The Hamilton Spectator

Dahl works to hit Netflix as animated series

- WENDY LEE

Netflix said Tuesday that it will bring animated series and specials based on the work of acclaimed children’s author Roald Dahl to its library, including “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” “Matilda” and “The BFG.”

The Los Gatos, Calif., streaming-video giant said it will “remain faithful to the quintessen­tial spirit and tone of Dahl while also building out an imaginativ­e story universe that expands far beyond the pages of the books themselves.”

Streaming companies are investing in adding original animated series as they aim to cater to families and children. Netflix is expected to spend $1.1 billion — or 11 per cent of its original-content budget — on animation this year, according to estimates by venture capital firm Loup Ventures.

Production companies behind animated series have told the Los Angeles Times that one benefit of working with streaming services such as Netflix is the platform they provide to reach a global audience. Streaming companies also pay rates that are competitiv­e with cable TV.

Titles included in Netflix’s agreement with the Roald Dahl Story Co. also include “The Twits,” “Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator,” “George’s Marvellous Medicine,” “Boy —Tales of Childhood,” “Going Solo,” “The Enormous Crocodile,” “The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me,” “Henry Sugar,” “Billy and the Minpins,” “The Magic Finger,” “Esio Trot,” “Dirty Beasts” and “Rhyme Stew.”

Terms of the deal were not announced. The Roald Dahl Treasury is being made into an animated series on Netflix.

Adaptation­s of Dahl’s books have had a mixed track record in Hollywood. Some movies, such as Disney’s 2005 “Charlie and Chocolate Factory,” were hits, generating $475 million in worldwide ticket sales, but Stephen Spielberg’s 2016 version of “The BFG” was a flop. It cost $140 million to make and grossed just $183 million in worldwide ticket sales, according to Box Office Mojo.

Production on the first animated series for Netflix is to begin next year.

“We have great creative ambition to reimagine the journeys of so many treasured Dahl characters in fresh, contempora­ry ways with the highest quality animation ...,” said Melissa Cobb, Netflix’s vice-president of kids and family content.

The Roald Dahl Story Co. chose Netflix for a reason, Gideon Simeloff, the Dahl company’s strategy director, said in a statement: “There is no other place in the world that can deliver animated entertainm­ent for the whole family at such quality and scale.”

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