Tag: animation

  • Discovery kids to launch ‘Little Singham’

    Discovery kids to launch ‘Little Singham’

    MUMBAI: Discovery Kids, in collaboration with Rohit Shetty Picturez and Reliance Animation, is all set to launch of new animation series called Little Singham. The show will be launched on 21 April at 1.30 pm to 5.30 pm, targeting children in the age-group of 5-11 years. It will comprise 156 episodes and five tele features.

    The new animation series will be aired in three languages-Hindi, Tamil and Telugu. Dabur Red Paste has come on-board as the title sponsor of the show. Moreover, Discovery India has tied-up with Indian Council for Child Welfare National Bravery Awards (ICCW NBA) to inspire young children across the country. As a part of this tie-up, Discovery Kids will run a special Little Singham episode based on the real-life stories of winners.

    Discovery Kids head Uttam Pal Singh said, “The kid’s genre in India has been largely devoid of ground-up super heroes. Little Singham is a very bold and at-scale attempt to fill this gap. We have worked with a world-class animation partner Reliance Animation to produce this multi-faceted series rooted in action, adventure and comedy to attract attention of kids across the country.”

    Reliance Entertainment COO Shibasish Sarkar said, “We have engaged as many 250 animation artists on this project who have been working for than six months to get ready for this mega launch. The presence of Rohit Shetty as a mentor of Little Singham will further help in penetrating deep across the country.”

    Reliance Animation produced its first animated short film with international acclaim, The Bad Egg, which won the prestigious Digicon International Award at Japan and Gold Medal at New York Festival in the year 2007. Little Krishna (TV series), Krishna Aur Kans (theatrical film), Shaktimaan (TV series), BIG Bees Jr. (nursery rhymes) are some of its creations and many more to come are in the development stage. 

    Also Read:

    Kids today watch more animated content than ever

    Original Indian kids’ animation content is the need of the hour

  • Guest column: Personifying animated characters for kids

    Guest column: Personifying animated characters for kids

    MUMBAI: One day, while at my neighbor’s house, I couldn’t help but notice how excited her daughter was to dress up for her annual fancy dress competition. More than being excited about the event, she was looking forward to dressing up as her favorite animated character! I realised then how big a role characters play in influencing kids. They just don’t consume the content but also relate to the characters as they are the first and major source of entertainment and engagement for them.

    Growing up is about following myriad animated characters. The story of a character transcends beyond the show into the kid’s world and builds a strong bond with them. A child consistently associates with key qualities of a character such as beauty or courage or even just language, mannerisms or situations. Beyond just being entertained, kids constantly pick up nuances from these character worlds and relate them to their own. In them, they find an idol, a hero or just a friend.

    Kids today are surrounded by innumerable characters that have become a day-to-day part of our pop culture. We, as content creators, tend to plug into a kid’s system to gather their understanding about their likings, preferences, routines and relationships, which become an innate part of their personality. From the look and feel of the characters to the storylines, the ultimate aim is to give kids something genuinely engaging and a reason to connect with the characters.

    Readings indicate that an average child watches approximately 18,000 hours of television from kindergarten to high school. It is thus natural for them to learn and soak in these animated characters. The animation industry, which has been a massive part of our childhood, is becoming more widespread and impressive as time has gone on. Shows with Indian characters with relevance and comedy-oriented plots click brilliantly with children. Hence, a content curator needs to constantly work towards build a show by personifying an animated character with the hope of making the brand memorable and the character that may seem worthy of a relationship.

    It is only in the kids’ segment that viewers’ loyalty goes beyond the show to its characters. Characters tend to develop into being kids’ friends with whom they can have fun with. This is exactly what translates into kids wanting to have every product or merchandise with their favorite character on it.

    “Only children believe they’re capable of anything,” quoted Paulo Coelho. They’re trusting and fearless; they believe in their own power and animated characters create a fictional world that kids can relate to. It encourages them to believe in the victory of good over bad and appeals, to a great extent, to their optimistic outlook.

