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BFI invests over £1 million in 15 new animation projects

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The BFI have announced the latest recipients of its Short Form Animation Fund. Across fifteen new innovative short-form projects, over £1 million of National Lottery funds has been invested, with ten receiving awards of up to £120,000 to aid in production as well as being overseen by a BFI Film Fund executive and a dedicated animation consultant, with the remaining five receiving up to £10,000 in development funds. This round of funding also marks the BFI‘s partnership with StoryFutures Academy, the National Centre for Immersive Storytelling, in supporting two of the fifteen projects that will incorporate VR/AR with funds from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI).

This round follows the first slate of the Short Form Animation Fund whose films have been doing the rounds at international festivals, with three screening this week at Annecy (Emma Calder’s Beware of the Trains, Elizabeth Hobbs’s The Debutante and Joseph Pierce’s Scale, the latter having also premiered at Cannes Film Festival Critics’ Week last month).

Left to right, top to bottom: There Exists, The Knitted Brain, Gardening, Two Black Boys in Paradise (BFI Short Form Animation Fund)

The BFI Short Form Animation Fund, made possible thanks to National Lottery funding, was designed to enable our talented UK animators to develop their practice, so it is exciting we are starting to see those films showcased and celebrated at international festivals. With round two, we saw a real breadth of styles and ideas come through in the applications, and we’re delighted to be unveiling such a diverse slate of projects today.

-Natascha Wharton, head of editorial, BFI Film Fund

The new partnership with StoryFutures Academy this year has been incredibly productive, allowing us to expand the scope of the fund, and back two immersive animated shorts from filmmakers who are pushing the boundaries of the form.

-Kristin Irving (senior production and development executive, BFI Film Fund)

StoryFutures Academy are thrilled to be working with the BFI to support these two fantastic immersive projects. Both pieces will use real-time animation techniques, which is an incredibly important growth area, requiring content-making skills that are highly in demand. We know they both have big ambitions and great teams behind them, so we’re really excited to support and follow them on their journey.

-Becky Gregory-Clarke (Head of immersive, StoryFutures Academy, the UK’s National Centre for Immersive Storytelling)

The Short Form Animation Fund was developed with the support of Animation UK, Animation Alliance UK and Helen Brunsdon, director of the British Animation Awards, who consulted extensively with the animation industry. The BFI also supports animation talent through BFI NETWORK with awards of up to £15k per project available for filmmakers at the early stages of their career.

The full list of awarded projects are as follows:

Production funding

And Granny Would Dance

Company: Animate Projects Limited, Derby
Director: Maryam Mohajer
Writer: Maryam Mohajer
Producer: Abigail Addison

Six year old Marmar observes how adult women navigate their relationships with their loved ones and each other. She remembers how, after her grandad’s passing, Granny stopped dancing and even smiling, and then listens in on her grandmother’s friends discussing their partners as they play an illicit game of cards. Based on the director’s memories of her childhood in Iran, ‘And Granny would dance’ is a tale of love, grief and resilience across generations, and at its heart, a tribute to the solidarity of Iranian women.

Gardening

Company: Hipster Films Ltd, Derby
Director: Sarah Beeby
Writer: Louisa Wood
Producer: Jo Lewis

In the aftermath of sexual assault, a women retreats into the garden of her mind. Searching for answers and struggling to do ’the right thing’, she realises that she must regain her voice and find new paths to healing, before she and her garden are destroyed completely.

Wind and the Shadow

Company: Out of Orbit Ltd, Belfast
Director: Kris Kelly
Writer: Kris Kelly
Producers: Brian J. Falconer, Vicki Rock

The Wind and the Shadow is a short animation about the emotional and physical impact childhood cancer and its treatment has on a six-year-old girl and her mother. Created by the BAFTA nominated Here to Fall writer / director, Kris Kelly.

Plunge (doc)

Company: Tyke Films Ltd, Sheffield
Director: Ellie Land
Writer: Ellie Land
Producers: Rebecca Mark-Lawson

‘And all through the sea, I found me’, one woman’s incredible journey to regain control of her life through open water swimming.

The Knitted Brain (doc)

Company: MediaActive Projects CIC, Wem
Director: Samantha Moore
Writer: Samantha Moore
Producers: Tilley Bancroft

An exploration of the effect that knitting has on the human brain, told by a group of knitted mice and some jumpers.

Two Black Boys in Paradise

Company: One6th Ltd, Manchester
Director: Baz Sells
Writer: Dean Atta
Producer: Ben Jackson

Two Black boys go on a journey of self-acceptance. Their love for each other and their refusal to hide it lands them in a paradise free of shame and judgement. A stop-motion short film adaptation of Dean Atta’s poem ‘Two Black Boys in Paradise’, which deals with themes of love, acceptance, homophobia, and racism.

Hag

Company: Passion Pictures (Films) Ltd, London
Director: Anna Ginsburg
Writer: Mirander Latimer & Anna Ginsburg
Producers: Becky Perryman & Kitty Turley

Femininity is often a shoddy and exhausting masquerade. What is the cost of compromise and repressing your authentic self?

She’s My Best Friend and I Hate Her

Company: Popsybobin Ltd, London
Director: Candy Guard
Writer: Candy Guard
Producers: Tracy Shaw

The complexity of an ancient friendship is dissected to hilarious and recognisable effect as Milly and June impatiently wait for each other at Wolverhampton Station.

Beachcomber (immersive)

Company: Second Home Studios, Birmingham
Director: Chris Randall
Producer: Ian Ravenscroft
Writers: Chris Randall, Ian Ravenscroft

Beachcomber is an immersive, ambient narrative that explores the stories within ourselves. Using virtual reality as a way to enter a new headspace, audiences will interact with their memories and imagination on a mindful journey into the subconscious.

There Exists (immersive)

Company: Studio ANRK, London
Director: Anrick Bregman
Scriptwriter: Gaëlle Mourre
Producers: Grace Baird, Kylie Boltin
Unreal Developer: RCL Graham

There Exists is a data-powered VR experience which recreates the extraordinary journey of an 18th century London-born woman. It explores whether we can trace the lives of individuals through data, and bring context to their story by looking at the aggregate.

Development funding

Dawn Chorus

Company: Jante Films Limited
Producer: Michelle Brøndum
Director: Lina Kalcheva
Writer: Laura Jayne Tunbridge

Jolly Garden

Company: Rowdy Limited
Producer: Daisy Garside
Director: Rory Waudby-Tolley
Writer: Rory Waudby-Tolley

QUIJIBOARDS

Company: Paisley Films Limited
Producer: Jamie MacDonald
Director: Theo Scott
Writer: Theo Scott and Jaskaran Sahota

The Book of Creatures

Company: Kimeleon.tv Limited
Producer: Daniel Bougourd
Director: Kim-Leigh Pontin
Writer: Kim-Leigh Pontin

Very ‘British’ London Stories

Company: Passion Pictures Limited
Producer: Amy Ashton
Director: Ivyy Chen (Yu-Ying Chen)
Writer: Tamara Vogl

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