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Tens of wild animals released back to nature

July 2, 2022 by en.vietnamplus.vn Leave a Comment

Tens of wild animals released back to nature hinh anh 1 Wild animals were released back to the Cuc Phuong National Park on July 2. (Photo: VNA)

Ninh Binh (VNA) – As many as 58 animals of eight species, including civet, king cobra, keeled box turtle, crested bird, cuckoo, yellow-billed starling, red-breasted parakeet, and Japanese zosterop, along with some cobras, were released back to Cuc Phuong National Park on July 2.

The activity was organised by the management board of the Cuc Phuong National Park and the Hanoi Wildlife Rescue Centre (HWRC) of the Hanoi Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.

These animals are all exhibits that have been rescued in illicit wildlife trading cases or voluntarily handed over by organisations or individuals.

Chu Phu My, Director of the Hanoi Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, said his agency has effectively cooperated in nature conservation with the management board of the Cuc Phuong National Park – the unit that has great achievements in wildlife conservation and environmental education.

According to a representative of the Centre for Rescue, Conservation and Development of Creatures of the Cuc Phuong National Park , this was the second time in the past two years the two units have collaborated with each other to release a large number of wild animals into the Cuc Phuong primeval forest./.

VNA

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Anime Expo news: Trigun Stampede trailer and FLCL updates

July 3, 2022 by www.avclub.com Leave a Comment

Los Angeles’ big Anime Expo is happening this weekend, and while there’s certainly a ton of anime-related fun to be had, at least two bits of news came out that will be of particular interest to anyone who grew up watching anime on Adult Swim: Production I.G shared new details on the two new seasons of FLCL (titled FLCL: Grunge and FLCL: Shoegaze ), while TOGO and Orange released a trailer for the recently announced Trigun remake . If we could get some Inuyasha , YuYu Hakusho , or Big O news as well, Adult Swim and Toonami fans would be all set.

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But alas, we’ll have to make do with very good FLCL news, with distributor Production I.G. USA confirming that Japanese band The Pillows will once again be returning to do the music for Grunge and Shoegaze . The band did the music for the original series, one of the greatest soundtracks in anime history, and previously returned for the 2018 sequels FLCL: Progressive and FLCL: Alternative . We also have some plot details for the new shows—which, if Progressive and Alternative are anything to go by—will have very little tangible connection to the original series.

Grunge , directed by Hitoshi Takekiyo and produced by MontBlanc Pictures, is about “three teenagers who graduated and have started working” and will be about “the feeling of being an adult.” That comes from Anime News Network , and it sounds like it might actually be a clever aged-up evolution of the FLCL concept, which up until now has always focused on sad pre-teens/teenagers having their lives upended by the arrival of infuriatingly cool alien woman Haruko Haruhara.

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Shoegaze , meanwhile, comes from the Alternative ’s director Yutaka Uemura and will be made by Production I.G and NUT. It will be a sequel of some sort to Alternative , focusing on a boy and girl in high school and taking place 10 years after that series. Both shows will be produced by Jason DeMarco, the creative director at Toonami.

As for Trigun , the classic action/comedy sci-fi Western is getting a CG-animated remake called Trigun Stampede from Orange, the Beastars studio, and its new trailer shows off a redesign for main protagonist Vash The Stampede. It also seems to tease that the new show will be front-loading some of the character’s backstory from the original series (and the manga it was based on), rather than teasing it out as a mystery.

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All of these shows are expected to premiere at some point in 2023, with FLCL probably airing on Cartoon Network and Trigun Stampede airing on Crunchyroll.

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Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers is a master class in animation | Digital Trends

July 2, 2022 by www.digitaltrends.com Leave a Comment

The Disney original film Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers seemingly managed to pull off a trifecta with a reboot of the Rescue Rangers franchise that won over fans of the original series, young audiences, and critics when it premiered on Disney+ in May.

Directed by Akiva Schaffer ( Hot Rod ), Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers is set in a world where animated characters and humans coexist , and finds the titular duo reunited when one of their former costars in the Rescue Rangers series goes missing. With Chip depicted in the more traditional, hand-drawn style of 2D animation in the series and Dale getting a 3D, computer-generated visual makeover, the pair find themselves interacting with characters from various eras of animation over the years — as well as humans — while attempting to solve the mystery.

Bringing all of those characters together and blending myriad animation styles was no small feat for the Rescue Rangers team, and Digital Trends spoke to visual effects studio MPC ‘s Oscar-winning production supervisor on the film, Steven Preeg , to find out how they made it possible.

Digital Trends: I read that MPC worked on more than 1450 VFX shots for the film. That’s a lot! Is that correct?

