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"Animation
World Magazine" December 03, 2007
Back to the Futurama: Bender's Big Score By Joe Strike
Futurama is back, and Joe Strike tells us how the TV series found new life on DVD in the new feature release, Bender's Big Score.
Rough Draft Studios/Claudia Katz
(Visit this article online at http://mag.awn.com )
When Philip J. Fry stumbled into that cryonic freezing chamber back on
New Year's Eve 1999, he had to wait 1,000 years to be defrosted into
the world of the far future. On the other hand, when Futurama itself
fell into the deep freeze of cancellation, it only took four years for
the show to come back to life. Vociferous, dedicated viewers have saved
more than one series from cancellation, but it's an exceedingly rare
television phenomenon when audience demand puts a cancelled show back
into production.
Family Guy blazed that particular trail, vanishing from Fox's Sunday
night schedule in 2002 (after a previous cancellation had been reversed
at the last minute), only to return three years later when a succession
of comedies flopped in its place. Surprisingly strong DVD sales
convinced Fox there was still life (and money to be made) in the show
and put it back on their Sunday night schedule, where it continues to
thrive.
DVD sales also played a big role in Futurama's return. "Fox Home [Ent.]
brought up" the idea of a Futurama revival, says Rough Draft Studios'
Claudia Katz, one of the producers of the show's triumphant return as
the direct-to-video feature Futurama: Bender's Big Score. " Ultimately
there was a business model there from Family Guy [also distributed by
FHE] and it started to make economic sense for them.
"We're very grateful they decided it was a good idea. They contacted
Matt [Groening] and David [X. Cohen, the series' executive producers]
with the idea. I think Matt and David went to the meeting hoping Fox
was interested in a DTV feature. When they got there, Fox told them
'we're looking at the numbers and it would only make sense if we can do
at least two of them.' Matt and David were like, 'oh, okay, that sounds
great.' I think that meeting went better than they expected."
As flush as Fox Home's pockets might've been with Family Guy cash, a
production partner was still needed. It just so happened that Comedy
Central had defeated Adult Swim in a fierce battle for the next round
of rerun rights to Futurama, and both it and Family Guy were still
attracting healthy audiences. Once they had the reruns locked up (and
scheduled to begin airing in January), working out the financing with
FHE for new episodes was "easy," according to Dave Bernath, Comedy
Central's SVP of programming. "Getting fresh Futurama content was
always very exciting for us."
The deal finally took shape: four direct-to-video movies that will be
released by FHE, beginning with Big Score this past Tuesday (November
27), followed by three more at several-month intervals in 2008.
Ultimately each of the four movies will be cut into half hours that
will run on Comedy Central a few months after their DVD release, with
the episodic version of Big Score airing sometime during the 1st
quarter of 2008.
The next step was pulling together a new crew to work on a show that
had been out of production for several years. "I was really the only
person on board with what the series was like," says Dwayne Carey Hill,
Big Score's director. Hill had been part of the series from the start,
first as a designer, then as director of the fourth-season episode
"Obsoletely Fabulous." "It was a big learning curve getting everyone on
board and getting them to understand the way Matt and David tell a
Futurama story.
"We had a great series and all the DVDs to reference. A lot of our crew
had been doing storyboard and design on Drawn Together and were using
Futurama as a storytelling model anyway; some of them had even worked
on Futurama prior to Drawn Together. It helped them to storyboard the way we liked to begin with. Basically it was a crew we were very
familiar with, artists we enjoyed working with."
There was no creative interference from FHE or Comedy Central beyond
"getting some standards known," as Katz puts it. "Content-wise it was
producer driven, which was really nice. They were, 'here, go ahead.'"
It must've been a dream come true for Groening and Cohen, who fought
Fox TV executives for creative control of their show since day one, a
battle which undoubtedly contributed to the premature end of its
broadcast run. Producing the new episodes for home video and basic
cable meant the shows could be scripted with the same freedom enjoyed
by South Park and Drawn Together. "The movie is looser than the
series," Katz acknowledges. "Network standards have tightened quite a
bit since we were on, since the Janet Jackson incident. On Fox you
can't show Bart's butt crack any more, something they'd been doing for
years. Writing them as DVD movies was a little more liberating -- we
see more of Fry's ass than we ever have before."
It was also more challenging. "The film has a bigger, more epic story
arc," she adds. "Usually you approach a 22-minute episode as a
three-act arc, but they're writing it like a movie you could look at as
having four acts. They wrote it like a movie and then sort of backed
out of that [to divide it into four episodes]. It's a pretty big
challenge and I think they did a great job structurally."
That feature-length structure is built around a complex time-travel
story that toys with all the clichés and paradoxes inherent
in the genre and builds to a twist ending worthy of The Sixth Sense. If
anything, fans of the show may feel the movie's dense plotting
shortchanges the zingy dialog and gags they've come to expect. Katz
admits Big Score is "a very heavy sci-fi genre story and might be a
little lighter on humor in favor of serving the story." For his part,
director Hill sees the first movie as "a great fan-based story. The
fans will really, really enjoy the return of something they've been
waiting for. At the same time, it's a great intellectual story. It kind
of introduces all these characters without you having to know who they
are -- but it definitely feels like more of a fan script."
Bender's Big Score comes to a definite conclusion -- then introduces a
cliffhanger that will be resolved in the second direct-to-video
release, The Beast with a Billion Backs. "The next DVD is another great
Futurama story, but it's more of a standalone, even though they hook up
together," says Hill. "It takes up where the first one leaves off, but
definitely in a not-expected Futurama way."
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