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Key Latin America Animation Titles to Come Under the Spotlight at Annecy-MIFA's La Liga Focus

Key Latin America Animation Titles to Come Under the Spotlight at Annecy-MIFA's La Liga Focus

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'Baptism,' directed by Oscar-nominated Hugo Covarrubias, 'Carmín,' from Mexican mural and animation artists Los Calladitos and Brazil's 'Pipa and Snail,' an ode to imagination will all be highlighted at this year's La Liga Focus, Annecy-MIFA's popular Latin American spotlight.Selecting many of the most exciting and highest-quality titles from Latin America, the Focus will underscore the breadth and vibrancy of the region's animation output, plus current artistic and market trends.
Unspooling Thursday at the Imperial Palace, home to Annecy's MIFA market, La Liga yokes the energies of MIFA, Ventana Sur's Animation!, May's Quirino Awards in Canary Island Tenerife and September's Pixelatl, Mexico's major animation fest.
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'Baptism' marks the feature film debut of Chile's Covarrubias whose scored an Academy Award-nomination for best animated short in 2022 for 'Beast,' winning a Quirino Award as well. The stop-motion feature explores the same sense of disavowed disconnect between daily life under Augusto Pinochet and the ghastly deeds carried out by his regime.
A short film sourced from Pixelatl's Shortway strand, 'Carmín' marks the latest from Los Calladitos, who have painted another mural in Annecy, a 15 meter x 15 meter work in a prime festival location, on the façade of Annecy's central Pathé Cinema. This is the first mural in a series of murals that they plan to create in the future, notes Silvina Cornillón, director of the Ibero-American Quirino Awards who had coordinated Annecy's La Liga Focus.
From Brazil's Mesinha Amarela, ('PiOinc'), 'Pipa and Snail' proved one of the standouts at last December's Animation! in Uruguay, with three other titles – 'Superchance,' 'Baptism,' 'Hua Awakes' – also winning MIFA Annecy Awards to take part in La Liga Focus.Another La Liga Focus title, 'Where There's a Will, There's a Way' is tapped from the 2025 Animation! Mentoring Program for Female Creators.
'La Liga Focus showcases the extraordinary talent and creativity of Latin American animation, combining universal themes with our region's unique history and culture – from Chile's dictatorship memories in stop-motion to Colombian feminist stories in mixed media to Peruvian-Chinese identity in CGI – all with diverse visual styles and strong creative identity,' said Cornillón.
Here's a closer look at this year's lineup:'Baptism,' ('Bautizo') (Hugo Covarrubias, Chile)After losing a VHS tape of his baptism, Héctor attempts to fill in the gaps of his memories from his childhood, which ran parallel to Augusto Pinochet's military dictatorship. Produced by Lucas Engel at Chile's Pista B and France's Vivement Lundi!, written by Covarrubias and Alejandra Moffat and targeting 14+ spectators, the project 'questions the subjectivity of memory, whether the truths we cling to are shields fabricated to guard us from trauma,' Covarrubias told Variety.
'Carmín,' (Ariadna Galaz, Mexico)A 2D short film prized at Pixelatl, directed by Ariadna Galaz – one half with Jorge Peralta of producers Los Calladitos – 'Carmín' explores characters based on legends, myths or real characters representing communities. Here, Carmín, a half-human, half-coyote girl, lives alone on an island of giant cactus, encounters a giant coyota, wounded and forgotten by its pack. The title mixes adventure, coming of age, migration and fantasy, La Liga notes.
'Hua Awakens,' ('El despertar de Hua,') ( Daniel R. Chang Acat, Peru)Peruvian-born Chinese teen Cheng struggles with his dual identity. After arguing with his father, he's transported to an ancient Chinese village where he battles a dark spirit to reconcile with his roots. The CGI title 'brings the rarely depicted experience of the Chinese-Latin American diaspora to life, highlighting the Asian minority experience in Latin America,' producer Saul Anampa explains.
'Pipa and Snail,' ('Pipa e Caracol,' Alex Ribondi & Ricardo Makoto, Brazil)A 2D cutout animation series from Brazil's award-winning Mesinha Amarela follows twins Pipa and Snail as they embark on adventures in a magical forest where a flying whale marks the passage of time, stones have feelings and stars appear as butterflies. Ribondi comments: 'It's a series where fun and philosophy go side by side.' Presented at Rio2C, Animacoaching, SAPI and Brasilia Film Fest in 2018.
'Superchance,' (Juan Gallo, Uruguay)Produced by Cine HHH, a reality show in which contestants repress their desires are expelled. What they don't know is that by losing they find the freedom to live true to their desires. A multi-prize winner at December's Animation! billed as a dark comedy made with 2D, 3D and grease pencil techniques, the series producers are Micaela Tcherkassky & Itatí Romero who are looking to structure the title as an international co-production.
'Where There's a Will, There's a Way,'('El Que Quiere Besar Busca la Boca,' Sandra Obando Morales/Tatiana Pinzon Salavarrieta Colombia)Yolanda is born with wings, which are clipped by her family. She spends her life trapped in a house that literally feeds on female sacrifice. Luckily, her daughters come back for her, and after a lifetime of servitude, Yolanda finally gets to fly—no metaphor this time. Gender dynamics depicted through the prism of allegory and magic realism. A black comedy step-up for Colombia's Malpraxis Studio, using 2D, 3D and stop-motion.
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‘How to Train Your Dragon' Director on the Big Changes Made and the Storylines He Expanded for Live-Action Remake
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‘How to Train Your Dragon' Director on the Big Changes Made and the Storylines He Expanded for Live-Action Remake