Steven Preeg: Yeah! I mean, there are bigger projects, like an Avengers movie, but this is a Disney+ project where they come in and say, “Oh, it’s streaming, so there’s not quite the same budget as a feature,” and you go, “Okay, well what’s the concession?” The resolution for the film is the same or higher. It’s not half the number of shots or anything. It’s a situation where, if this had been a theatrical release, the visual effects budget would have been double. So it felt like a real achievement.

Was it always the plan to present Chip and Dale as 2D and 3D CGI characters, respectively?

It was. When I first joined the film, before it was a green-lit and it was just basically Akiva and me — there were producers in the background and writers, of course — we did a proof of concept, about a minute long, and it was basically to show Dale as 3D and Chip as 2D next to each other. It was created to figure out whether it was going to work.

How quickly did you get approval to go ahead with that plan?

I think we finished the proof of concept in October. And by the end of December, I was on the film and it was green-lit, so it was pretty fast from finishing the proof of concept to starting pre-production.

How did having hand-drawn animation, stop-motion animation, and so many other types of animation in the same film change your approach?

There was definitely a lot of looking into what those things would look like together. We knew we couldn’t do traditional stop-motion with Captain Putty (voiced by J.K. Simmons), because he’s interacting with Ellie (Kiki Layne, portraying a human character) in real time. For Putty, there was a lot of studying stop-motion and looking beyond the obvious things.

For example, should he have thumbprints that show up and change from frame to frame? If you look at something from Aardman [stop-motion animation studio], you’re not going to see thumbprints because it’s more polished, but we wanted the animation to feel sort of manipulated, so we introduced more elements like that than you might see in a very polished thing.

We also knew there were a number of scenes that were going to be fully CG. For example, with Bjornson (voiced by Keegan-Michael Key), who was sort of a Muppet character, the bigger of his two scenes is a fully CG environment. We were like, “We’re not really going to make him a puppet, because we have to do the scene in full CG later anyway, so we’re going to make him fully CG, too.”

So we met with a group called Puppet Heap , which has some former Jim Henson people who have a lot of experience with Muppets. We had discussions with them about the behavior of puppets, their limitations, what a puppeteer is thinking when they’re doing it, and so on. And then we showed them animation tests as we were going along and got feedback. There was a lot of asking around like that because we really did want this film to pay as much homage to different animation styles as possible.

How did you decide on the best way to handle Chip, since he represents that sort of traditional, 2D, hand-drawn animation style, but also plays such a big role in the film?

Chip was our biggest concern because we knew we couldn’t do fully 2D, hand-drawn animation for him, due to budget and time constraints. We did look into it and got bids, but it would have doubled our effects budget and added a year to post-production. We do have background characters that are traditionally drawn, though, because they weren’t so important editorially as Chip, and it wasn’t a situation where the edit or dialog was changing a lot over time. So we tried to do a bunch of tricks to pay homage to the 2D, hand-drawn stuff where we could.

It feels like you were bringing these traditional styles into the modern effects production environment in some ways…

Yeah. We would have loved to do traditional animation, and people online like to say, “Well, then why didn’t they just do this hand-drawn?” And that’s like saying, “Why don’t we just go to Mars?” You can say that, but there are aspects of filmmaking that just don’t allow it — two of them being money and time.

Were there certain characters or scenes that proved to be more of a challenge than others?

I’m not sure that there were any specific scenes that gave us trouble, because Akiva was very good about planning everything out. We [previsualized] the entire film. Every shot…we had to plan, because we had half the money you would expect to have, with the full expectation that you still want the highest level of quality. We had to make sure we were not wasting money or time.

And with COVID hitting right in the middle of everything, we ended up having a very short shoot schedule. More of it got pushed into visual effects in terms of environments, and I think somewhere between a third and a half of the movie is just fully CG.

That’s surprising, because it doesn’t feel like it’s so heavily CG.

That’s great to hear. Akiva had this idea that he didn’t want it to feel like you’re observing small characters. He really wanted this to feel like a regular buddy-cop movie, and every once in a while, you back the camera out and realize they’re so small. In terms of shooting style and shot selection and framing, it was very much like a Michael Bay film, with that sort of camera work. So we had to do it digitally because Akiva wanted it to feel like we had little, foot-tall cameramen and small cameras.

He did such a good job of policing that and only allowing the reality to come in when he wanted it. For example, when we’re in Monty’s apartment with Putty, there’s a sort of jump-scare when Ellie shows up outside the window. You suddenly realize you’re in a really small apartment building. Before that, you sort of forgot you were in this small world.

I loved when the characters traveled to the Uncanny Valley and acknowledged that particular era in animation. Did you feel like you had to regress to do it justice?

Oh, you definitely do. I was involved in a number of uncanny valley projects myself, so I feel like it’s less making fun of it and more acknowledging that there was a period of time that we, as an industry, had to get through to get to this point. When the proof of concept was done for that scene where they first meet Bob (voiced by Seth Rogen), Akiva kept saying, “No! It has to look worse!” He even started suggesting he was going to go all the way back to something like PlayStation 2-style models for the character.

