If there’s a big animated film coming out, a studio somewhere will be rushing to release a cheap imitation. But who makes them? Are they proud of their work? And how did they become an internet hit?

It is hard to describe what happens 24 minutes into Ratatoing, an animated children’s movie from 2007. Four unnerving rats – one with a handlebar moustache, another in pearls – begin to jump up and down and grunt in a restaurant, in order to alarm the human clientele. “La, la, la, la, la,” they sort of sing while sort of dancing. They then do the can-can and shout “HA, HA, HA!” before making ghostly noises. Ratatoing is not, it is safe to say, a good movie. It is barely even an acceptable movie. It was created in just four months by Brazilian animation studio Vídeo Brinquedo, to be released in the same month as Ratatouille, the restaurant-and-rat-themed film that went on to win Pixar the Oscar for best animated feature.

“I don’t have regrets but I’m not proud of it,” says Ale McHaddo, one of Ratatoing’s producers. He says Vídeo Brinquedo had a budget of just £75,000 to script, cast, animate and score each movie he worked on. These included The Little Cars (released the same year as Pixar’s Cars) and Little Bee (released two years after DreamWorks’ Bee Movie). Ratatouille’s budget, by comparison, was £112m. “I was young and needed to produce some films,” says the 37-year-old from São Paulo. “I thought, ‘I have plenty of ideas – but OK, I need to pay my bills.’”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Family of missing girl accuse Met police of bungling search

Aaliyah Chen, 15, is feared to have run off with an older…

Why are books on the English school curriculum still in the grip of straight, white men? | Jeffrey Boakye

Classic books play a vital role, but children in diverse societies need…

England open World Cup in style with Bukayo Saka double in 6-2 rout of Iran

England have opened their World Cup campaign in spectacular style, beating Iran…

Parental alienation and the unregulated experts shattering children’s lives

In English and Welsh custody cases, a finding that one parent has…