Lucasfilm Animation Singapore Opens for Business

On the heels of last month’s opening of Lucasfilm Animation Singapore, Barbara Robertson discusses the operation and production plans with gm Christian Kubsch.
Posted In | Magazines: VFXWorld

On Oct. 27, Lucasfilm officially opened the doors to Lucasfilm Animation Singapore. Created through a consortium that includes Lucasfilm, EDB Investments and Creative Technology Ltd., the 40,000 square-foot digital animation studio plans to create content for television and film projects. The first project will be a TV series titled Clone Wars based on the time between Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith that is scheduled for 2007.

VFXWorld spoke with Christian Kubsch, gm, who left DreamWorks Animation, where he was an associate producer on Over the Hedge, to help found the studio. Prior to that, Kubsch was a visual effects consultant on The Matrix Revolutions and The Matrix Reloaded and, while at ILM, was visual effects producer for Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, where he also produced Tom Bertino’s animated short, Work in Progress.

Barbara Robertson: How many people are working at the studio now?

Christian Kubsch: We have 35 people from 19 different countries. Most are entry-level character animators, although a few are more experienced. In Asia, there is more of a generalist approach, so we’re trying to figure out what the people do best through a course of training both technical and artistic. We’re starting a td training class now, so I can tell you more about the breakdown in three months.

BR: Why are you hiring entry-level people?

CK: Some of the people are straight out of school; others have five years of experience. We were happy to find so many excited people with any experience at all. Singapore is very young in doing this.

BR: Why establish the studio in Singapore?

CK: They are really trying to kick-start an animation business and putting a lot of money into universities. It seems that every school is enhancing or establishing a wing for animation. Some are building entire campuses for film production including animation. We hope to be able to benefit from the talent coming out of these schools. It’s not the case yet, but we’ve been talking to seven or eight schools out of probably a dozen with programs. The kids are extremely excited; it’s been exciting for us.

BR: Who’s doing the training?

CK: We’re bringing in folks from all over the place, from other parts of Asia, California and Europe. Oliver Acker who was in Disney’s Paris studio is heading up the training department. Also, Rob Coleman [and] other folks in California are helping us shape this group with their experience and background, allowing us to not only evaluate talent but train them with the assets we’re going to use for the TV show. Rob came over for the opening, and to teach masters classes. [Phillip Stamp, who’s worked on INUK Season II, Alien Planet and The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne, has been hired as director of animation.]

BR: Are you continuing to recruit?

CK: We’ve been doing a massive recruiting drive all over the place, and it will continue as we go forward. Once we get going on the TV show, we want to have a little more than 50 people, and when we get into the feature, we’ll want quite a bit more than 100, I think. We’ll probably bring in higher-level folks once we finish with training. We’ll see how far we get in the training program and complement the staff with additional talent with more experience.

BR: How are you recruiting?

CK: The major recruiting is, of course, in Singapore, but we’re also looking all over the world. We’ve set up interviews in a variety of cities, and we’ve had a lot of people from other countries fly to Singapore for interviews. We fly in those with more experience.

BR: What language do you speak in the studio?

CK: The business language in Singapore is English, so that’s what we speak. Even with folks from all over the world, everyone speaks English.

BR: Tell me how you’re working with the teams in California.

CK: On the television show, the writers, directors and story team and the art department are at [George Lucas’] Ranch. This group is all under Gail Currey (vp and general manager of Lucasfilm Animation). The Singapore group will pick up the execution — the animation, lighting, rendering and what have you. This relationship could migrate into different shapes and dividing lines as we go along, but this is how we’re starting. I can’t tell you much about the plan for the animated feature. It’s in development, but we won’t assemble a team and kick off the front-end development until next year.







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