We eventually got to a place on the proof of concept where he was happy with it, but then we started the actual project and the digital assets had been remade again to be a little more flexible. So the process started all over again. They were too good. I kept telling them, “Akiva is going to kick this back if you don’t dial it down.” But getting artists to intentionally make their work worse is asking a lot of their egos.

This film is such a journey through the history of animation. Did you come away from it feeling like you learned anything new about some animation styles?

I did. So many different people from so many different worlds were involved. The guy who drew Roger Rabbit in our movie had originally worked on Who Framed Roger Rabbit , for example. Having people who could talk about the old days brought a lot to it.

There’s an episode of Rescue Rangers we see right before they have their wrap party in the film and split up. That episode is a made-up episode, but it had to look like one of the original episodes. We brought on this guy Uli [Meyer] who was really old-school and knows his stuff. Akiva has very specific ideas of what he wants, and he’d say, “Could we do this?” And then [Uli] might say, “Well, the old show wouldn’t have the budget for that, so it wouldn’t be done that way. They would’ve cheated a bit, and it would be like this.”

I do want to ask you about something I read right before the interview. Was Jar-Jar Binks really in the film at one point?

He was! Jar-Jar was originally the Ugly Sonic character. There were a number of different points in the script where things changed over the years. With that whole set-up of Ellie seeming like the bad guy, there was a version of the script where she really was the villain. Part of that whole “It never aired in Albany” misdirect was, at one point, an actual clue they discovered. It’s interesting how many things change in the course of a movie.

Glad to have that confirmed! One thing I can confirm is that Rescue Rangers did indeed air in Albany, NY. I know because that’s where I grew up. I even messaged one of the screenwriters about it, who apologized for misrepresenting my city .

[Laughs] Yeah, there were a couple of things that were historically inaccurate, and that was one of them for sure: It did air in Albany.

Glad we can set the record straight!

Disney’s Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers is available now on Disney+ streaming service.

Chip ‘n Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022)

Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers
66 %

7.1/10

pg 99m

Genre Animation, Family, Comedy, Adventure, Mystery
Stars Andy Samberg, John Mulaney, KiKi Layne
Directed by Akiva Schaffer
watch on Disney+

watch on Disney+

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Animated Movies, Chip n Dale: Rescue Rangers, Movie interviews, MPC, steven preeg, VFX, visual effects, chip n dale rescue rangers theme song, why is chip n dale rescue rangers 2 so expensive, chip and dale rescue ranger, chip n dales rescue rangers

Cliff Richard, 81, puts on animated display in eye-catching white suit at Wimbledon Day 5

July 1, 2022 by www.express.co.uk Leave a Comment

Cliff Richard

Cliff Richard put on an animated display at Wimbledon Day Five. (Image: Getty)

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Cliff Richard , 81, has arrived at Wimbledon Day Five wearing an eye-catching white blazer paired with a matching tie.

Cliff Richard

Cliff opted for an eye-catching white suit. (Image: Getty)

Cliff Richard

He wore a matching white blazer and tie paired with black shirt, trousers, and a studded belt. (Image: Getty)

Cliff Richard

Cliff looked in good spirits as he arrived on Friday. (Image: Getty)

Cliff Richard

Cliff was going for gold on Day Four with a metallic tie to match his grey suit. (Image: Getty)

Cliff Richard

Cliff also attended on Day Three and pinned his signature red rose to his left lapel. (Image: Getty)

Cliff Richard

Cliff also attended the first day wearing a metallic ensemble. (Image: Getty)

Cliff Richard

Cliff seemed to be having fun as he watched the tennis. (Image: Getty)

Filed Under: Uncategorized entertainment, celebrities, cliff richard, wimbledon, Celebrity News, centre where animals are put on display crossword clue, eye catching displays, eye catching window displays, forty days cliff richard, 40 days song cliff richard

Remarkable friendships from the animal world

July 3, 2022 by www.cbsnews.com Leave a Comment

In the leafy Pine Barrens of southern New Jersey lies a very different kind of farm:  the astonishing Funny Farm, a not-for-profit animal sanctuary open to the public two days a week, created by New Jersey’s own Doctor Doolittle, Laurie Zaleski.

Every animal here is a rescue – abused, abandoned, disabled – and Zaleski has healed and protected more than 600 animals over the last 20 years, from retired racehorses to raucous roosters. “We have 115 roosters,” she said. And it sounded like it!

Correspondent Lesley Stahl asked, “For those people who have never been here, never even heard of the Funny Farm, how would you describe it?”

“I say Heaven on Earth, especially for animals,” Zaleski replied. “And for people, because when you walk through the gates, you can feel the inner peace and harmony, because they all get along here.