    Today, India’s animation industry is booming and a large part of the revenue comes from licensing and merchandising (L&M)–an important layer that allows characters to be present far and wide in a kid’s life like in schools, homes, play areas and even their bathrooms! This, however, needs to be a lot more organised and L&M needs to be seeded while a show or a character is being conceptualised. The amount of animated character-based merchandise available in the grey markets for toy clearly reflects the enormous opportunity for any brand to put foresight and planning to create product-embedded concepts and shows.

    Moreover, building early affinity to a brand can lead to a lifelong relationship. By creating meaning in the mind of the child, it helps the brand become more relatable to them. Thus, linking a brand to a popular character helps bring it to life and leverage the relationships kids have already formed with these endearing characters that they see round the clock.

    public://ms-leena-dutta.jpg The author is the business head for the kids’ genre at Sony Pictures Networks India. The views expressed here are her own and Indiantelevision.com may not subscribe to them.

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    Guest column: Digital outlook for 2018

    Guest Column: The comeback of full-service agencies in India

  • Animation sees an uptick despite expensive production

    Animation sees an uptick despite expensive production

    MUMBAI: When it comes to popular content on TV in India, general entertainment channels (GEC) lead the way. Primetime shows are most watched, most-earning and most talked about since the early years of the saas-bahu serials.

    Animation as a genre is sidelined to the kids’ channels but producing it involves tons of cash, which may not necessarily be recoverable so easily. At first, India was content with syndicated content like Tom & Jerry, Mickey Mouse, etc and only in 2008 did we get our most pride-worthy IP Chhota Bheem.

    A media professional quoted the price for producing 2D or 3D animated content to be Rs 10-20 lakh or above for one 11-22 minute show. Initial episodes entail an even higher spend at Rs 20 lakh. The cost depends on the number of characters, background, etc. Another professional estimated it to be between Rs 30-50 lakh for shows that top the chart. If we produce it with the intent of selling it to the overseas market, the investment could skyrocket to Rs 1 crore. Compare these staggering numbers with just Rs 7-8 lakh needed for a single GEC episode.

    Green Gold Animation chief strategy officer Srinivas Chilakapudi said that GECs will raise the cost depending on the quality they wish to achieve. With Netflix and Amazon bringing in high value content, TV channels will be compelled to add visually appealing elements as well. He says that the case is similar with animation.

    It took a while for producers to realise that owning IPs was more profitable than syndicating animation content. However, Green Gold has a balance of local and syndicated shows. By playing shows at different times and watching where the ratings come from, the production house does its budgeting. Older shows like Luv Kush or Arjun are syndicated at a lower price.

    GEC ad rates are four times that of kids’ channels due to the viewership they command. Brand-building founder Ambi Parameswaran says, “It will be a much lower cost per thousand to reach kids through channels focussed on them. Obviously, GECs have huge barriers to entry and while they may deliver good number of kids, you are also reaching homes without kids.”

    He says that as the penetration of TV grows, there will be a growth of sub genres like kids, sports, religion, travel etc. There has also been a growth of Indian language niche channels that will further lead fragmentation of audiences. “Surprisingly multiple TV homes are still a rarity. I expect this to change in the next five years. From the current low level of multiple TV homes (less than 5 per cent) we can expect this to go beyond 15 per cent in the coming decade,” says Parameswaran.

    Viacom18 kids entertainment head content Anu Sikka says that kids love animation as it allows them to step into an imaginary world with their favourite characters. “Kids love stepping into Furfurinagar with Motu Patlu or riding a cycle in Vedas city with Shiva. Also, the repeat value of animation content is high, which increases the shelf value of the show. This, in turn, allows broadcasters to produce hours of original content that can be played on the channel for years bringing in a great success thereby reducing the cost average.”

