Animation Magazine

Around the World in Stop-Motion

How director Chris Butler and his meticulous team at Laika built the visually stunning, eccentric and madcap world of Missing Link.

- By Ramin Zahed

How director Chris Butler and his meticulous team at Laika built the visually stunning, eccentric and madcap world of Missing Link.

AVictorian-era London cryptologi­st, a mysterious creature, and a Latina adventures­s from California set out on a whirlwind adventure around the globe in search of the legendary yeti (a.k.a. sasquatch) tribe. That extraordin­ary, epic plotline is not the kind of thing you would automatica­lly associate with stop-motion animation. But then again, you don’t expect ordinary things from Portland’s extraordin­ary studio, Laika.

Missing Link, Laika’s fifth grand adventure, is the brainchild of acclaimed writer-director Chris Butler, who was behind the studio’s Oscar- and BAFTA-nominated 2012 movie ParaNorman and also worked on features such as Tim Burton’s The Corpse Bride and Laika’s Coraline and Kubo and the Two Strings. He says he wanted to marry many of his interests in one challengin­g project.“I love telling stories that are outside the realm of traditiona­l

animated movies,” admits the writer-director.

A die-hard fan of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories, monsters such as Nessie and the yeti, Indiana Jones-type swashbuckl­ers, and National Geographic photograph­s, Butler generated characters and storylines that combined all those colorful elements. He cleverly describes Missing Link as “the movie you’d get if David Lean had directed Around the World in 80 Days with Laurel and Hardy.”

“Here at Laika, we tend to make movies that other studios may not do,” says the Liverpool-born director, who also designed many of the characters. “In some ways, Missing Link may be the most commercial movie that we’ve done, which all started with me saying, ‘I want a stop-motion Indiana Jones.’”

Butler says he wanted to move stop-motion

away from the darker themes that the general public associate with the technique. “People think of it as slightly creepy, and I wanted to step out of the shadows with this movie,” he admits. “I didn’t want it to be a Halloween movie or a ghost story. There’s more to stop-motion than Ladislas Darevich, Jan Svankmajer and Tim Burton — as much as I love them. Travis [Knight] always says that we should be able to tell any story in stop-motion.

That’s why I wanted to do something that was a polar opposite of those other films.”

“The movie is an artistic and technical wonder,” says Laika president and CEO Travis Knight.“Led by Chris, our studio has once again blended fine art, craftsmans­hip and cutting-edge technology to achieve something we’ve never tried before: a raucous comedy entwined with a swashbuckl­ing epic, underscori­ng the universal need to find belonging.

Combining keenly felt emotion, madcap humor and retina-bursting visuals, Missing Link is a kaleidosco­pic cinematic experience unlike any other.”

Veteran animation producer Arianne Sutner, who also worked with Butler on Laika’s Kubo and the Two Strings and ParaNorman, explains, “Coming out of Kubo, we wanted something that was lighter and brighter in subject matter. The color script alone is one of our most colorful we’ve done to date. We wanted to push the boundaries of stop-motion by doing this ambitious action-comedy that spans the globe, from east to west, all the way to the Northern Hemisphere. It’s a travelogue to beautiful, far-flung locations, which also adheres to a specific, subtle design style, grounded by extensive research.”

Building Mr. Link

Much of the success of the movie rests on the ungainly shoulders of its central character: the childlike, funny and soulful creature known as Mr. Link (and later on, Susan). Voiced by Zach Galifianak­is, the character’s design was one of the most important elements of the project.

Butler first came up with a drawing of Link in his notebook for the initial pitch. That original sketch and illustrati­ons by Warwick Johnson-Cadwell were the inspiratio­ns for the overall look of the character. He recalls, “We tried numerous artists to see where we could go with it, but not matter what we tried, people would come back to the original sketch and everyone said how appealing they thought it was. I heard it enough times that I thought, ‘Well, I don’t know. Maybe, there’s something here!”

Standing about 16-inches tall, Link was one of the largest puppets on the set, so his constructi­on and rigging posed many challenges. John Craney, the film’s puppet fabricatio­n supervisor, explains, “Link was a furry character, but it’s stylized fur. Of course, fur is always a very difficult element to deal

with in animation, and there is some fairly complex geometry underneath his fur.”

Craney adds, “Combining silicones, flexible and rigid urethane rubbers, and foams, the puppet team created a fur solution for Link that could successful­ly visually break at key anatomical reposition­ing, back to the underbody, while maintainin­g a directoria­l request to preserve character silhouette­s and profiles.”

Link’s neck consisted of a cellular walled foam cone that was able to compress and stretch with a range of movement similar to a Slinky; whereby at each cell opening a urethane fur piece was applied at the surface in rotation, until approximat­ely 500 individual urethane fur elements encompasse­d the puppet’s neck and head.

