everyday. Bzymek explains
that the concept for her prize-winning short actually came
from her boyfriend, who helped her sift through dozens of
ideas. "We were both taking up 3D at the time and I had
so many ideas, I couldnt pick one. Mike suggested, jokingly,
Why dont you do two old biddies fighting in a
market? I thought, Well, thats not bad.
I put a little story behind it and, voila! Loco Melones!"
Ahh
if only everything were that easy! (To contact Izabela
Bzymek e-mail her at ibzymek@yahoo.com
or check out her illustration website, www.faeriesarereal.com.
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Film
#3: Playing Cricket (Length: 1:40; 3D animated
in Hashs AnimationMaster)As most of us know, the
online dating thing isnt all its cracked up to
be. Humans, though, arent the only animals that have
a hard time finding their soulmate. In Jack Morrisons
clever take on insect mating, crickets do, too! Says Morrison,
"During their mating season, crickets like to invade
our house, and their favorite spot is under the tracks of
the largest sliding glass doors they can find. It got me thinking
about how clever they are to pick the best spot for amplifying
that annoying noise they make, and I wondered what extremes
a cricket might go to boost his odds." Lets just
say, "all" extremes! (To reach Jack Morrison, e-mail
him at jack@digins.com
or check out some of the work hes completed as a robotics
engineer for NASA/JPL. Jack animated "Rover Navigation
101," at http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/video/animation.html)
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Film
#4: Beach Booty (Length: 1:27; 2D, edited in
Adobe Premiere and After Effects)Oh, the perils of sunbathing.
Heres what filmmaker Alex Hirsch has to say about the
creation of his wonderfully uncomfortable short: "I made
Beach Booty for my CalArts freshman year film,"
explains Hirsch. "First year shorts are required to be
under 90 seconds, in black and white, so I needed to come
up with a fun, simple story that would communicate quickly.
Over winter break, I was cleaning out my garage when I found
this old metal detector I used to have as a kid. Even though
I never found much of anything, I always loved the idea that
under the sand could be some kind of hidden treasure. That
kind of thing really fueled my imagination, and I thought
it would be a good jumping off point for a short." (You
can contact Alex Hirsch through his e-mail address, Fezguy@hotmail.com.)
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Film
#5: Fool Throttle (Length: 5:00; Flash)Talk
about stylish and retro, filmmakers Todd Hemker and Morgan
Williams really come off the line fast with Fool Throttle.
Admittedly macabre, Fool Throttle is a cautionary tale
that, according to these filmmakers from Minneapolis-based
ReelWorks, offers a message of peace. The project started
as simply 'quirky eye candy' bumpers for the commercial houses
demo reel. In the storyboard phase, exec producer Audrey Robinson
Favorito challenged Hemker and Williams to take their scooter
character to the next level and make it a real story. The
filmmakers explain, "We drew inspiration from Dr. Seusss
The Butter Battle Book. We liked how there is
no clear innocent or guilty party in The Butter Battle,
and how the entire conflict escalates over nothing but a matter
of taste. Fool Throttles story of road rage is
a bit like The Butter Battle, an innocent misunderstanding
that leads to pointless aggression." As we all know,
pointless aggression makes for really good cartoons! (To learn
more about the filmmakers and their company, go to www.realworks.com.)
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Film
#6: Monkey, Monkey (Length: 2:18, 2D animation)Oh,
that little green monster does create conflict, doesnt
he? In the case of Melissa Jordans funny short, that
least attractive of all traits is the main subject. Says Jordan,
"I came up with the idea for Monkey, Monkey in
storyboarding class at the School of Visual Arts. My teacher
was the legendary Howard Beckerman and he asked us to create
a storyboard on the topic of jealousy. I ended up making a
whole film about it. I think the idea of using monkeys and
a tropical theme comes from Florida, where I grew up."
Jordan is working in New York at Funny Garbage, a web-design
house. (To reach Melissa Jordan, e-mail her at melissasaurus@aol.com.)
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Film
#7: Rustbuckets: The Last Rainforest (Length:
3:00; CG animation)Filmmaker Daniel Kouts says, "The
films, TV shows and animated stories Ive enjoyed the
most are the ones that dont rely on dialogue."
One of his favorite examples is The Road Runner; another
is Mr. Bean. The central character in Kouts 13x3
Rustbucket series, is Klanka 24th-century robot
who works as a janitor in an aging museum of the 20th century.
"Klank has his comedic roots in the great silent film
era comicsChaplin, Keaton," adds Kouts, who worked
with producer Paul Harmon, to develop the property. Of the
several delightful Rustbucket shorts, we selected The
Last Rainforest for its solid animation, whimsical tale
and dash of pathos. Kouts has worked for such Australian houses
as Animal Logic and Filmgraphics Prods. Harmon is an award-winning
filmmaker/producer running his own ad agency downunder. The
Australian Film Commission and SBC Television funded the pilot
episode of the series. (For more information on Rustbuckets
go to www.thinkingpictures.com.au.)
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Film
#8: Six Snails Snoring (Length: 3:00; Flash)By
day, Charles Danziger poses as a lawyer for fine artists,
but here at the film festival we know hes a talented
animator to boot. Although Danziger explains that his film
was created to help kids calm down at night, we found that
it also has a wonderfully mesmerizing effect on adults. We
kept watching it over and over without realizing it. "The
idea behind Six Snails Snoring is that young children
can learn to count as they go to bed, while at the same time
literally counting down to bedtime," says Danziger. "I
have tried to put each animal in imaginative scenes that are
appealing to kids, such as fish eating French Fries, and peacocks
playing ping-pong. By the end of the movie, the child will
have sung good night to the animals, all ten of them will
be happily snoring and, ideally, the child will be, too. The
films extraordinarily talented composers, Drew Hemenger
and Philip Carroll, managed to create the perfect, whimsical
music to give each animal a distinct personalityand
to send them off to sleep." (To contact Charles Danziger,
e-mail him at charles@danziger.com.
To see more of his animation, go to www.crunchyworld.com.)
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