“Petit,” the best series winner at May’s Quirino Ibero-American Animation Awards, will have a third season.
Employing 2D cutout animation, the third season will have 26 episodes more episodes, bringing the current total episode count to 65.
The short format will again be backed by Chilean production house Pájaro, Colombian public broadcaster Señal Colombia, Argentine kids TV channel Paka Paka and Non Stop. Also boarding as co-production partners for season three are Barcelona animation studio Wknd, and Spanish state TV networks Tve and TV3.
Targeting pre-schoolers, “Petit” is the fifth animated show directed by Chile’s Bernardita Ojeda. Director (“How Most Things Work”) and scriptwriter Fernando Salem pens the scripts; Gustavo Pomeranec (Fernando Spiner’ “Six Shooters”) and Simón Ramírez Vera lead the animation team.
“‘Petit’ is a series where kids can feel represented. It is creative, original and funny. We think it will be a great success on Clan,” Tve Head...
Employing 2D cutout animation, the third season will have 26 episodes more episodes, bringing the current total episode count to 65.
The short format will again be backed by Chilean production house Pájaro, Colombian public broadcaster Señal Colombia, Argentine kids TV channel Paka Paka and Non Stop. Also boarding as co-production partners for season three are Barcelona animation studio Wknd, and Spanish state TV networks Tve and TV3.
Targeting pre-schoolers, “Petit” is the fifth animated show directed by Chile’s Bernardita Ojeda. Director (“How Most Things Work”) and scriptwriter Fernando Salem pens the scripts; Gustavo Pomeranec (Fernando Spiner’ “Six Shooters”) and Simón Ramírez Vera lead the animation team.
“‘Petit’ is a series where kids can feel represented. It is creative, original and funny. We think it will be a great success on Clan,” Tve Head...
- 6/7/2021
- by Emilio Mayorga
- Variety Film + TV
On the occasion of its 25th edition, Argentina's Mar del Plata Film Festival (site) is teaming up with Mubi to present five films from its competition lineup online for free through November 21. Viewable as of today is Juan Baldana's Arrieros (Muleteers), a documentary on the life of one family living in Cajón del Maipo, up in the Chilean Andes (see the trailer above, the festival's interview with Baldana and his blog).
On Tuesday, Lucas Blanco's Buenos Aires-set comedy Amor en transito (Transit Love) will be available to viewers in Argentina, while Tamae Garateguy's Pompeya, a playful, gangster-ridden take on the movie-within-the-movie, goes worldwide.
Then on Thursday it's Nicolás Carreras's El camino del vino (The Ways of Wine), about a sommelier who loses his pallet, followed on Friday by Fernando Spiner's Aballay, based on a story by Antonio Di Benedetto set in 19th century Argentina: the western goes gaucho.
On Tuesday, Lucas Blanco's Buenos Aires-set comedy Amor en transito (Transit Love) will be available to viewers in Argentina, while Tamae Garateguy's Pompeya, a playful, gangster-ridden take on the movie-within-the-movie, goes worldwide.
Then on Thursday it's Nicolás Carreras's El camino del vino (The Ways of Wine), about a sommelier who loses his pallet, followed on Friday by Fernando Spiner's Aballay, based on a story by Antonio Di Benedetto set in 19th century Argentina: the western goes gaucho.
- 11/16/2010
- MUBI
Westerns are a dying breed. Though over the last few years there has been a minor resurgence in the genre with some amazing films (The Proposition, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford…I’m looking at you) the genre is most definitely on the downward slope. What does that mean for niche films within the genre? Only that we see even less of them and in some cases, they're nearly extinct.
That isn’t stopping director Fernando Spiner and Timecrimes producer Eduardo Carneros from taking a run at bringing back the Gaucho Western. Shooting has wrapped on Aballay based on a short story of the same title from Argentine author Antonio di Benedetto. It’s the story of an ill-tempered gaucho who reconsiders his life of crime and brutality after seeing the terror on the eyes of a boy whose father he killed in cold blood.
That isn’t stopping director Fernando Spiner and Timecrimes producer Eduardo Carneros from taking a run at bringing back the Gaucho Western. Shooting has wrapped on Aballay based on a short story of the same title from Argentine author Antonio di Benedetto. It’s the story of an ill-tempered gaucho who reconsiders his life of crime and brutality after seeing the terror on the eyes of a boy whose father he killed in cold blood.
- 11/30/2009
- QuietEarth.us
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