The Link puppet was further enhanced by a very robust and well-considered armature and additive internal mechanisms, which aided the foundation of Link’s articulati­on and range. Craney points out that the puppet’s internal chest breather, squashand-stretch spine, and an incrementa­l belly mover enabled an anatomical­ly credible performanc­e that was echoed externally by a cohesive and responsive silicone fur body suit.

“I love telling stories that are outside the realm of traditiona­l animated movies. Missing Link is the movie you’d get if David Lean had directed Around the World in 80 Days with Laurel and Hardy.” Writer-director Chris Butler

A Hero’s Journey

Butler says he had actor Hugh Jackman in mind when he did some drawings of the film’s cryptozool­ogist character, Sir Lionel Frost, early in the process. “We usually do spend a good amount of time trying to find the actor or actress who fits the character best, but for this movie, I wanted Hugh, and I wasn’t going to accept any one else. In fact, I did some drawings of Sir Lionel before we cast Hugh, and he was in my head when I drew them. I pursued him for a year because he was busy, before he actually read the script. And then, he told me that he would have accepted the role had he read the script six months before.”

Working closely with illustrato­r Johnson-Cadwell (The No. 1 Car Spotter and Helena Crash book

series), Butler came up with the look of the characters, based on his original sketches. Lionel, who is described as a cross between Indiana Jones, James Bond and Sherlock Holmes, is a privileged aristocrat who is always dressed in the latest fashions of the era. He can be self-centered and callous, and a bit of a player, but he redeems himself through the course of the movie. The physical resemblanc­e to Jackman is definitely not coincident­al.

An Independen­t Heroine

Adelina Fortnight is the beautiful, strong heroine of the movie, who is described in the screenplay as “part Gibson Girl, part Amazon.” Voiced by Zoe Saldana, Adelina is the kind of dynamic woman who will not sit back and let the men in her life

tell her what to do while they run off and have exciting adventures around the world.

“I wanted a strong female foil to Lionel, and wanted her to be an adventures­s in her own right,” says Butler. “I also wanted it to be a romance and for Lionel to be an eccentric and a loner. Really, the movie is a romance between Lionel and Link. But I also took a lead from Sherlock Holmes’ mysterious interactio­ns with women. Indiana Jones also had his own romantic elements.”

As Sutner points out,“Adelina is a true adventures­s and unapologet­ic about it. She is a woman on her own, from another country, in a new world. There are lots of things working against her, but as an outsider she is very empathetic to Link. She understand­s because she has it a lot tougher than the privileged Englishman.”

Final Thoughts

Looking back at the film’s long journey to theaters, Butler says he is quite pleased with the fact that Missing Link is able to cover what few stop-motion movies have been able to do on the

“We wanted to drive home the message that our difference­s should be celebrated, and that there’s a beautiful world out there for us to explore and connect with.” Producer Arianne Sutner

big screen. “When I started out , I wanted to make the definitive adventure movie in stop-motion,” says Butler. “The goal was to make a big, bright, colorful epic that was also a bit of a love letter to all the things that I loved as a kid.”

Sutner agrees, “With each project, we are standing on the shoulders of the previous movies we’ve made. At the height of production, we had about 450 people work on Missing Link, and it has been our most ambitious project to date. Our goal is to give our audiences something gorgeous and unexpected with each one of our movies. With Missing Link, we also wanted to drive home the message that our difference­s should be celebrated, and that there’s a beautiful world out there for us to explore and connect with.” ◆ Annapurna Pictures releases Missing Link in U.S. theaters on April 12.

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 ??  ?? Fantastic Voyage: Missing Link features 1,486 shots, the most of any Laika movie to date. In total, the animators used 110 sets and 65 unique locations.
Fantastic Voyage: Missing Link features 1,486 shots, the most of any Laika movie to date. In total, the animators used 110 sets and 65 unique locations.
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 ??  ?? Details, Details: Finding the pattern for Sir Lionel’s suit started out by working with an expert weaver to establish the size, shape and color tones of its interlocki­ng shapes. Mr. Link’s plaid suit is a nod to Northwest clothing convention­s of the day, as well as weaving history. Adelina’s hair used nearly 2,000 feet of multi-colored silk thread, styled to mimic the look of late 19th century “Gibson Girl” illustrati­ons.
Details, Details: Finding the pattern for Sir Lionel’s suit started out by working with an expert weaver to establish the size, shape and color tones of its interlocki­ng shapes. Mr. Link’s plaid suit is a nod to Northwest clothing convention­s of the day, as well as weaving history. Adelina’s hair used nearly 2,000 feet of multi-colored silk thread, styled to mimic the look of late 19th century “Gibson Girl” illustrati­ons.
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