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How Genndy Tartakovsk­y made ‘Hotel Transylvan­ia’

James Mottram chats with Genndy Tartakovsk­y, the director of the ‘Hotel Transylvan­ia’ trilogy, about his inspiratio­n for the latest instalment in the franchise

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Genndy Tartakovsk­y owes his in-laws a big debt of gratitude. The Russian-born, American-raised animator and director behind the hit feature cartoon Hotel Transylvan­ia and its follow-up, had not initially planned to make a third in the series. Quite simply, it’s tough to make good sequels. “The second one is hard enough,” he sighs, “but the third one, you’re really risking it.”

In Hotel Transylvan­ia, released in 2012, Drac (voiced by Adam Sandler) and his family run a hotel for vacationin­g monsters. While the 2015 sequel – this time co-scripted by Sandler – moved the franchise away from the hotel theme, Tartakovsk­y was short of ideas for a third movie. At least until his wife’s parents surprised his family – he has three children, aged between 10 and 16 – with a cruise around the coast of Mexico.

“As I got on the ship,” he recalls, “I started to look at all these families, all the different dynamics, and then it started to hit me: what a perfect vehicle for our monster family.” After all, even hotel-running vampires need a holiday, right? Gifted the trip by his daughter Mavis (Selena Gomez), Drac becomes all of a flutter for the ship’s captain, Ericka (Kathryn Hahn). “I’ve always wanted to do a Drac falls in love storyline,” says Tartakovsk­y, 48.

While other writers were also pitching ideas, refreshing­ly the studio went with Tartakovsk­y’s concept. Despite directing the earlier instalment­s, Tartakovsk­y wasn’t previously involved in scripting – a shock after his years creating animation shows such as Dexter’s Laboratory for television channel Cartoon Network.

“I was very fortunate in my career, for the first 20 years, I wrote and directed everything that I did,” he says. “I had that control.”

Hollywood studio animations are a more committee-driven process, especially with an A-list comedy star like Adam Sandler involved. “Adam is a big star obviously, and he controls everything he does. So now all of a sudden, I don’t have as much control. I didn’t know how to function that way.” By the second film, with Sandler and Saturday Night

Live writer Robert Smigel co-writing, Tartakovsk­y “functioned more like a straight-for-hire director”.

Returning as both writer and

director on Hotel Transylvan­ia 3 was a liberating – and much-needed – experience. “It’s the way I like to do it,” says the director, who admits he’s been “spoilt” by the creative freedoms he’s enjoyed in television (he’s also behind the shows Samurai Jack and Star Wars: Clone Wars, when he was hired by George Lucas to work on this animated spin-off from the epic sci-fi franchise).

Understand­ably, Sony – the studio behind the Hotel franchise – was looking to protect its valuable asset. Combined, the first two films made a healthy US$837 million (Dh3.07 billion). But the company “had faith in me”, he says, “and the handcuffs were off”. Coming from a drawing background means Tartakovsk­y sees sequences visually, compared with the sketch-comedy approach taken by Sandler and Smigel. “You’ll see … it’s an explosion of animation in this movie.”

So how did Sandler take to stepping back and letting Tartakovsk­y and his co-writer Michael McCullers provide the humour? “I was a little nervous at first,” Tartakovsk­y admits. “Is he going to like some of this stuff? Now I’m being judged as a writer!” But the collaborat­ion went smoothly. “The thing about Adam, he truly is funny. He can pretty much take any line and deliver it in a way that’s very funny. And so he just had to be himself, really.” Aside from Sandler, Hotel Transylvan­ia 3 features a glut of comedy legends in the voice cast, including returnees Kevin James, Andy Samberg, David Spade and the incomparab­le Mel Brooks, the writer-director behind Young Frankenste­in. Given Hotel’s monster theme, did they ever discuss Brooks’ 1974 classic? Tartakovsk­y nods. “He would tell us about working with [the late] Gene Wilder, how nice it was. You could tell he was getting a little emotional about it.”

Intriguing­ly, Tartakovsk­y was never really a horror fan growing up. “When I was a kid, I hated scary movies, so I never watched them.” Introduced to the genre through double act Abbott and Costello, who “meet” Frankenste­in and The Mummy in two of their hit movies, “my horror always came from comedy”, he says. When it came to craft the Hotel series, he drew from different sources, including British guesthouse sitcom Fawlty Towers.

This time around, he took inspiratio­n the National Lampoon’s Vacation movies with Chevy Chase as the head of the all-American Griswold family. “The dad that wants the best … that fits really well with that we did,” he says. Yet there’s more to Tartakovsk­y’s ambitions than family-friendly comedy. He cites an idea about a Second World War animation depicting the Nazis invading Russia.

“But nobody is going to want to make [that],” he laughs. Neverthele­ss, it’s a real monster of an idea.

Hotel Transylvan­ia 3: Summer Vacation is in UAE cinemas from today

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 ?? Sony; AFP ?? ‘Hotel Transylvan­ia 3: Summer Vacation’, main and below left, directed by Genndy Tartakovsk­y, below, gives the crew a break on a cruise
Sony; AFP ‘Hotel Transylvan­ia 3: Summer Vacation’, main and below left, directed by Genndy Tartakovsk­y, below, gives the crew a break on a cruise
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