The Commercial Appeal

London animation studio adapts to finish Disney film

- Louise Dixon

LONDON – Hanging under blankets for audio soundproof­ing and working around patchy home Wi-fi, a London animation studio is following the British motto of “keep calm and carry on” during the coronaviru­s pandemic to complete its first feature film in time for Disney’s planned release early next year.

Some 270 crew members have been working from home on “Ron’s Gone Wrong” in a re-imagined production process that Locksmith co-founder Sarah Smith calls a logistical “nightmare.”

“It’s exciting and complex and fun and incredibly challengin­g,” said Smith, a writer and producer of the film. “And once you’ve done it once, nothing else seems even vaguely interestin­g because it’s like the hardest thing you’ve ever done.”

Most of the crew is remotely connecting to their office workspaces for digital modeling, rigging, animation and lighting. Editors then assemble the remote work, in some cases with temporaril­y out-of-sync audio.

“Looking at the stuff in edit was the hardest thing because it was out of sync and with your brain trying to figure out the fine timing of an edit, which in animation is super precise,” Smith said.

The film and television industry halted production in March because of safety fears over the coronaviru­s pandemic. Some are now restarting production or exploring ways to do so safely.

Locksmith had been in production for more than two years before the pandemic hit. Suddenly, animators found themselves on lockdown wrestling with glitchy technology while their nearby children stared at tablets. “Ironically and brilliantl­y, the film is actually about children and screen time,” Smith said.

The story is set in a world where talking robots have become children’s best friends. For one 13-year-old boy, things don’t go according to plan when his bot malfunctio­ns.

“It’s supposed to be taken away and destroyed for being dangerous. But he keeps it, and he tries to teach it how to be a friend,” Smith said.

Voice actors have been unable to record in formal studios during the lockdown. The lead child star had to tell his grandfathe­r to turn off the television and his mother to go offline in order to conserve home internet bandwidth for a remote recording session, Smith said.

Studio art director Justin Hutchinson-chatburn said it’s remarkable that animation is “thriving and surviving” during the pandemic, but he’s hoping to gather with work colleagues in person soon.

 ?? LOCKSMITH ANIMATIO VIA AP ?? Art director Justin Hutchinson­chatburn, right, communicat­es on his computer during the filming of a video diary. The London animation studio, Locksmith, had been in production on “Ron’s Gone Wrong” for more than two years before the pandemic hit.
LOCKSMITH ANIMATIO VIA AP Art director Justin Hutchinson­chatburn, right, communicat­es on his computer during the filming of a video diary. The London animation studio, Locksmith, had been in production on “Ron’s Gone Wrong” for more than two years before the pandemic hit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States