Red Stick 09: It’s Closing Time

27 04 2009
Crazy Eights creators take home the Red Baton at pitch fest.
Crazy Eights creators take home the Red Baton at pitch fest.

The festival’s last day begins with Red Stick’s now-annual Pitch Contest. It might not as well attended as KidScreen’s similar event, but the presenters are every bit as passionate about their projects and after several days of tutoring from industry pros they’re ready to rock: Tim Raglan wants to turn his beautifully illustrated kids’ book Uncle Mugsy (featuring a stuffy bulldog and his mischievous niece and nephew in a Victorian canine universe) into a movie, followed by “many episodes or sequels depending on your personal preference;” Greg Farren and Jeremy Melton merge hot rodders (only their characters race spaceships, not cars), 1950’s-style sci-fi and rockabilly music into an inspired mixture called Crazy Eights; Digital Tap’s Martin Grebing presents Zap Squad, a team of adolescent superheroes (“they’re not your average kids next door”) on time travelling adventures; Patrick, a local cartoonist whose last name I missed offers Guns McMenanin, “the most bad-ass repo man in LA,” and Chris – again last name missing – does as much stand-up as pitching (“this is the most attractive crowd I’ve ever seen at an AA meeting”) while presenting two projects – Spells, a gross-out effort starring a trio of macabre witches (“mean-spirited fun for everyone”) and El Mucho Grande, Wrestler for Hire. (“He’s so big it took two women to give him birth.”)

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Red Stick 09: F is for Friday Field Trip

27 04 2009
Hans Rijpkema
Hans Rijpkema

Friday is field trip day at the Red Stick Festival – It seems as if half of Baton Rouge’s school population has been bussed in to take part in the festivities. I share an elevator With Walt Santucci of Duck Studios, on his way to lead an all-day animation workshop with the local school kids. I bump into him again at days’ end; his group produced some 9 anti-global warming PSA’s, with some of the best work done, he says, by kids with no previous animation experience. If you teach them too much at once they start worrying if they’re doing it right or not…

I head down the hill to the Louisiana Art & Science Museum (aka LASM) auditorium where Rhythm & Hues’ Hans Rijpkema is waiting for a few field trippin’ classes to arrive so he can begin his session on how R&H built last year’s bigger, better, hulkier Incredible Hulk. We see the test clip the studio produced to snag the assignment (it goes on for a while as Hulkie smashes his way thru an office skyscraper), low-rez motion & anatomy tests, live-action video reference of the R&H animators grunting and snarling, and their after-houses goofball reel, starring a two-legged moose wearing a Speedo, the Hulk making funny faces and exploding into a half-dozen mini-Hulks, a quick glimpse of Cheney that draws boos from the crowd and Wilbur the pig transforming into a package of Oscar Meyer bacon.
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Wishing I Could Split in Two

24 04 2009
Red Stick brings animation vets to Baton Rouge - (l-r)  Scott Johnston, Stuart Sumida, Doeri Welch-Greiner and Rachelle Lewis.
Red Stick brings animation vets to Baton Rouge - (l-r) Scott Johnston, Stuart Sumida, Doeri Welch-Greiner and Rachelle Lewis.

written by Joe Strike

Day 2 of Red Stick, and the multiple events begin. Oh for the power of Dr. Manhattan to split myself up into several Joes so as to cover everything, but all I can manage is to run to and fro, capturing a taste of this and that.

In an upstairs classroom at the Shaw Center Chris Williams and Dougy Pincott are handing out modeling clay to middle school students who are about to learn the rudiments of stop motion animation. Chris and Dougy are visitors from Animex, Red Stick’s partner festival in Middlesbrough England. “We’re similar towns,” Dougy explains, “we’re both post-industrial and regenerating ourselves” through a focus on digital technology and animation. He adds that their town also features a bridge running across a major river, like the one carry I-10 across the Mississippi just south of the Shaw Center.

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Red Stick’s Opening Day Pitch

22 04 2009
Zap Squad in pitch contest.
Zap Squad in pitch contest.

written by Joe Strike

Red Stick began today for real, sort of. An abbreviated session wrapped up around 4, in time for people to go out and enjoy the warm Louisiana sun – which they needed to do after spending the past several hours in the sub-zero temperatures of the Shaw Center’s Manship Theatre. (Don’t they know this is Earth Day, you’re supposed to cut back on the AC and all that?)

First session was dedicated to ‘New Business Models,’ which are actually combinations of old business models and guess what, the internet. Animation distributors and networks are on the lookout for “content that people are already connecting with,” according to panelist Leah Hoyer of the Disney Channel, adding that videos that spread virally (what they used to call ‘word of mouth’ before there was an internet) turn the internet into an ad-hoc focus group; if a comedy or animated video gets 500,000 hits in a few days, a major distributor can safely assume a lot more of that demographic will be interested in seeing the video too. Phrases like ‘branded entertainment,’ ‘monetize on-line content,’ ‘user-generated content’ and ‘DRM’ [digital rights management] were bandied about by all present. The takeaways: high-definition content is in demand – and practice your pitch on your friends before you go into a for-real meeting.

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The T-Shirt Tells All at Red Stick

22 04 2009
Comet Ent.'s Santa vs. Claus
Comet Ent.'s Santa vs. Claus

written by Joe Strike

You can (almost) always tell an animator by their t-shirt, so I figured the young lady in the Supergirl tee waiting for the hotel shuttle at the Baton Rouge airport had to be in town, like me, for the Red Stick festival. The Supergirl fan turned out to be Carmen Llanos from Comet Entertainment, soon joined by her partner Raquel Benitez in a Chinese dragon tee. (Me, I’m wearing my Comic Book Legal Defense Fund shirt with the tough, healthily-chested cat babe pointing her gun right atcha and politely inquiring “who you tellin’ to shut up!?!”) Last year Carmen and Raquel were here with their Santa vs. Claus feature, the screening of which I missed due to an early departure. This year I’m staying to the very end, which means I’ll get to see their new one, Around the World for Free, which they tell me started as a TV pilot, became a feature and will spin itself off into a TV series after all.

Now here in the hotel lobby business office filing this entry, I’m sitting back to back with Marlene Sharp of Enemes, Inc., a Korean animation studio that’s done Higglytown Heroes for Playhouse Disney and the Stitch! DTV movie. She’s here - in a Barbie tee - to be one of the judges in Red Stick’s show pitching competition (and she types faster than me…)



Disney Sneak Peeks Princess and The Frog at Red Stick Preview

27 01 2009
The Princess and the Frog to play a key role at Red Stick in April.
The Princess and the Frog to play a key role at Red Stick in April.

Reported by Joe Strike

Back in the pre-digital, pre-xerographic days of Disney animation, the Ink and Paint department was responsible for tracing the animators’ pencil drawings onto acetate cels and filling those transparent images with color. Technological advances rendered hand inking and painting a thing of the past, but the name lived on in 1988’s Who Framed Roger Rabbit as the Ink and Paint Club, an after-hours honky-tonk where the ‘toons’ entertained Hollywood bigwigs.

There’s a new Ink and Paint Club in town, the town being Baton Rouge Louisiana, and the ‘Club’ the outreach arm of the city’s Red Stick International Animation Festival to the local business community. On January 16 the Ink and Paint Club held its premiere luncheon with Walt Disney Animation Studio’s Emily Hoppe on hand as the guest of honor. Hoppe, the studio’s senior manager of creative marketing outlined the role Disney and The Princess and the Frog, the studio’s first 2D animated film in five years, will play at Red Stick’s April festival.

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