Monster Safari (lost production material of cancelled stop-motion animated film; 2009): Difference between revisions
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'''''Monster Safari''''' was a cancelled stop-motion film directed by Mark Caballero and Seamus Walsh and produced by Chris Finnegan of Screen Novelties for the Jim Henson Company. A script had been written in 2009 by Matt Chapman and Craig Zobel, two of the creators of internet series ''Homestar Runner''. | |||
"Monster Safari" was originally developed as a short film for a block of shorts called ''Shorts in a Bunch'', before being expanded into a feature-length project. The plot focused on two bumbling cryptozoologists who work to save Earth's newly-found monsters from a big-game hunter.<ref>[https://www.firstshowing.net/2009/screen-novelties-monster-safari-to-become-a-feature-film/ "Screen Novelties' Monster Safari to Become a Feature Film"]</ref> Despite being announced in 2009 and the short existing on Screen Novelties' website,<ref>[http://screen-novelties.com/work/monster-safari-clip-1/ Screen Novelties page.] Retrieved 25 Mar 2016.</ref> not much had been heard about the movie for years. | |||
In 2011, co-writer Matt Chapman remarked that he was unaware of the movie's status, explaining that he and Zobel "haven't heard anything since" they wrote their initial draft years earlier.<ref>[https://archive.is/Pm1G Matt Chapman (@ronginald)] tweet 12 Sep 2011. Retrieved 19 Jul 2012.</ref> In Sep 2013, Zobel similarly stated that he was unaware of any plans to produce the movie, "but if screen novelties ever do it, it'll be freakin awesome".<ref>https://twitter.com/craigzobel/status/376391944626520064</ref> To further complicate things, Peter Dennis, the voice of Basil Pennyfarthing in the original short, passed away during the process in April 2009. | |||
On March 8, 2015, the original short surfaced, after finding its way online in November 2014. The script and whatever else was produced for the feature-length adaptation remains lost. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
{{Video|perrow =2 | |||
|service1 =vimeo | |||
|id1 =13750884 | |||
|description1 =Clip of the original short film. | |||
|service2 =youtube | |||
|id2 =OEsvlqJ7WhQ | |||
|description2 =Episode of ''Shorts in a Bunch'', containing the original short film (1:16-7:02). | |||
}} | |||
==Reference== | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
[[Category:Lost animation]] | [[Category:Lost animation]] | ||
[[Category:Lost films]] | [[Category:Lost films]] | ||
[[Category:Completely lost media]] |
Latest revision as of 04:04, 5 February 2024
Monster Safari was a cancelled stop-motion film directed by Mark Caballero and Seamus Walsh and produced by Chris Finnegan of Screen Novelties for the Jim Henson Company. A script had been written in 2009 by Matt Chapman and Craig Zobel, two of the creators of internet series Homestar Runner.
"Monster Safari" was originally developed as a short film for a block of shorts called Shorts in a Bunch, before being expanded into a feature-length project. The plot focused on two bumbling cryptozoologists who work to save Earth's newly-found monsters from a big-game hunter.[1] Despite being announced in 2009 and the short existing on Screen Novelties' website,[2] not much had been heard about the movie for years.
In 2011, co-writer Matt Chapman remarked that he was unaware of the movie's status, explaining that he and Zobel "haven't heard anything since" they wrote their initial draft years earlier.[3] In Sep 2013, Zobel similarly stated that he was unaware of any plans to produce the movie, "but if screen novelties ever do it, it'll be freakin awesome".[4] To further complicate things, Peter Dennis, the voice of Basil Pennyfarthing in the original short, passed away during the process in April 2009.
On March 8, 2015, the original short surfaced, after finding its way online in November 2014. The script and whatever else was produced for the feature-length adaptation remains lost.
Gallery
Reference
- ↑ "Screen Novelties' Monster Safari to Become a Feature Film"
- ↑ Screen Novelties page. Retrieved 25 Mar 2016.
- ↑ Matt Chapman (@ronginald) tweet 12 Sep 2011. Retrieved 19 Jul 2012.
- ↑ https://twitter.com/craigzobel/status/376391944626520064