Vancouver Sun

Canadian filmmaker enjoys working in the cartoon world

- BOB THOMPSON bthompson@postmedia.com

Getting a movie made is difficult. Putting together an animated motion picture can be even more demanding. Just ask Toronto-born filmmaker Aaron Woodley.

“I can tell you the difference­s are pretty stark,” says Woodley, who directed and co-wrote the animation Spark: A Space Tail.

“These things take a lot work and a lot of time because you have to build every little piece of the universe.”

Loosely inspired by a 16th-century Chinese fable, the movie tells the story of Spark, a courageous teenage monkey. He is joined by his buddies, the savvy fox Vix and the tech-smart pig Chunk on a journey.

Their mission is to thwart the dastardly General Zhong and his scheme to control the universe. The lightheart­ed entertainm­ent combines some laughs with action and lots of film references for kids of all ages.

“It’s really a coming-of-age story with a good-versus-evil theme,” Woodley says. “It’s about (Spark) being tested and becoming, not so much an adult, but a little bit more mature than before.”

The underlying testimonia­ls in the film come from re-creating a space adventure in a fantasy world.

There are lots of references, the director says. “There’s Planet of the Apes, The Lion King and there’s Transforme­rs, Star Wars and a Star Trek, too.”

Attracting high-profile names to do voice work was a combinatio­n of Woodley’s persuasive personalit­y and the story.

“(Jessica) Biel was the first one who responded to the script and the character,” he says. “It struck a chord with her. And then Hilary (Swank) came on and Susan (Sarandon) and finally Patrick (Stewart).”

It’s impressive stuff for the York University film school graduate who subsequent­ly “paid the bills” as a stop-motion animator for more than a decade while directing a few short films.

He made his feature-length live-action directoria­l debut with Rhinoceros Eyes, which picked up the Discovery Award at the 2003 Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival. That was followed by his movie Tennessee, starring singer Mariah Carey, and the thriller The Entitled, showcasing Ray Liotta.

Next up is another animated motion picture called Arctic Justice: Thunder Squad.

“This one’s a comedy with an environmen­tal slant to it,” Woodley says of the movie set for release in the summer of 2018.

That makes two animated films in a row.

“It kind of feels like coming full circle and going back home,” he says.

“I am very fortunate.”

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Aaron Woodley

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