Gatchamania.net (http://www.gatchamania.net/index.php)
- [Gatchaman Library] (http://www.gatchamania.net/board.php?boardid=300)
-- Gatchaman Chat (http://www.gatchamania.net/board.php?boardid=9)
--- Gatchaman movie news (http://www.gatchamania.net/threadid.php?threadid=2293)


Posted by Condorfan on 05-01-2009 at 15:21:

Gatchaman movie news

I was just reading an article on Anime News Network about IMAGI financial outlook for the future. Although Astro Boy will be released at the end of the year the financial forecast for their other movies including Gatchaman looks doubtful. Here's the link to the article:

Anime News Network article

I certainly hope things will change so that the Gatchaman movie can be made or else I will Mecry

__________________
Old age is a high price to pay for maturity.


Posted by veritas on 05-01-2009 at 17:33:

Ahhhhh crap, although, its not really too much of a suprise, the way things were going.


Posted by Transmute Jun on 05-01-2009 at 17:52:

I don't think it's the end. It just means that Imagi is looking for financing.

__________________
 


Posted by gatchgirl on 05-01-2009 at 21:25:

I certainly hope that things change around for them.

__________________
" No gratitude needs to be voiced, your mind speaks to us!"


Racer by day, Feather Thrower all the time!


Posted by clouddancer on 05-01-2009 at 22:47:

Thank you for the news condorfan. I am still of the opinion we will see what happens WHEN it happens.

__________________
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things.


Posted by Ebonyswanne on 06-01-2009 at 00:56:

quote:
Originally posted by Transmute Jun
I don't think it's the end. It just means that Imagi is looking for financing.


Ita a Galactor plot I tell you!!!

__________________
Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up- Pablo Picasso.


Posted by clouddancer on 06-01-2009 at 01:41:

Aren't they all? shadowboxing

__________________
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things.


Posted by shamrokchick on 06-01-2009 at 04:36:

RE: Gatchaman movie news

quote:
Originally posted by Condorfan
I certainly hope things will change so that the Gatchaman movie can be made or else I will Mecry


I agree with you on that one Sad2

__________________
"They say the Titanic sank because it hit an iceberg, but that must have been Galactor's fault too." Swallow

 


Posted by tatsunokofan on 17-01-2009 at 01:11:

Hi all!

On Felix Ip's blog (At http://felixip.blogspot.com/ ), a fellow named Andrew asked the following:

quote:
so what's the news on Gatchaman????? is that not in the works anymore???? Please tell me you guys are still working on Gatchaman!!!!!!!!


Felix's response was as follows:

quote:
Gatchaman is still in work now, don't worry. there's great breakthrough in both story and design, very cool. I can't talk too much, but you will be happy when you see any work in the future. i will keep you guys update.


It's not really news exactly, but it's the closest thing we've had to any sort of confirmation that work on the movie is continuing.

Just figured you'd want to know!

James


Posted by clouddancer on 17-01-2009 at 02:00:

Oh, yes I am pleased to hear this, but it makes me wonder what the breakthroughs are, especially the one(s) in design.

Dog

__________________
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things.


Posted by Transmute Jun on 17-01-2009 at 02:23:

That's good to hear! I've been wondering why Jun Falkenstein hasn't been saying anything on her blog about it...

__________________
 


Posted by lborgia88 on 17-01-2009 at 06:16:

Oh, this cheers me up! Nothing is guaranteed in this universe, but any positive remarks about the film from someone involved in its production give me hope.


Posted by tatsunokofan on 17-01-2009 at 11:10:

Hi all!

quote:
I've been wondering why Jun Falkenstein hasn't been saying anything on her blog about it...


Assuming she's even still involved with it. With a lack of any official announcement of her involvement and the total lack of any sort of news regarding her work on the "mystery film" on her blog for months now, it makes me wonder if she might have joined the likes of Kevin Munroe, Robert Mark Kamen, and Paul Dini in the "At one time associated with..." column.

And, speaking of Imagi, here's another recent article that gives a few detail regarding their financial situation:

The Rescue Of Astro Boy
Robyn Meredith, 01.14.09, 06:00 PM EST
Forbes Magazine dated February 02, 2009

Amid the financial crisis a Hong Kong animation house with superheroic ambitions gets a reprieve for its exciting project.