“My mother had the original Funny Farm, and she said it’s full of animals and fit for lunatics!” laughed Zaleski.

As she writes in her book, “Funny Farm: My Unexpected Life with 600 Rescue Animals” (Macmillan), there are lessons here for our polarized, at-each-others-throat society, because the creatures on the Funny Farm live in harmony, no matter how different they are. It’s not quite the Biblical tale of the lion lying down with the lamb, but as friendships go, this bond between Emily the emu and a goose named Airplane (because of her wounded wings) is pretty jaw-dropping. “That goose is just always wherever she is,” Zaleski said.

“Do you know why the goose loves the emu?” Stahl asked.

“Maybe he likes larger women? I don’t know!” Zaleski laughed. “I’m not really sure! So, it’s possible that she protected him at one point in there that we just don’t know about. And he thought, ‘You know, this is my protector and I’m gonna stay with her.'”

Zaleski introduced us to another cross-species couple: a donkey, Jethro, and a very kissable llama named Lorenzo. Jethro’s previous companion, a horse, passed away, and (according to Zaleski) Jethro went into mourning:

“This poor guy was suffering because he was so sad. Lorenzo came, and they bonded themselves. They just found each other. I mean, these two are such an odd couple.”

An even odder couple might be Yogi the steer and Cooper the alpaca. “Wherever Yogi goes, he goes,” Zaleski said.

They make an adorable pair today, but two years ago Yogi’s long horns ripped a hole in Cooper’s side by accident. Zaleski said. “When I tried to take Cooper to the hospital, Yogi was definitely freaking out. He cried! He went, ‘MOOOOO!’ It broke my heart! You know, ‘Where’s my friend? Where did you take him?'”

Stahl asked, “Are they really missing them? Are you attributing human emotions to your animals? You’re making it up?”

“I absolutely think that they miss each other,” she said.

“But was it grieving?”

“I think he was grieving. Sure. People say they don’t have emotions. They do have emotions.”

“But scientists complain …”

“Scientists, schmientists!” Zaleski laughed. “What do they know? What do they have in their backyard?”

Jennifer Holland has collected dozens of stories of unexpected animal affection in “Unlikely Friendships” (Workman), one of a series of unlikely bestsellers. Her favorite coupling is of dogs and dolphins, who play in the water together.

“One of my favorites is an iguana with a cat,” she said. “The fact that the iguana not only would cuddle with the cat, but would let it play with his tail, and lick him, and share his food. Those kind of stories just really make me smile.”

In the course of writing her books, the former National Geographic staffer had some questions: “I wanted to know, was there science behind this? Do we understand why this happens? [I] started looking into it and realized we don’t really have one answer, because there’s so many different contexts, so many different animals. It would be very difficult to do a rigorous study and explain what’s happening.”

But with some companions, might it be an instinct for a pet, like a human’s desire for a kitten? “Part of that may be a little bit of that parental instinct, that instinct to care for, wanting to mother,” Holland said.

Zookeepers often place orphaned babies with mothers of another species who are nursing. Stahl asked Holland if the need for protection might come into play, such as with the goose and her emu bodyguard? An example of animal altruism? “Even with an animal that’s blind, another animal may kind of turn into a seeing-eye dog and protect that animal, and show where the food is, and just be the bodyguard, be the helper,” Holland said.

And when animals meet when they’re young, anything is possible. Holland told of an unusual friendship involving a lion, a tiger, and a bear, three predators-turned-pals that were found as babies in a drug dealer’s basement and brought to an animal sanctuary where they became lifelong buddies. “They were pals. These are three animals that would never meet in the wild. And it just happened that these three found something, again, positive in each other, and pal around together.

“I think you see this in captivity so often, because these animals are taken care of, they’re not competing for food, they’re not stressed. And so, they have this luxury of being able to be social with other animals.”

Laurie Zaleski takes that “If you feed them, they won’t fight” theory to a whole other level. She has 35 animals in my house, and they don’t eat each other. “I have 10 dogs, about 20 cats, a cockatoo who is louder than all of them put together, a chicken,” she said. “It’s like Noah’s Ark!”

“Saving animals is what Noah did,” Stahl said.

“I’m Biblical!” Zaleski laughed.

  • Funny Farm Rescue , Mays Landing, N.J.
  • “Funny Farm: My Unexpected Life with 600 Rescue Animals” by Laurie Zaleski (Macmillan), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon , Barnes & Noble and Indiebound
  • “Unlikely Friendships: 47 Remarkable Stories from the Animal Kingdom” by Jennifer S. Holland (Workman), in Trade Paperback and eBook formats, available via Amazon , Barnes & Noble and Indiebound

Filed Under: Uncategorized friendship animal hospital, animators world, unlikely friendships animals, animation world network, animal world movie, friendship tours world travel, friendship animation, animated worlds, animal world.com, animals world

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