Renaissance: A New Beginning in Animation

Is the French animated feature, Renaissance, the shape of things to come? If anything, it heralds a new era of filmmaking, just like Polar Express or Sin City did. Mireille Frenette and Benoit Guerville reveal the magic.
Posted In | Magazines: AnimationWorld

Renaissance is a futuristic animated thriller that’s filmed in motion capture, animated in 3D and rendered in flat black and white. In the year 2054 in Paris, police and the Avalon Corp. are trying to find a kidnapped researcher who holds knowledge that can transform the future of the human species altogether.

The film was in development well before Robert Rodriguez put together his demo of Sin City and Robert Zemeckis started work on Polar Express. “We came up with the first Renaissance concept back in 1997,” explains Marc Miance, founder of Attitude Studio, a facility dedicated entirely to the recreation of high-end virtual characters. “At the time, we were thinking of an animated CG film shot entirely in black and white with no shades of gray set in Paris.”

When Miance met Aton Soumache and Christian Volckman, Soumache had just produced Volckman’s short film, the multi award-winning Maaz that had been shot with real actors and then hand-painted frame by frame with Painter. They loved Miance’s idea and decided to produce a demo together. “We were naïve and ardent enough to go out there and pitch our film,” smiles Soumache. Very quickly, they convinced French TV channel France 2 and French distributor Pathé to pre-purchase the project.

At the time, there had been no Shrek to prove that an animated feature could appeal to the 15-35 demographic. Moreover, shooting the film entirely in black and white seemed an odd choice, not to mention the fact that sci-fi movies are not a genre that can easily find French financing. Adds Soumache, “The first question distributors would ask was “Who’s the audience?” The 15 million Euro budget was considered expensive for a European film, particularly since it was the director and the producer’s first feature, and that Miance was only beginning to set up Attitude Studio to handle the technical side of the project.

“But,” continues Soumache, “the strength of this film is its singularity. It is unique, ambitious, stunning and different. Renaissance has the French touch, but it deals with universal values that people from around the world can relate to. And so, while some worried about costs and audiences, others were immediately seduced by the project and wanted to be a part of it.” That’s what happened to Canadian film producer Jake Eberts who became an invaluable ally in the film’s financing. He saw the treatment and the three-minute demo, said, “That’s Matrix in animation!” and took the project to Hollywood.

Disney took the plunge, “It’s the first time that Disney pre-purchased a French film based on a script and a pilot,” says Soumache. Disney’s contribution made up 30% of the budget. Beyond France, international financing came mainly from Luxembourg and the U.K.







Comments


DAWK Mc Farlane’s commentary is simply shocking! I’ve heard and read about “Renaissance” well before this article was published, and to me, it really looks like a great project. Mc Farlane should first understand that having the possibility to achieve complex things does not prevent us from doing simple ones: Black and white for instance. People still like black and white drawings and photographs as they create an atmosphere different from the one that colours produce. Animation is about TELLING STORIES, technology is just a support. If flat black and white expresses best the atmosphere of the story, it a good thing to us it. I will also add that considering the fact that a part from animating drawings in a traditional or digital way (toon boom, Macromedia flash, hand painting) achieving flat black and white on screen is impossible. Using CG to combine that graphical expression with motion capture to keep realistic movements was the way to go. So, a waste of high-tech time and manpower huh? I would end, saying that there should never be “some kind of 'WORLD WIDE ANIMATION COURT'” because art is about freedom, the freedom that allowed the opinions of narrow minded persons to appear on this website.
Dady GONDA (not verified) | Mon, 02/27/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
this is good. Dawn, isn't it good to iron out the concepts perhaps first in black and white. later intellectual geniuses and pygmies can experiment further, with colour. Did you see Avalon.
michael mullins (not verified) | Sat, 02/25/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
Wow, looks like we arrived a bit later :) I'm working on a similar project... it's a bit different, because we'll not use mocap but hand drawing from real life film...
Stefano Sgambati (not verified) | Fri, 02/24/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
Nothing new, old technique, I think someone missed the boat, the mention of the realization of the eyes being the key to their success is worth the price of the film. After all how many have us at one time or another studied the masters of both hand drawn art or film. Not to mention life itself.
Martin Mannette (not verified) | Fri, 02/24/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
The article has me standing in line for a ticket to this showing. Thank you. Valera
Valera (not verified) | Tue, 02/21/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink
ARE THERE ANY CHAPLIN,LAURL AND HARDY,ETC. BLACK AND WHITE FLICKS (NOW) PLAYING IN OUR THEATRES? I DON'T THINK-SO BECAUSE THIS IS 'RETRO-INSANITY',CALLING THIS 'A NEW GENRE' AND EXPECTING 'BLACK AND WHITE' TO MAKE A 'COME BACK'? What a waste of high tech time and manpower.Do you want our HI-DEF TV (only?)in black and white?There-in lies the problem.It simply doesn't present anything new,and is not complimentary to 'high-def' television OR MOVIE SCREENS! This belongs on the "AMC" channel with the bogey flicks,not in todays modern cinemas? The continued path of claiming 'it's somtning new' by going back in motion picture'time' and then throwing in some high tech tricks,just seem so ameaturish-sophamoric...and totaly DESPERATE to fuck the public with more promotion propaganda,like this article attempts to applaude. There should be some kind of 'WORLD WIDE ANIMATION COURT' where new creatives, who can not find ' venture capital funding' for their origional and entirely ,never before-seen (IN COLOR!!) ideas can win a cash award of JUSTICE!!
DAWK Mc Farlane (not verified) | Sat, 02/18/2006 - 01:00 | Permalink

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