    She further added that connect of an original Indian show with Indian characters is higher given that there is better connect and relatability to the environment. “Also creating content locally and owning the IP’s gives us more control over the creative of the show, which then can incorporate the local sensibilities thus making the show more endearing to the audience.” She added that the turn-around time for local show is much faster compared to international shows, which is the need of the hour, especially in India, as today kids are always looking for refreshed and newer content. Today, there’s a dearth of international shows, which has a strong universal appeal and which can match the success of some of the earlier acquisitions like Ninja Hattori or Oggy and the Cockroaches. “If we own the IP, it opens up more streams of revenue for the broadcaster, especially in CP, digital platforms, licence products, etc.”

    In an earlier interview, Shemaroo Entertainment head-animation business Smita Maroo and Green Gold Animation VP-content sales Bharath Laxmipati agreed that anything that is made for the own territory is far more expensive than syndicated content.

    Sikka also agrees with Maroo and says that today there’s a strong potential as the content is being viewed on multiple platforms world over in various languages. “If the content and the characters are universal enough, the potential of them being acceptable in the international market goes up substantially.” She said that an Indian show, Pakdam Pakdai was renamed as Rat-a-Tat and was sold to 30 territories worldwide, the concept was developed by Nick and executed by Toonz animation.

    Vaibhav More Films founder Vaibhav More takes a different view. He said that GECs are expensive than animation production. “In GECs the actors are charged high. Not only this, the equipment costs, editing, post-production activities, etc are also taken into consideration.” He feels that some stories live longer via animation.

    When asked about the ways you keep the production cost low, Sikka said that today it’s increasingly becoming difficult to keep down the cost of animation series in India as there’s been a surge in demand for local animation content in India. This requirement for local content is coming not just from the broadcasters, but also from digital platforms as kids are consuming content from all these mediums. “There’s also a shortage of big animation studios which can deliver the product from scratch to the end while maintaining a certain benchmark in terms of quality,” she says. She further added that one way to control the cost is by commissioning and committing to a certain number of episodes, which allows the studios to re-use the assets which in turn keeps the cost in control. “The other option that can always be explored is to go with 2D animation, which is cheaper in comparison to 3D show, provided the concept allows you to do so.”

    Though animation is a more intense and cost-expensive content, broadcasters and creators see potential in it, especially with the growth of digital and the global reach that popular ideas are likely to get.

    Also Read :

    Japanese kids’ content going strong despite home-grown onslaught

    20 years later, ‘The Powerpuff Girls’ still breaking stereotypes

  • Green Gold’s golden Mumbai launch

    Green Gold’s golden Mumbai launch

    MUMBAI: Green Gold Animation is all set to hit the green running with its new offshoot Golden Robot. The Rajiv Chilaka-run animation outfit has been wowing everyone with its deals for animation series with both Netflix and Amazon Prime. 

    But the occasion this time was the celebration of the launch of Golden Robot’s new Mumbai studio in Mumbai’s Goregaon West area’s DLH Park (which also has the presence of Red Chillies’ VFX facilities) earlier this week.

    Spread over some 10,000 sq feet, Golden Robot is Chilaka’s third animation initiative. Its purpose: to capture more outsourced work from international studios. While Green Gold will house the original IP creating arm – churning out episodes of Chhota Bheem, Mighty Raju, and many others, Golden Robot will be producing episodes for large American and European studios.

     The whos who of the animation industry made it a point to attend the launch party which was cheered on by Golden Robot’s 250 or more employees. Among those who came to congratulate Rajiv, Srinivas, and Samir Jain included Nick boss Anu Sikka, Sony Pictures Networks India vice-president programming Ronojoy Chakraborty, Amazon Prime’s Manish Menghani and Abhishek Goradia, Bioscopewalla Pictures’ Nishit Takia and AnimationXpress.com’s Anil Wanvari.

    They all came in to wish the team luck, and of course a golden pot for Golden Robot.

    Also Read:

    Green Gold, Amazon Prime put Kerala martial art on the map

    Chhota Bheem-makers launch Golden Robot Animation

    Chhota Bheem becomes Mighty with Netflix

  • Pogo launches indigenous slapstick comedy Andy Pirki

    Pogo launches indigenous slapstick comedy Andy Pirki

    MUMBAI: Pogo is all set to roll out a new show – Andy Pirki – a slang word in the Tulu language (a language spoken on India’s southwest coast) which means ‘mad cap’. It is a silent slapstick comedy series launching from 3 December 2017, created by Mangaluru based AUM animation studios. The series will be telecasted every Sunday at 9.30 am.