Not far from a Hong Kong dock where Chinese cargo exports were feeling the pinch of a world financial crash, another kind of factory was humming. To get there, you must take a skyscraper's elevator to the 23rd floor and get past a locked door guarded by a face-recognition security system. Only then can you enter the darkened room where hundreds of young adults lean close to computer screens, bringing fictional characters to life. They are the 400-strong movie animation staff of Imagi, which aspires to be the DreamWorks of Asia.

One animator used his mouse to wiggle the onscreen nose of a character he's been programming, while next to him someone was tweaking the facial expressions of a robot dog in a movie called Astro Boy.

Yahoo! BuzzThe staff, dressed mostly in jeans and untucked shirts, their workdays spent creating the imaginary world of Japanese comic book hero Astro, had no clue in mid-November that they were at risk of losing their jobs or that the promising movie they were working on might not make it to the big screen.

Their boss, Douglas Glen, Imagi's chief executive, had just come back from the American Film Market in Los Angeles, which was devastated by the gloom and doom spanning the globe. "If markets don't return to some semblance of normalcy, it is going to be difficult to keep operations going," an ashen-faced Glen told a visitor. Only two months before he had triumphantly secured $30 million in financing for his movie animation company. Then $20 million of it fell through.

Imagi wasn't the only moviemaker in trouble--the whole industry was crippled by the credit crunch. In November at the Film Market "it was absolutely bleak," says D. Jeffrey Andrick, managing director of Continental Entertainment Capital, a Beverly Hills company that serves as a merchant banker specializing in the movie industry. Continental brought to Citigroup The Spirit, the $50 million-plus Frank Miller film that opened on Christmas Day. "It may have been the worst environment I've seen at the American Film Market."

Indeed, Continental had a capital partnership with Citi, and after the subprime crisis Citi pulled out. Other banks, along with hedge funds and institutional investors, have dramatically dialed back their recent freewheeling backing for moviemaking, Andrick says.

But just like the animated hero of Astro Boy, Imagi has proved a survivor. In December it was promised $20 million in replacement financing, allowing the movie to go forward and the Hong Kong animators to keep their jobs. "At the last second we got untied from the railroad tracks," Glen says. "It's a little cinematic."

The substitute funding was arranged by Chicago private equity firm Prescient Advisors.

Imagi's first big hit came in 2007 with a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie animation that grossed $100 million. Astro Boy, with a $65 million budget, is supposed to be released later this year in the U.S. on Oct. 23 and in Japan over the Christmas holidays. It is a classic Japanese comic book story of a robot designer in a world of the future who, heartbroken after the death of his son, builds an android to replace him. After Astro Boy's "father" rejects him, he sets off on a journey of adventure and redemption. "It's got a lot of promise," says Andrick, who's not an investor but saw clips of Astro Boy at the Film Market. It has a built-in fan base of those who remember the comic book--not just in Japan but also around the world. In the U.S. Astro Boy was the top children's syndicated TV show for three years during the 1970s.

People used to say the film industry was recession-proof. In the Great Depression even out-of-work people would scare up a quarter to see a matinee starring a tuxedo-clad Cary Grant or Fred Astaire acting out some fantasy. In this recession the demand is still there--but not the financing. "There was a great outpouring of funds available, and there's now a great shortage," says Jonathan Dolgen, former head of the Viacom Entertainment Group and its Paramount Pictures unit. He is now a principal of Wood River Ventures, a new firm that focuses primarily on media investments. "That's going to result in fewer films being made."

DreamWorks itself has run into trouble. After it assembled a $1.2 billion debt and equity deal in late September to split from Paramount, the equity piece, from India's Reliance Group, came through. The debt portion, which was to be syndicated by jpmorgan Chase, has run into delays.

While DreamWorks has Steven Spielberg, Imagi got into the movie animation business only after it got out of the business of making artificial Christmas trees in Chinese factories. Francis Kao, 32, urged his father, Michael Kao, to sell the manufacturing business and seek higher service-industry margins. The founder sold the tree business to the Carlyle Group and later retired, handing the company reins to his son, who is now Imagi's chairman and chief creative officer. The Kao family retains more than a third of the company, while another large backer is Hong Kong's Winnington Capital, with more than 20% of the company.

