Animation Magazine

A Son’s Animated Tribute

Young animator Perry Chen’s new short Changyou’s Journey is a tender homage to his late father’s life and his devotion to his family.

- By Karen Idelson

Before he was even finished with middle school, Perry Chen began a deeply personal creative journey he hoped would touch and inspire his terminally ill father to live even just a little bit longer, so they would have more time together.

“I made the first trailer in July 2012 when my dad Changyou was still alive,” says the 18-year-old Chen in a recent interview. “When I first learned that he only had about two weeks to live, I decided to make an animated film to honor his life and give him hope to live longer. I was drawing from early morning ‘til late at night every day for an entire week to make the trailer, which my dad barely managed to see before

passing away five days later.”

After his father died, Chen knew he had to continue on and make a longer version of the film, which he named

Changyou’s Journey. Using tools like Toon Boom Storyboard Pro 4.1 and TVPaint, Chen made a five-and-a-half minute version of the story over the next five years. With the help of his mom, pro- ducer Zhu Chen, he also brought on animator Matthew Fisher and background artist Kiana Mosser to help with work on the final project.

Changyou’s Journey follows the life of Chen’s father, who was born in rural China and went on to do well in school, emigrate to America and start a family. It also tackles his father’s cancer diagnosis and untimely death from the disease.

“At its core, Changyou’s Journey is a story directly from the heart” notes Chen, who is now a freshman at UC Irvine. “It’s not exactly the retelling of my dad’s life. What I wanted to convey is the feeling that I wanted the viewers to leave with. This is a film on many different levels about love: the love between my mom and my dad, my dad’s love for and dedication to his work and his family, my own love for both my dad and his memory, and the artistic medium of animation itself and storytelli­ng in general. There is nothing greater I can convey in this film than love, resilience, determinat­ion and enduring hope.”

Chen’s abilities have been lauded far and wide this year. He was a 2018 U.S. Presidenti­al Scholars in the Arts semifinali­st, a 2018 Scholastic Art & Writing Award National Gold Medalist in Film & Animation and a 2018 New York Life Award recipient. Changyou’s Journey has also won three U.S. film festival awards in the last year (Arizona Internatio­nal Film Festival, Newport Beach Film Festival, Film Now Festival), received third place documentar­y honors at the L.A. Animation Festival and qualified for an Oscar for Best Animated Short.

But Chen’s talent had already been spotted by Bill Plympton in 2010 when the seasoned animator chose Chen as one of around 70 animators around the world to work on Guard Dog Global Jam, which was a project based on the short Guard Dog, but with each scene completed by a different animator. Chen then went on to work on the short Ingrid Pitt: Beyond the Forest, which told the tale of a young Holocaust survivor. Chen was the only animator on the project and collaborat­ed with Plympton, who did storyboard­ing and character design. Chen was just 10 years old at the time.

Before the collaborat­ion with Plympton, Chen began writing for his own movie blog, PerrysRevi­ews.com, in 2008

when he was only eight years old. Later, he also wrote for Animation World Network, San Diego Tribune and Amazing Kids Magazine. He says he was always inspired by the limitlessn­ess of animation, that work in animation could be drawn from the creator’s imaginatio­n and anything he imagined could become part of a project or story.

“Japanese animation legend Hayao Miyazaki is one of the greatest inspiratio­ns who influenced my style of storytelli­ng significan­tly,” says Chen. “I never get tired of watching Spirited Away! Watching his animation as a child, I was struck by his incredible magical realism and fantasy aspect, yet with such a deep, humanistic level of heart, and appreciati­on for people, nature and life. I was flattered that the 2018 Newport Beach Film Festival jury who gave my film the Gold Award commented that the art from Changyou’s Journey reminded them of Miyazaki’s animation!” ◆

For more informatio­n, visit www.changyousj­ourney.com.

“At its core, Changyou’s Journey is a story told directly from the heart.There is nothing greater I can convey in this film than love, resilience, determinat­ion, and enduring hope.” — Director Perry Chen

 ??  ?? A young Perry Chen works with his father, Changyou (below). The 18-yearold animator today, with his mother, producer Zhu Chen.
A young Perry Chen works with his father, Changyou (below). The 18-yearold animator today, with his mother, producer Zhu Chen.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States