    The studio came up with the idea for the show in 2009, but as a small studio, it lacked experience and budget. By 2013, the studio was producing an episode every two months. The story’s main characters include Andy, a pink dinosaur and Pirki a caveman who develop an inimitable bond because of their unique circumstances.

    Turner executive director and network head-kids South Asia Krishna Desai said that the channel decided to create a silent slapstick comedy was to ensure it has a universal appeal without language barriers or political or demographic distinctions. He added, “Since there are no dialogues, the original show is emphasised. Every show has 50 per cent visual and 50 per cent audio content; here we can deliver great audio experiences as well.”

    Andy Pirki will have 80 episodes and Pogo has planned production for 2-3 years. It is using only open source software like Blender and Krita.

    Desai said that when it comes to watching television, kids prefer light-hearted content. “Six or seven years ago there were many genres like drama and history. They were quite popular then, but now we have funny and light-hearted content that is becoming popular.”

    The production house and the network co-own the intellectual property rights (IP). It was the production house AUM animation that approached the network first a year and a half ago, showing up the rough drawings of the characters and then impressed by them, the deal got finalised.

    AUM Animation Studios MD Shreekaanth Dass said, “The initial idea to produce Andy Pirki came to us in the inception year of AUM Animation Studios in 2009. Andy Pirki has already won multiple industry awards for best animation in India and international markets.”

    Talking about the viability of the show, especially when the audience is shifting to over the top (OTT) platforms, Desai said that it is a growing trend, but as of now, it is urban-centric which can change in the long run. “In the short term, we don’t see television viewership getting affected by OTT. In long-term, anything can happen. If OTT is growing, we make sure our franchise is available digitally and it is available on linear TV as well.”

    As far as the quality of Indian content versus foreign ones is concerned, Desai says that kids don’t understand this concept and enjoy things they like.

    Awards won by Andy Pirki

    FICCI FRAMES ‘BAF’ award 2015, 2016 and 2017 – Category: Best animated episode (National)

    FICCI FRAMES ‘BAF’ award 2015 and 2017 – Category: Best animated episode (International)

    DIGICON6 India awards 2015 – Category: NextGen India

  • Rama goes unnoticed; ‘Ae Dil…’ made Rs 78 cr, Shivaay Rs 28 cr in first week

    Rama goes unnoticed; ‘Ae Dil…’ made Rs 78 cr, Shivaay Rs 28 cr in first week

    This week had a solo release, Mahayoddha Rama (Animation); the week after Diwali saw two releases, namely, Shivaay and Ae Dil Hai Mushkil. However, the film, lying in cans for eight years now, failed to draw audience. Lacking in publicity and promotion, the film went unnoticed.

    Ae Dil Hai Mushkil had a below par opening and, as the reports that came out from the early audience went against the film, it deteriorated on Saturday and Sunday leading to a weak opening weekend of Rs 35.25 crore. However, after Diwali, the film peaked on Monday almost doubling its opening day figures. The collections remained strong even on Tuesday, being a holiday and a day of family outing. Wednesday onwards, the film found its own level to match its merit as the collections dropped for the film to close its first week with a tally of Rs 78.2crore.

    hivaay, Ajay Devgn’s second attempt at direction with this action adventure, did not generate the expected anxiety and faced a poor opening day response. The collections remained static on the lower side on Saturday and Sunday as the film could put together just Rs 27.8 crore for its first weekend braving dull Diwali days.

    However, the next two days into the new week, the film made the most of two holidays on Monday and Tuesday as the collections on both days took a massive leap. By then, Devgn had also deleted about 10 minutes of length from the film following reports of the 172 minute length affecting collections.

    Collections dropped thereafter on Wednesday and Thursday as the film collected Rs 65.1crore for its first week.

