Animation Magazine

Discoverin­g Santa’s Origin Story

Sergio Pablos offers a sneak peek at his much-anticipate­d 2D feature Klaus.

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Sergio Pablos offers a sneak peek at his muchantici­pated 2D feature Klaus.

For the past few years, fans of beautifull­y crafted 2D animated features have been waiting patiently for Sergio Pablos’ new feature Klaus. The movie, which is described as a Santa Claus origin story, centers on the friendship between a young mailman and an old toymaker in a snowy village, and will get an Oscar-qualifying run this December, thanks to its distributo­r Netflix. The Spanish animation veteran will be at Annecy this month, offering a special “work in progress” sneak peek.

We recently caught up with the talented director, who was kind enough to answer a few of our questions, although he is quite busy working on the movie at this Madrid-based Sergio Pablos Animation Studios. Pablos, who was supervisin­g director on such Disney classics as Tarzan, Hunchback of Notre Dame and Treasure Planet, is best known for creating, designing and producing the global blockbuste­r Despicable Me, and has also worked on features such as The Smurfs, Rio, Smallfoot and Nocturna.

“Our goal has been to create a movie that not only looked unique, but also had its own sense of storytelli­ng and tone,” says Pablos. “It was very important to me that the film did not feel like it could have come out of any other studio, and that it had its own personalit­y without losing the broad appeal that’s expected from a high-end holiday film.”

A Perfect Tale for 2D

Pablos says it was very clear to him that 2D animation would serve the film’s story better.

“As someone who’s always looking for the next great animated film idea, I’ve come to learn that these ideas have a strong voice when it comes to what they want to be,” he explains. “If you learn to listen, you’ll find that some ideas clearly lend themselves more to CGI, some to live action, and every now and then you come across an idea that clearly would benefit from the organic quality that only traditiona­l animation can bring. This was the case with Klaus.”

To get the right visuals for the movie, Pablos and his team set out to bring a new approach to traditiona­l 2D animation. “We set off to look for ways to advance the medium of traditiona­l animation,” he says. “Disney was known to always bring some new innovation to every traditiona­lly animated film (from the multiplane camera to the inclusion of CGI environmen­ts), but at a certain point the 2D industry seemed to stop innovating and relied on nostalgia alone. We wanted to pick things up where we left off and look for the next innovation. After carefully analyzing the 2D pipeline, it became very obvious that the use of color and particular­ly light were the areas that were ripe for it.”

To that end, Pablos and his technical team created tools to allow artists to effectivel­y add volumetric lighting to drawings.“We looked at many different approaches, but in the end we decided to go for a hand-crafted approach, which fits beautifull­y with the rest of the traditiona­l animation process,” he notes. “The results speak for themselves.”

Looking back at the journey to make Klaus, Pablos says the monumental task of writing, directing and growing his studio to take on a film of his scope while keeping the balancing act going for the full production has proven to be a big challenge. He adds, “On the other hand, finding and attracting the talent to create a high-end traditiona­lly animated film in the early 21st century was no easy task, either!”

So, how will the movie be different from other Christmas movies we’ve seen before? Pablos says one big difference is that it’s not about saving Christmas. He adds, “Seriously though, when I first came across the realizatio­n that there’s no one single widely accepted origin story for Santa Claus, it really felt that there was a great opportunit­y in trying to fill in that missing chapter. And, if we could do it with a good dose of humor and heart, we might have a chance at having a true Christmas classic.”

He leaves us with this great tip: “The magic formula is, ‘Make them laugh 30 times and make them cry twice: first time out of sorrow, and second time out of joy.’ I’m hoping we got as close to that as possible!”

Something tells us we’ll all be thanking him for his cinematic gift this holiday season. ◆

For more info, visit www.spastudios.com.

“The magic formula is,‘Make them laugh 30 times and make them cry twice: first time out of sorrow, and second time out of joy.’” — Writer & director Sergio Pablos

 ??  ?? A Winter’s Tale: Netflix is planning an Oscar-qualifying run for Sergio Pablos’ Klaus in December.
A Winter’s Tale: Netflix is planning an Oscar-qualifying run for Sergio Pablos’ Klaus in December.
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