KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS – Official Trailer [HD] – In Theaters August 2016

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4-6qJzeb3A

 

Focus Features will release LAIKA’s KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS nationwide on August 19, 2016

Download the high-res version of the new character posters here: http://wdrv.it/1VpUYrr

Watch the debut of the new trailer here: https://youtu.be/p4-6qJzeb3A

Fans wanting to learn more about Kubo’s epic quest, the friends joining him on his journey, and the monsters that stand in his way can get sneak peeks through his Instagram account at @Kubothemovie

Updated Synopsis:

Story: An epic action-adventure set in a fantastical Japan from acclaimed animation studio LAIKA. Clever, kindhearted Kubo (voiced by Art Parkinson of “Game of Thrones”) ekes out a humble living, telling stories to the people of his seaside town including Hosato (George Takei), Akihiro (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa), and Kameyo (Academy Award nominee Brenda Vaccaro). But his relatively quiet existence is shattered when he accidentally summons a spirit from his past which storms down from the heavens to enforce an age-old vendetta. Now on the run, Kubo joins forces with Monkey (Academy Award winner Charlize Theron) and Beetle (Academy Award winner Matthew McConaughey), and sets out on a thrilling quest to save his family and solve the mystery of his fallen father, the greatest samurai warrior the world has ever known. With the help of his shamisen – a magical musical instrument – Kubo must battle gods and monsters, including the vengeful Moon King (Academy Award nominee Ralph Fiennes) and the evil twin Sisters (Academy Award nominee Rooney Mara), to unlock the secret of his legacy, reunite his family, and fulfill his heroic destiny.

Director: Travis Knight

Writers: Marc Haimes and Chris Butler (“ParaNorman”)

Voice Cast: Art Parkinson, Matthew McConaughey, Charlize Theron, Rooney Mara, Ralph Fiennes, George Takei, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Brenda Vaccaro

 

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Dan Shefelman

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What is your name and your current occupation?
Dan Shefelman, Cartoonist, Director, Head of Story, Writer.
What are some of the crazier jobs you had before getting into animation?
Hanging 200 feet on the side of a building painting a trompe l’oeil mural on Park Avenue in NYC. The owner of the company was color blind but we were’nt supposed to know. So he would come to the site and tell us to add more red. We would do nothing and the next day he’d say it looked much better. The union guys on the site hated us because we were non-union. They would tip over our paint. Once I got stranded 200 feet up on the scaffold when the electrician shut off the power at quitting time. I had to swing like Spiderman on my safety line over to a fire escape and climb down. I finally quit the next day when I realized I was risking my life for “art”.
What are some of your favorite projects you’re proud to have been a part of?
Teaching storyboarding at NYU. It’s so great to see new talent develop. I did a flash political web cartoon during the 2008 election on CNN.com. Wrote, designed and animated it. I love the collaboration of big productions but it’s always very satisfying to do everything on your own.  I have always been proud of working on the story team at Blue Sky on Ice Age. It was the first feature for Blue Sky and it was great to be there in the beginning as we all flailed our way to discover how to get these monsters done. I am particularly proud of the cave painting sequence I storyboarded which dealt with difficult issues of loss and forgiveness in a family movie without terrifying the kids in the audience. The big challenge was to Continue reading

Carol Wyatt

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What is your name?

Carol Wyatt.
What are some of your favorite projects you’re proud to have been a part of?
I am very proud to have been a part of the first 4 years of The Simpsons TV series. I started out as a background cleanup artist working with Nancy Kruse and ended up doing background design & layout, assistant animation on the Butterfinger commercials, and color supervisor for 3 of the 4 years. It was a real learning experience working with Wes Archer, David Silverman, Brad Bird, Rich Moore, and many, many incredible animators! Klasky/Csupo was a crazy and fun place to be in the late 80s.  Another project I am very proud of is Nightmare Ned for Disney. It was an incredible opportunity to design and paint in a very unique and fun style. I worked  with immensely talented artists like Conrad Vernon, Mike Mitchell, Vince Waller, Mike Bell, Paul Tibbitt, Howy Parkins, Alan Smart, Miles Thompson, and Sue Mondt. We were definitely the Disney underdogs. I am very proud to have been a part of Foster’s Home For Imaginary Friends on Cartoon Network and, most recently, The Ricky Gervais Show for HBO.  Most projects I have worked on I am very proud of and the people I have met are the BEST!

