Exclusive: Urban Sales has unveiled key deals for Mascha Halberstad’s CGI animation Fox And Hare Save The Forest ahead of its world premiere in the Berlin Film Festival’s young audience-focused Generation Kplus sidebar this weekend.
The company has sold the movie into more than 50 territories including to France (Eurozoom), Germany (Neue Visionen), Poland (New Horizons), Cis (Russian Report), Baltic Countries (Garsu Pasaulio Irasai), Norway and Denmark (Another World) and Sweden (Njuta), Mena (Selim Ramia & Co), Ex-Yugoslavia (Kino Mediteran), Czech Republic & Slovakia (Aero Films), Hungary (Mozinet), Turkey (Bg Film), Romania (Bad Unicorn) and Benelux (Periscoop).
The film follows protagonists Fox and Hare as they race to stop the flooding of their forest following the construction of a large dam by a megalomaniac beaver that sends water flowing into their woodland home.
In the backdrop, mischievous Rats are wreaking havoc in the neighborhood and their dear friend Owl has disappeared.
The company has sold the movie into more than 50 territories including to France (Eurozoom), Germany (Neue Visionen), Poland (New Horizons), Cis (Russian Report), Baltic Countries (Garsu Pasaulio Irasai), Norway and Denmark (Another World) and Sweden (Njuta), Mena (Selim Ramia & Co), Ex-Yugoslavia (Kino Mediteran), Czech Republic & Slovakia (Aero Films), Hungary (Mozinet), Turkey (Bg Film), Romania (Bad Unicorn) and Benelux (Periscoop).
The film follows protagonists Fox and Hare as they race to stop the flooding of their forest following the construction of a large dam by a megalomaniac beaver that sends water flowing into their woodland home.
In the backdrop, mischievous Rats are wreaking havoc in the neighborhood and their dear friend Owl has disappeared.
- 2/17/2024
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- Deadline Film + TV
Screen can reveal the first trailer for animated feature Fox And Hare Save The Forest, ahead of its world premiere at the Berlinale.
The 3D animation follows a group of animal friends who embark on an adventure when a lake threatens to submerge their forest home, perhaps the work of a megalomaniac beaver. The trailer reveals a stop motion animated feel, which was achieved by making the characters out of clay and 3D-scanning them.
It is directed by Dutch filmmaker and illustrator Mascha Halberstad, whose debut feature Oink premiered in the Berlinale’s youth-focussed Generation sidebar and was nominated for...
The 3D animation follows a group of animal friends who embark on an adventure when a lake threatens to submerge their forest home, perhaps the work of a megalomaniac beaver. The trailer reveals a stop motion animated feel, which was achieved by making the characters out of clay and 3D-scanning them.
It is directed by Dutch filmmaker and illustrator Mascha Halberstad, whose debut feature Oink premiered in the Berlinale’s youth-focussed Generation sidebar and was nominated for...
- 2/14/2024
- ScreenDaily
Leading Dutch animation studio Submarine has presented its latest TV series project based on the bestselling Max children’s books at Europe’s industry event for TV series-in-the-making in the south-eastern French city of Toulouse.
A pre-school series of 52 seven-minute episodes, “Max” is a character-driven show about a small kitten with a large appetite for adventure, who sees himself as a fearless predator but is just a little ball of fluff.
The series will embrace the simple, clear and colourful 2D aesthetic of award-winning British author and illustrator Ed Vere to allow the viewer to focus on the characters.
The team has enlisted the voice of British actor Ade Edmondson for the narrator’s voice in a show which producer Bruno Felix says is also very dialogue driven. The characters’ mouths, however, do not move: Instead, explains Vere, who is a Buster Keaton fan, the show will rely heavily on body language and facial expressions.
A pre-school series of 52 seven-minute episodes, “Max” is a character-driven show about a small kitten with a large appetite for adventure, who sees himself as a fearless predator but is just a little ball of fluff.
The series will embrace the simple, clear and colourful 2D aesthetic of award-winning British author and illustrator Ed Vere to allow the viewer to focus on the characters.
The team has enlisted the voice of British actor Ade Edmondson for the narrator’s voice in a show which producer Bruno Felix says is also very dialogue driven. The characters’ mouths, however, do not move: Instead, explains Vere, who is a Buster Keaton fan, the show will rely heavily on body language and facial expressions.
- 9/21/2022
- by Lise Pedersen
- Variety Film + TV
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