    Minor releases like 31st October (tax free in Punjab), My Father Iqbal, Ek Tera Saath, Gandhigiri rated as total loss projects.

    Motu Patlu (3-D; Animation) added about Rs 10 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 4.25 crore.

  • Rama goes unnoticed; ‘Ae Dil…’ made Rs 78 cr, Shivaay Rs 28 cr in first week

    Rama goes unnoticed; ‘Ae Dil…’ made Rs 78 cr, Shivaay Rs 28 cr in first week

    This week had a solo release, Mahayoddha Rama (Animation); the week after Diwali saw two releases, namely, Shivaay and Ae Dil Hai Mushkil. However, the film, lying in cans for eight years now, failed to draw audience. Lacking in publicity and promotion, the film went unnoticed.

    Ae Dil Hai Mushkil had a below par opening and, as the reports that came out from the early audience went against the film, it deteriorated on Saturday and Sunday leading to a weak opening weekend of Rs 35.25 crore. However, after Diwali, the film peaked on Monday almost doubling its opening day figures. The collections remained strong even on Tuesday, being a holiday and a day of family outing. Wednesday onwards, the film found its own level to match its merit as the collections dropped for the film to close its first week with a tally of Rs 78.2crore.

    hivaay, Ajay Devgn’s second attempt at direction with this action adventure, did not generate the expected anxiety and faced a poor opening day response. The collections remained static on the lower side on Saturday and Sunday as the film could put together just Rs 27.8 crore for its first weekend braving dull Diwali days.

    However, the next two days into the new week, the film made the most of two holidays on Monday and Tuesday as the collections on both days took a massive leap. By then, Devgn had also deleted about 10 minutes of length from the film following reports of the 172 minute length affecting collections.

    Collections dropped thereafter on Wednesday and Thursday as the film collected Rs 65.1crore for its first week.

    Minor releases like 31st October (tax free in Punjab), My Father Iqbal, Ek Tera Saath, Gandhigiri rated as total loss projects.

    Motu Patlu (3-D; Animation) added about Rs 10 lakh in its third week to take its three week total to Rs 4.25 crore.

  • Turner Asia Pacific acquires Oggy and the Cockroaches seasons 6 and 7

    Turner Asia Pacific acquires Oggy and the Cockroaches seasons 6 and 7

    MUMBAI: Xilam, the award-winning animation production company, today announced that Turner Asia Pacific, one of its key broadcast partners, has acquired two additional seasons for its ratings-winner Oggy and the Cockroaches. The series in 4K will be delivered from 2017 onwards and available across Turner’s channels including Cartoon Network, Boomerang and Pogo.

    Turner’s chief content officer of its kids’ networks in Asia Pacific Mark Eyers said: “We all know that cockroaches have some serious survival skills, and there’s just something about Oggy and his mischievous friends that continues to connect with kids. By extending the relationship with Xilam, Turner has kept hold of a proven hit to further boost its leadership position in the region.”

    Xilam Animation CEO and founder Marc du Pontavice added, “Oggy’s worldwide success continues to hit new highs, and we are thrilled to pursue the partnership with Turner and Cartoon Network that helped build and expand Oggy as a phenomenon throughout Asia.”

    In Season 5 (78 x 7’), the battle goes on between Oggy and the roaches as they travel back in time through the ages and meet icons such as Caesar, Leonardo da Vinci and the Cyclops, as well as rocketing forward into the year 3000. Seasons 6 and 7 (156 x 7’) will comprise a mix of brand new episodes along with full remakes of classic stories from seasons 1 and 2 all produced in 4K. After almost 20 years of success, this spectacular addition of 234 new episodes, all in 4K, will project the brand in the next 15 years, as it will keep entertaining the kids and their parents with them.

  • Turner Asia Pacific acquires Oggy and the Cockroaches seasons 6 and 7

    Turner Asia Pacific acquires Oggy and the Cockroaches seasons 6 and 7

    MUMBAI: Xilam, the award-winning animation production company, today announced that Turner Asia Pacific, one of its key broadcast partners, has acquired two additional seasons for its ratings-winner Oggy and the Cockroaches. The series in 4K will be delivered from 2017 onwards and available across Turner’s channels including Cartoon Network, Boomerang and Pogo.