 

How did you become interested in animation?
I loved cartoons growing up and was a huge fan of Bugs Bunny and Pink Panther cartoons, plus the little cartoons on Sesame Street. Cartoons were only on on Saturday mornings when I was a kid, so it was a really big deal when a new show like Scooby Doo aired. I didn’t realize it at the time, but Continue reading

Ivan Sarrion Soria

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What is your name and your current occupation?
My name is Ivan Sarrion Soria and I´m looking for a stop motion animator job, but now I’m doing a little short with Victor Saez (model maker and set builder) and I’m learning some 2d animation.What are some of the crazier jobs you had before getting into animation?
I used to work in a friends paint company, I was helping them to paint houses and also we did letterings and drawings on the walls (we did commercial graffiti… well, we didn’t do only commercial graffiti), after working we painted graffiti with leftover paint of these works. Sometimes we still do. Here are our “legal” works: http://disyrot.blogspot.com.es/

What are some of your favorite projects you’re proud to have been a part of?
I’m proud of all the projects I have participated, all were good to acquire experience. But I am particularly proud and grateful to worked as Stop Motion animator in two full seasons and also as director for one chapter in the “Clay Kids” series created by Javier Tostado (Clay Animation). It was my first job in the animation world and here I really learned to animate. Here I met great people and participated in their personal projects. I enjoyed participating with “SuKolega prod” a small studio of Stop Motion animation directed by J. Tomas Mira, and I worked side by side with Sergio Moreno, Kecy Salangad and Manuel Rubio, big professionals in the Stop Motion animation sector. A really good experience.  My experience as a stop motion teacher in Clay Animation was very gratifying, I was the substitute for David Caballer, he used to be my teacher, the best I’ve ever had, and with this experience I reaffirmed my animation knowledge and also acquired more experience to lead a group of animators. I love teaching and the people I met there.

Where are you from and how did you get into the animation business?
I´m from a little city of Valencia (Spain) named Alzira. It is one of the cities with more “Fallas” of the world in proportion to her citizens. As my grandfather was fallas artist in my house always breathe an artistic atmosphere. My family always supported me in everything artrelated, I’m very thankful. As I mentioned, I was interested by graffiti, and this help me to find people with my same artistic concerns, with them I experienced lots of different art techniques and I discovered the animation world (at that moment i was only doing little tests with clay in Stop Motion), so I decided to study 3D animation, but soon I went back to Stop Motion animation and when I was nineteen years started working as animator.

What’s a typical day like for you with regards to your job?
When I worked in “Clay Kids” I had entire day to animate, the gears of the “Clay Kids” machine ran very well, all workers worked at once and that facilitated the production labour. Therefore, I was only centrated in animate, I loved it.
Now ,I have many open fronts, as I said, I’m about to start a Stop Motion production with Victor Saez as I’m learning to use 2D animation programs and looking for a Stop Motion animator job. This is my current typical day.

What part of your job do you like best? Why?
All, I love animation! I like when I have to interprete a large and expressive acting, think in an attitude and poses, to climb the frames like a ladder… I like when the characters have to jump, run, fly or any expressive thing in the scene.
Also, as said David Caballer (Stop Motion animator) when we work together in the short “The Cryptozoologist”: -“I never before saw a Mosquiphant”- the mosquiphant is a mixture of elephant with fly and that’s another wonderful thing of animation world, many times we have to invent how to move different creatures and bring them to life.
And see the end result is beautiful too, you can see all the work done in months passing in minutes… But it is awesome!

What part of your job do you like least? Why?
I don’t like when some production requirements limit or subtract the creativity progress, because this still make you enjoy your work, I understand sometimes is necessary.

What kind of technology do you work with on a daily basis, how has technology changed in the last few years in your field and how has that impacted you in your job?
Now I use DragonFrame, and when I started to animate already existed live view in cameras, so with a single camera I could animate things with a good preview. The change from StopMotionDragon to DragonFrame was very good, among many things, I would like to feature the incorporation of a lipsync animation interface and the new control mouths organization as it has it’s brand new little internal app. It’s a very practical program and varies according to the new needings of the sector.

What is the most difficult part for you about being in the business?
When we work in a Stop Motion production, every day we should be inspired but not every day the inspiration comes, so the most difficult part of my work is when I have to find the afflatus by duty. Forcing this sometimes damages the resulting work but if you have a good day at all everything is fabulous. Also we have to consider how hard are all necessary requirements within the scene you’re animating, always respecting the project. That is a important part of the job. And finally having to travel abroad to have the choice of get work continuously, at home I’m really well, my grandmother makes the best paella in the world.

If you could change the way the business works and is run how would you do it?
I’d settle for having more jobs closer to home and not have to get out of my country looking for it. This could be solved with greater support to creators for create a big industry, I think we can. And I would try to provide good communication between animation professionals, locally and internationally, internet makes this function but it can be better. Greater communication would allow a better exchange of professionals and knowledges.

