You are welcome to look at the talkback but please consider that this article is over 6 years old before posting.
Forum - View topicShelf Life - Typhoon Noruda
Note: this is the discussion thread for this article |
Author | Message | ||
---|---|---|---|
Zin5ki
Posts: 6680 Location: London, UK |
|
||
I might be able to complete my Gundam UC collection now! Truthfully though, I cannot say that my enthusiasm for it has persisted during the eight-year interim...
|
|||
configspace
Posts: 3717 |
|
||
Regarding Typhoon Noruda, that's a lot of money for just 26 mins of actual run time. (plus the bonus tiny extra). I can understand how a debut work meant as a sort of demo reel showcase of your talents would be short though. Perhaps he should've scaled down his ambitious story to make the pacing much better.
Sentai has been releasing these shorts separately including the ones from the Animator Expo project. I wish they compiled all of them into one volume instead. |
|||
russ869
Posts: 425 |
|
||
Yeah, I would love a collection of Animator Expo shorts.
|
|||
WingKing
Posts: 617 |
|
||
For a little more background on the main folks behind Typhoon Noruda, Arai used to work as an animator at Ghibli, and Noruda's animation director Hiroyasu Ishida made several independent short films before hiring on at Colorido. Ishida was the one who recruited Arai to join Colorido, and they've worked on several projects together since he came to the studio, normally with Ishida as the lead director and Arai as the animation director, such as with Paulette's Chair and Hinata no Aoshigure - for this movie they flipped jobs. They're also working together on Colorido's next movie, Penguin Highway (which was just announced a couple of days ago) with Ishida back in the director's seat for that one. I'm guessing they'll probably continue to trade off in the future.
For those who'd like to know more, here's a good article about Studio Colorido and their production philosophy, from around the time that Noruda came out back in 2015. It also mentions that this movie has around 18,000 animation frames, which (after doing the math) means most of it was shot on twos, like American animation, instead of on threes like a typical anime. https://www.timeout.com/tokyo/film/the-future-of-digital-animation-in-japan |
|||
MarshalBanana
Posts: 5423 |
|
||
|
|||
Animechic420
Posts: 1730 Location: A Cave Filled With Riches |
|
||
It's good to see another person who liked Gundam UC. |
|||
configspace
Posts: 3717 |
|
||
That was very interesting. I think more studios will move towards an all digital workflow at least for the main production too. |
|||
All times are GMT - 5 Hours |
||
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group