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Animated Film News
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Friday, 14 December 2007 |
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Blue Sky and Fox have released a new trailer for Horton Hears a Who. The Dr. Suess story will open on March 14th. The film is about an imaginative elephant who hears a cry for help coming from a tiny speck of dust floating through the air. Suspecting there may be life on that speck and despite a surrounding community which thinks he has lost his mind, Horton is determined to help.
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Technology News
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Wednesday, 12 December 2007 |
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mental images, founded in 1986, is the recognized leader and de facto industry standard for visualization software for the entertainment, computer-aided design, scientific visualization, architecture, and other industries that require sophisticated images. The company's core product is the Academy Award®-winning photorealistic rendering software mental ray® which runs on a wide variety of platforms ranging from networks of workstations to parallel supercomputers, producing images of unsurpassed realism.
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Animated Film News
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Wednesday, 12 December 2007 |
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Imagi has secured the placement of $406 million (in HK) to finance future films. Astro Boy and Gatchaman are both scheduled to be released in 2009. Astro Boy was originally created in the 50's with an animated TV show that first aired in 1963. Gatchaman was developed in Japan in the 1970s as a TV series. It aired in the US as Battle of the Planets and G-Force.
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General Animation News
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Tuesday, 11 December 2007 |
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Press Release: Nickelodeon and DreamWorks Animation, two of the world’s most prolific producers of television and feature film animation, today announced plans to join forces on a new, 26-episode, CG animated comedy series tentatively titled The Penguins of Madagascar, based on the beloved penguin brothers in DreamWorks Animation’s hit feature film, “Madagascar” ($532 million worldwide gross) and upcoming sequel, “Madagascar, the Crate Escape.” The series, which tells the story of a group of penguins who believes it leads an elite strike force from its Central Park Zoo headquarters, will be produced at the Nickelodeon Animation Studio in Burbank, California and is scheduled to premiere on Nick in early 2009.
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Animated Film News
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Friday, 30 November 2007 |
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Worldwide Biggies, a digital studio recently opened by longtime Nickelodeon and Spike exec Albie Hecht, has acquired all rights to Simon & Schuster's long-running Tom Swift book series.
The company plans to introduce the franchise with a feature film and vidgame and follow with episodes for TV and the Web. Hecht used a similar pattern for "Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius," which opened as a film while he was head of Nick Movies and soon segued into an estimable run as a TV skein.
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