Imagi gradually built up a stable of computer graphics specialists and expanded into TV production work; it moved on to animate DreamWorks' Father of the Pride TV series on NBC in 2003. After the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles hit, with a big-screen gross more than twice the production cost, Imagi hired two executives from DreamWorks, Kenneth Tsumura and Timothy Cheung (the animator who brought Shrek to life), and brought them to Hong Kong to train a generation of animators in computer graphics. Imagi now has three films in production: Astro Boy, then the sci-fi ninja story of Gatchaman, planned for the fall of 2010, followed by Tusker, which will be reminiscent of Disney's Lion King, scheduled for the summer of 2011. "They are all heroes' journeys," says Glen, a former Mattel and Sega executive. They teach lessons gently, "like Flintstones vitamins--you make sure you package it in a way that's attractive to kids, but they're good for you."

What's attractive to investors--at least in normal times--is that Hong Kong is much cheaper than Hollywood for creating computer animation. Of course there are cheaper places: China, Malaysia, the Philippines and India. But lower costs are just part of the story, Glen says: "What makes Imagi magical is the combination of the story development in Los Angeles" with 120 employees there, "combined with the skills in turning those designs into pixels on the screen that you've got here in Hong Kong." That kind of globalization may enable this outfit to survive what is shaping up to be a nasty economic storm.

The original aritcle can be found here:

http://www.forbes.com/technology/forbes/2009/0202/072.html

James


Posted by lborgia88 on 17-01-2009 at 13:48:

"In December it was promised $20 million in replacement financing, allowing the movie to go forward and the Hong Kong animators to keep their jobs."

This is very good news, both for Imagi and for Astroboy fans. I see they're saying "the fall of 2010" for Gatchaman now. I hope that Imagi continues to get funding as they need it!


Posted by Cain Highwind on 17-01-2009 at 16:33:

Nice to hear the movie is still in the works, hope we can see some of these "awesome designs" soon.


Posted by Transmute Jun on 17-01-2009 at 17:45:

Thanks for the information, James! And I hadn't thought about it before, but you're right, it makes a lot of sense that Jun might not even be on the project anymore, given that they still haven't officially announced the new director. Regardless, this 'breakthrough' that Felix Ip talks about implies that there must be someone in charge of co-ordination. Or maybe not, Heck, what do I know? I'm an accountant, not a creative type!

Regardless, funding for Astroboy is a good thing.If that movie is profitable, it will carry them (financially) through to Gatchaman, and make it more palatable for other investors to dip their toes in the Imagi waters.

__________________
 


Posted by Ebonyswanne on 17-01-2009 at 21:06:

Glad to hear they haven't canned the whole project...

Springie if they fail we may have to do it ourselves...

Springie; resident artist can do the drawings
TJ, Ebony, Hino, and a few others can write the script...(Mainly because we write ficcies set in Gatchaman.)

Tats can be resident Guru for Cannon information...hows the production team looking so far...

__________________
Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up- Pablo Picasso.


Posted by Springie on 17-01-2009 at 22:25:

I say we use that lovely, smutty IF!! I'm ready with my pencils! Hope you guys don't mind a low budget, low resolution movie! Biglaugh1

__________________

There is no problem that cannot be solved with time, patience, and a judicious amount of high explosives.
 


Posted by lborgia88 on 17-01-2009 at 23:00:

That just leaves the musical score.

Anyone here with musical composition skiils?
(or willingness to beg Tatsunoko for permission to use the original numbers?)

Guitar Band drumming


Posted by clouddancer on 18-01-2009 at 01:56:

quote:
Originally posted by lborgia88
That just leaves the musical score.

Anyone here with musical composition skiils?
(or willingness to beg Tatsunoko for permission to use the original numbers?)

Guitar Band drumming


Ummm? Which of the original numbers would you use for the smut scenes? Animegiggle
And there would be lots of them if TJ and LB were left up to the script.

__________________
Don't sweat the petty things and don't pet the sweaty things.

Powered by: Burning Board Lite 1.1.2c © 2001-2004 WoltLab GmbH
English translation by Satelk
Site Coded by Cep