In your travels, have you had any brushes with animation greatness?
Well, I never went to other country for job, fortunately or unfortunately, But I worked with big professionals to animation, people who I admire, like Pablo Llorens (Director/animador: “El enigma del chico croqueta”, “Molecular Zombie”…), David Caballer (animator in “Vicenta”, among others, and director to animation in “Clay Kids”), Vivente Mallols (animator: “Pos Eso”, “Clay Kids”… and director in “The cryptozoologist”), Sergio Lara (animator in “Anomalisa”, “Under The Apple Tree”…), Raul Eguia and Maria Moreira (animators: “Clay Kids”, “Shaun the sheep movie”…), Manuel Rubio (animator: “O Apostolo”, “Clay Kids”, “Anomalisa”…), Fran Deltell (animator in “Clay Kids” and now work in “Amazing World of Gumball”) and more great people and professionals who i could name. I respect them a lot and I enjoyed learning from they.

Describe a tough situation you had in life.
Luckily life gives me strength to overcome difficulties, so aren’t difficulties. But If I or my family don’t work is very hard. Unfortunately, now in Spain this can happen, hopefully soon the situation will change here.

Any side projects you’re working on that you’d like to share details of?
Anything right now, but surely soon I will show personal works in Stop Motion and 2D animation. You can follow me on my vimeo channel: https://vimeo.com/user45528896

Any unusual talents or hobbies like tying a cherry stem with your tongue or metallurgy?
My main hobby is drawing, this is not unusual, the only unusual thing might be when I paint it on the wall. And well, I have the habit of drawing every day, on all surfaces, sometimes I do not know or because I’m drawing only drawing , mainly all kinds of characters… and my girlfriend hates when I draw her magazines.

Is there any advice you can give for an aspiring animation student or artist trying to break into the business?
The first thing I recommend is that fortunately (at least in Stop Motion) the practice you can perform without being hired, this allows you to gain experience from home. Practice is the trick! And also say that the internet is a great ally, that can give us a lot of information and contacts in the industry. Above all things you have to enjoy and learn from the job and all his coworkers, these projects are very nice and sometimes ephemeral.  We have to enjoy and learn!

 

 

 

Dean Yeagle

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What is your name and your current occupation?
Dean Yeagle – I have my own animation company, Caged Beagle Productions, and I do cartoons for Playboy Magazine and publish my own books as well.  My pinup girl character, Mandy, has become known all over the world due to the Internet, and I do original drawings of her for galleries and collectors.

What are some of the crazier jobs you had before getting into animation?
Well, aside from a summer job when I was just out of high school with the Head Start program, animation was my first ‘real’ job.  It was interrupted by a stint in the Navy during Vietnam, and then I went back into animation.  There’s plenty of ‘crazy’ in animation, anyway.

What are some of your favorite projects you’re proud to have been a part of? 
I produced, directed and largely animated the Cookie-Crisp cereal spots for eight years…they were fun, sort of like 30 second Tex Avery cartoons.  I worked on  various TV specials, for Warner Bros. (animating Bugs and Daffy and Elmer), and animated the Trolls in The Gnomes; I did pre-production work on ICE AGE; and I did lots and lots of commercials and worked with some great people, here and in London.  And now I’m doing full-page color cartoons for Playboy Magazine.

How did you become interested in animation? 
The way everyone does – watching cartoons as a kid.  The Disney features were just magic to me, and I knew early on that I had to be involved in doing that.  The old Disney ABC network show often had programs about the process of animation, and I knew Continue reading

Darnell Johnson

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What is your name and your current occupation?
Darnell Johnson I am an Illustrator and Visual Development Artist, who enjoys telling stories with color and light.

What are some of the crazier jobs you had before getting into animation?
I didn’t really have any crazy jobs. Starting in high school I started my own t-shirt airbrush business. I designed business cards, flyers, logos, and painted portraits.

What are some of your favorite projects you’re proud to have been a part of?
I would have to say the freelance Marvel gig I worked on pencils for “Dog Pool Vs Void Mutt” in “DeadPool Family”. It was my first big professional job. Still fairly new in my career so I’m sure there will be other projects that I’m proud of in the future.

How did you become interested in animation?
I’ve always love to draw since I was little creating my own comics at home. It was my elementary school art teacher Mrs. C who told me one day to draw my own cartoon characters. From that day on I started to develop short stories to design characters for. They weren’t your greatest stories but it was a start. As I got older my appetite for Continue reading