When 'How to Train Your Dragon' director Dean DeBlois received a call from Universal telling him they were considering a live-action reimaging of the animated feature, his first response was 'I don't want to see someone else's version of this.' DeBlois had never made a live-action film, but this was his baby, and of course, he felt protective. Back in 2010, he and Chris Sanders co-wrote and co-directed the fantastical animated feature that would spawn a trilogy. DeBlois pleaded with the studio. 'I said, 'If you're going to do it, please consider me as the writer and director.'' He went on to tell them, ''I do know where the heart is, and I know this world. I know these characters. So I pledge and promise that we will bring that over into this new medium, intact, and then expand wherever it was additive, you know, find a myriad of ways of giving a little more character depth, expanded mythology, make it more immersive, lean into the tools of live action, but always with the wonder and emotion intact.'' More from Variety 'How to Train Your Dragon' Star Nico Parker Says Astrid Is a 'Boss Bitch' in New Live-Action Film Box Office: 'How to Train Your Dragon' Flies to $8.6 Million in Thursday Previews, A24's 'Materialists' Earns $1.5 Million New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week And he did. In bringing the film to life, DeBlois knew he had to honor what had come before. And while the live-action film features a lot of shot-for-shot moments, he also knew he had room to expand the world through storytelling. The film stars Mason Thames as Hiccup, the young Viking boy whose village is under attack from dragons, and soon finds himself befriending one, Toothless. Together, they take flight and become best friends, but this friendship soon disrupts the community and opens up a world of possibilities for both the Vikings and dragons. DeBlois spoke with Variety about honoring the animated feature, changes he made to the story, casting his characters and the film's box office projections. I think recognizing that we have a devout, fervent and vocal fan base, I wanted to be able to honor them with a few moments that we all know are iconic to the entire franchise, and they happen to reside in this first movie. There's the moment where Hiccup and Toothless are befriending one another and drawing in the sand, which leads to the first touch. And then there was also the moment where Hiccup and Toothless are flying together above the clouds and testing out the flight rig, and they become detached. Both are set to beautiful pieces of music by John Powell, and they're considered to be iconic moments of that friendship and that entire journey. So I thought it would be a fun and challenging task to try to recreate that in the medium of live action, shot for shot as possible. That was an homage to the fan base, and to that original source material, and also that might allow us to then play around a little bit elsewhere in the movie, and maybe omit a couple moments we no longer needed from the animated movie, and delve a little deeper into others that we that we felt might be beneficial in terms of deepening characters and relationships. It was rehearsed and actually shot on one day. I credit our puppeteer team for a lot of it, because they had figured out the whole choreography of what the line work in the sand was going to be, and how Mason would be stepping around it. And Tom Wilton, the puppeteer who operated the Toothless head, is just amazing. He can make himself vanish on a set, and you just believe that the character is there. He had this foam head of Toothless with articulated ear plates, mouth, and he just breathed so much life into it. So, Mason had a dragon as a scene partner. Mason has a background in ballet, and so he was able to sort of match the choreography beautifully. We played John Powell's music over the loudspeakers to make it that special. This version allowed us to go a little bit more nuanced with the performances. And I thought the father son relationship could benefit from knowing a little bit about a little bit more about Stoick's (Gerard Butler) plight, seeing him as sort of a very public politician, in a sense, trying to keep his dispirited group together and motivated, remotivating them one more time to follow the objective and try to find the dragon's nest after they'd been defeated yet again in a nighttime raid. I loved the grandstanding of the persona that he puts on publicly and the vulnerability that he shows once the room is emptied out. That was a nice dimension to bring to Gerard Butler's character, and then see that reflected in his relationship with Mason going forward. Every private conversation they have, right up until the very public blow-up, has a deeper sense of connection. And it brings an authenticity to the whole mix that I feel as a son who was a disappointment to my father. I feel that connection, and that push and pull of love and expectation, and it played out with much more authenticity. In other places, there was the venturing with the warriors into the fog and reminding the audience that as Hiccup is befriending a dragon back on the island of Berk, elsewhere, they're still very much a threat, and lives are being lost, and this is still a big issue that needs to be resolved that's soon going to fall upon Hiccup's shoulders. I'd seen a bunch of his lesser-known films like 'Dear Frankie,' so on the heels of watching '300,' and I thought he could play the gamut. It is a combination of all of Gerard's strengths that's quite satisfying in terms of the arc of the character going from being so set in his ways and almost a villain in the story. It's a story of redemption for him. He comes to see this disappointing failure of his son turn into a strength that is a who can take the tribe forward into an era of peace and there's humility in that. The secret was Framestore. They're an amazing visual effects company with very talented animators. I married our Framestore team, led by Christian Manz, our visual effects supervisor, with a longtime friend of mine, Glen McIntosh, who comes from Industrial Light and Magic. He had worked on the 'Jurassic Park' films as an animation supervisor. 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Brad Garrett Signs with Gersh for Voiceover Representation (EXCLUSIVE)

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