Getting to Know My Dog Tulip

Paul Fierlinger regales us with the canine and digital challenges of bringing J.R. Ackerley's popular memoir to animated life.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld | Site Categories: Films

Check out the My Dog Tulip trailer at AWNtv! 

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Tulip offers a rare sensitivity of human and canine interaction. All images courtesy of New Yorker Films.

Anyone still questioning the adaptability of traditional animation in the digital age should check out My Dog Tulip by Paul and Sandra Fierlinger. It's not only a marvelous adaptation of author J.R. Ackerley's account of his bittersweet friendship with an Alsatian in England after World War II, but it's also the first paperless hand-drawn animated feature (using TVPaint).

Ackerley was a famous curmudgeon and his Tulip was a kindred spirit. "One of the reasons we made the film is to make it clear to people who are considering having dogs that they should rethink it if they don't understand dogs well," proclaims Paul Fierlinger. "We had been successful with dog films [Still Life with Animated Dogs, A Room Nearby] before and when Tulip became a possibility, I had always had it in the back of my mind as film material. I had to understand Ackerly better. Once I decided to do it, I had to look more into his past and got acquainted over email with his biographer, Peter Parker. And we became good friends."

It helped, of course, that the husband and wife team have been dog lovers and owners for decades (he draws and she paints), but Paul admits that he had never had great success in drawing canines before. "I was never quite happy with my work. It was my plan to put myself through that challenge."

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Tulip marks the first hand-drawn animated feature to go paperless with TVP.

According to Sandra, painting Tulip "was hard and then I got into the swing of things, and most of my painting depends on how Paul draws it, so I can be loose. With the realistic drawings, I don't know how many layers I had to paint her in, but I learned to really enjoy it."

To make the movie visually interesting and arresting, the Fierlingers decided on four distinct graphical concepts. "We did that for two basic reasons," he says: "One reason being that 80 minutes of the same style is going to get boring no matter who draws it and who does it. I get bored very quickly sitting through an animated feature. The first and perhaps the only one I've liked is Yellow Submarine because it had so many different styles. We decided that we have to go through a few changes. The problem is that our story about two characters, a man and his dog, is not like Yellow Submarine. So that's how we arrived at the idea of portraying his various levels of delivery of the story in different graphic styles. One level is his early memories (in the style of a New Yorker cartoon); the next level is what he's thinking but not always realistic -- just fantasy (yellow pad scribbles); the next level is just his reactions to reality and with a lot of imagination in it (black-and-white line art); and the other one is realism: what was really happening (close to realistic dimensions and color)."

And, with a workload that consisted of drawing and painting 60,000 drawings in three years, going paperless was a godsend. They view drawing and painting with TVP on a Wacom tablet a liberating experience.







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