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By PATRICIA WARD BIEDERMAN
When the nominations for the
Annies--the animation industry's equivalent of the Academy Awards--were
announced recently, the big winner was "The Iron Giant." The Warner Bros.
film garnered a remarkable 15 nominations, including best animated feature,
best director and three nominations for best character animation.
To put that number in perspective,
"The Iron Giant" received more nominations than DreamWorks' "The Prince
of Egypt" and Disney's "Tarzan" put together.
Unfortunately, hardly anyone
saw "The Iron Giant," despite its having received reverential reviews.
Under-promoted by Warner Bros., it opened in August and quickly disappeared.
Last time I checked, it was playing in just three discount theaters in
Greater Los Angeles.
But when you talk to the people
who made "The Iron Giant," you hear few complaints. No one is happy that
the Burbank-based studio chose to put its promotion money behind "Wild,
Wild West" and other forgettable films. But the people who made "The Iron
Giant" have something better than a hit on their hands. They have the satisfaction
of having made a great movie and having had a great time doing it.
Like many other animators, Annie
nominee Steve Markowski lives in Valencia, not far from the CalArts campus
from which most of the industry's best animators flow.
Based on a novel by Ted Hughes,
written to comfort their children after Hughes' estranged wife, poet Sylvia
Plath, committed suicide, "The Iron Giant" is the story of a boy, named
Hogarth Hughes, and his buddy, a 50-foot robot from outer space.
In most animated features a
single animator is responsible for a particular character. In "The Iron
Giant," however, director Brad Bird gave animators chunks of film rather
than one character to animate. The exception was Markowski, who did most
of the work on the giant robot.
As Markowski explains, the robot
was computer animated, in contrast to the other principals, who were drawn
the old-fashioned way.
"The biggest challenge," he
recalls, "was getting a lot of emotion and acting out of a big metal character."

To make sure the computer creature
and the hand-drawn characters were integrated stylistically, he made printouts
of the giant and the other animators often drew directly on them.
Although the project meant "my
wife was widowed for a year," Markowski has no regrets. Bird, he says,
"is an inspirational director" who created an atmosphere in which everyone's
energy went into "what was best for the picture," not intramural competition.
"Of course, everybody was disappointed"
by the lack of promotion the film received, he says. "Had it been given
a Disney push, it would have made Disney dollars, I think; the movie is
of that quality."
But the reviews are vindication
("I think it might be the best-reviewed movie of the year"), and there
is hope of an Oscar nomination. Even Hughes, who died last year, was reported
to have liked the picture.
Dean Wellins was also nominated
for character animation on "The Iron Giant." Another CalArts guy, Wellins
is currently at work in the Warner animation studio in Sherman Oaks on
a feature called "Osmosis Jones," about "a white blood cell who's a cop
and who's running down a virus" inside a human body--a perfect example
of what only an animated film can do.
Wellins recalls that Bird managed
to make everyone feel the film was his or her baby, as well as Bird's.
An animator himself, Bird filled the movie with fun scenes to animate,
Wellins says. The piece of the movie that he most thinks of as his own
is the scene in which the boy and his giant play in the lake, which draws
on his memories of splashing in various lakes in the Sierra.
Unlike most directors, Wellins
says, "Bird really asked, 'What do you think?' and he really meant 'What
do you think?' " If one of the other members of the production crew came
up with a better idea, Bird would change the film accordingly.
"As easy and simple as that
sounds, it's really rare," Wellins says.
A cartooning wunderkind, Bird
introduced himself to the Disney studio when he was 11 years old. He returned
when he was 14, and even though he was too young to work on an actual film,
the studio turned him over to legendary animator Milt Kahl to mentor.
Bird was one of a group of greatly
talented animators who experienced enormous frustration at Disney during
the fallow period before Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg revitalized
feature animation in the 1980s and 1990s.
Fired after two years "for rocking
the boat," Bird says, he and the other rebels struggled with a hierarchy
that lacked the greatness of earlier Disney animators.
"The whole corporate outlook
in a nutshell was 'Let's not screw it up,' " Bird recalls. That regime
refused to share power with the younger talent, avoided risk-taking and
put every aspect of feature filmmaking through the blanderizer.
You can see the results of that
philosophy in the 1981 Disney film "The Fox and the Hound," Bird says.
The only part of the movie that comes alive is the bear fight, which was
left the way its gifted animators drew it because the release date loomed.
"They didn't have time to ruin
it, as they did the rest of the movie."
In making "The Iron Giant,"
Bird tried to remain open to input of others in the group.
"I think it's a mistake to hire
talented people and then never allow them to express their individual point
of view." He also made it a point to spread the choice animation jobs around.
"Everyone got to do something
fun," he says.
At Disney, he recalls, great
talent was often wasted on animating minor characters. He tried to make
sure that even relatively green animators had important work to do.
"They really rose to the occasion,"
he says of the mostly young crew, many of whom came to the project still
demoralized from their involvement in last year's animated flop "Quest
for Camelot."
If you let your top talent monopolize
the best assignments, he says, "You overburden your strongest people and
underburden the others."
Although he's sorry the film
wasn't marketed better, he's grateful for the freedom Warner Bros. gave
him in making it.
"I think there are two sides
to the flying-under-the-radar coin," he says. "We were left to our own
devices while making the film, which was wonderful, but we were also left
to our own devices when it came to promoting it."
And yet "with one-third the
money and one-half the time" most major animated features require, the
group made a movie that may have a life in video as long as "Bambi."
"I'm very proud of our team,"
Bird says.
And so, obviously, is the animation
industry.
The 27th Annual Annie Awards,
sponsored by ASIFA-Hollywood, will be held the evening of Nov. 6 at the
Alex Theatre in Glendale. For ticket information, call (818) 842-8330.
Spotlight runs each Friday. Patricia
Ward Biederman can be reached at
valley.news@latimes.com.
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