    Turner’s chief content officer of its kids’ networks in Asia Pacific Mark Eyers said: “We all know that cockroaches have some serious survival skills, and there’s just something about Oggy and his mischievous friends that continues to connect with kids. By extending the relationship with Xilam, Turner has kept hold of a proven hit to further boost its leadership position in the region.”

    Xilam Animation CEO and founder Marc du Pontavice added, “Oggy’s worldwide success continues to hit new highs, and we are thrilled to pursue the partnership with Turner and Cartoon Network that helped build and expand Oggy as a phenomenon throughout Asia.”

    In Season 5 (78 x 7’), the battle goes on between Oggy and the roaches as they travel back in time through the ages and meet icons such as Caesar, Leonardo da Vinci and the Cyclops, as well as rocketing forward into the year 3000. Seasons 6 and 7 (156 x 7’) will comprise a mix of brand new episodes along with full remakes of classic stories from seasons 1 and 2 all produced in 4K. After almost 20 years of success, this spectacular addition of 234 new episodes, all in 4K, will project the brand in the next 15 years, as it will keep entertaining the kids and their parents with them.

  • Chakra movies to air on Toonami; Astra Force coming soon

    Chakra movies to air on Toonami; Astra Force coming soon

    MUMBAI: After its successful debut on Cartoon Network in 2013, Graphic India and Stan Lee’s “Chakra The Invincible” is back with three new installments of “Made for TV” movies for Turner International. Chakra is the brainchild Graphic India’s Sharad Devarajan, and POW Entertainment founder Stan Lee, who is credited with creating billion-dollar character intellectual properties such as the Spider-Man, the Hulk, the Fantastic Four, Iron Man, Daredevil, Thor and the X-Men.

    Sixty to 70 mins long, the first of the three installments, Chakra Rise of the Infinitus, was aired on Turner’s Toonami last Sunday, while the second and third animated movies are scheduled for December-end and first half of 2017.

    “The movie will subsequently be aired on other Turner channels such as Cartoon Network,” said Devarajan. “I have had a great long-standing partnership with Krishna Desai who heads Turner’s kids content division. He is a true fan of comics books; Stan Lee and I saw the true potential for this kind of unique content,” Devarajan added on choosing Turner as the broadcast partner.

    To make the content travel to regional markets as well, the movies have been produced in English, Hindi, Tamil and Telugu feeds. Apart from its TV broadcasts in India, Graphic India is largely looking into syndicating the TV movies to other international markets. “Our partnership is only for the Indian market, but Graphic India is aggressively expanding to other markets with foreign broadcasting partners as well. We have already partnered with Angry Birds creators, Rovio Entertainment, and its digital platform ToonsTV, making Chakra as the first third-party character to have launched on the platform.”

    The character received a warm welcome from the fan boys in the United States. “Kids from the mid-west America have been found dressing up as an Indian superhero in cosplay conventions and birthday parties — that is how popular it is in the western markets,” Devarajan shared, adding that 100,000 copies of the comic book have been distributed in the North American market.

    Devarajan also has big plans to market the character in India, starting in the next two to three months which will tied to the promotion of the live action Bollywood film inspired by Chakra, announced by Phantom Films (in 2017).

    “We will be pushing the distribution of the comic book, organise live events, and ensure that Chakra has a visibility in games, merchandise and promotions deals with brands in India.”

    Devarajan shied away from discussing the actual budget of the latest series of TV movies, but he reassured that they have scaled up the production.

    “Now that we are getting international market attention about distribution, the more we move to multi-market, the scope of expanding both, scale and budget, increases. Working only in the Indian market gives us limited options, but when foreign players are willing to invest, we naturally consider a higher budget,” he added.

    Apart from Chakra The Invincible, Graphic India will also see its long-announced animated series “Astra Force” (featuring an animated Amitabh Bachchan) see the light of the day this year-end with Disney India being the broadcast partner.