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Animalia (TV series)

Animalia is an animated children's television series based on the 1986 picture book of the same name by illustrator Graeme Base. The series premiered on Network Ten in Australia on 11 November 2007, airing two seasons before ending on 7 November 2008.

Premise

The series tells the story of two human children, Alex and his friend Zoe, who stumble into the magical library which transports them to the animal-inhabited world of Animalia. Strange events have undermined the Animalian civilization, and Alex and Zoe join forces with their new friends G'Bubu the gorilla and Iggy the iguana to save Animalia from evil and comical villains.

Characters

Humans

  • Alex (voiced by Brooke Mikey Anderson) is a 12-years old boy artist who is hardly ever seen without a sketchbook and pencil. He keeps a cool level head and is rather enthusiastic with a sense of adventure; he's also athletic and can jump very well. His ability to see forgotten portals that can transport anyone anywhere in Animalia is what makes him special.
  • Zoe (voiced by Katie Leigh) is a sassy and smart-mouthed but benevolent and jolly 12-year old girl. Zoe met Alex by accident where she followed him to the world of Animalia. Despite a rocky start, she found a friend in Alex, who she refers to as "Sketch Boy." She is a very good storyteller, as evidenced in "Over and Beyond".
  • Stanley is the librarian of the Metro Library. He is Livingstone's human counterpart, and a close friend to him.
  • Emma is Zoe's friend. Although she is not shown on-screen, she is heard in Zoe's PDA when she is calling her.

Animalians

  • G'Bubu (voiced by Chris Hobbs) is a green-furred Western lowland gorilla who lives in his treehouse home with his best friend Iggy. G'Bubu is fun-loving and enjoys monkeying around. Despite this, he still has a sense of acumen, be it about Animalia or his family tree.
  • Iggy (voiced by Robert Mark Klein) is a Mexican-accented iguana with a slightly excitable personality. He thinks himself to be bigger than anyone else, but always gets ahead of himself. He and G'Bubu were the first to befriend Alex and Zoe when they first arrived and are always on hand to help their new friends with any problem. He can camouflage and change the color of his body due to being part chameleon via his grandfather.
  • Livingstone T. Lion (voiced by Chris Hobbs) is a friendly lion who rules Animalia and the Keeper of the Core. He has a vast knowledge of the Core itself and just about everything and everyone in Animalia. He can be gentle, helpful and is always up for a game, but sometimes he is rather self-deprecating, wondering whether he can manage to bring Animalia back on track with its unstable Core.
  • Reenie (voiced by Peta Johnson) is a Scottish-accented black rhinoceros. She works at Animalia's Great Library and helps Livingstone with keeping the Core stable whenever something goes wrong. Almost as smart as Livingstone and just as friendly, Reenie has a big heart with room for everyone, but also claims to have a "love friend" named Rumble.
  • Allegra (voiced by Kate Higgins) is a teenage American alligator who lives in the swamps. Allegra is a self-loving and snappy creature who is very protective of her land. She dreams of being a singer, but the others find that unlikely due to her terrible voice, except for her two gal pals, Bitzy and Snitzy, who constantly follow Allegra and admire her thoughts. Her singing improved when Zoe taught her in "Animalia's Talent-o-Topia".
  • Tyrannicus (voiced by Dean O'Gorman) is a smooth-talking Bengal tiger who serves as the main antagonist. Tyrannicus feels he should be ruler of Animalia rather than Livingstone. He finds ways of getting ahead by the use of various get-rich-quick schemes. He despises Alex and Zoe, who he refers to as "stink bugs" and especially wants to get rid of them. Tyrannicus ends up working with Alex and Zoe to stop the Creeper after being double-crossed.
  • Fuchsia (voiced by Katie Leigh) is a French-accented red fox with pink fur and Tyrannicus' assistant. Always sent to help him arrange or develop plans, she is very intelligent. She serves as a secondary antagonist.
  • Elni (voiced by Peta Johnson) and Erno (voiced by Chris Hobbs) are African forest elephants who run the Elephants Eatery, the local restaurant for all Animalians. Elni's warm personality makes her lovable by all, while Erno's cooking is something worth trying, despite his tendency to panic.
  • Herry and Horble (known as the "Horrible Hogs") (voiced by Dean O'Gorman and Robert Mark Klein) are Cockney-accented warthogs who are a little crass at times. They are a duo of criminals. They are mostly seen riding on their motorcycles, specially equipped with loud speakers that play music wherever they go.
  • Melba and Melford are the main news reporters on Animalia News, broadcasting all of the current news and happenings on Fluttervision. Melba is more level-headed and calm, whereas Melford is slightly more neurotic and rather slow thinking Klein)
  • Zee and Zed are two zebras who ride in their large zeppelin, giving the low-down on Animalia from a bird's eye view. While Zed has a level head on his shoulders, Zee is very excitable and sometimes can't stop herself talking excitedly.
  • Bitsy and Snitzy are Allegra's two female friends who do whatever she says. They're the only ones who respect Allegra's singing before Zoe taught her how.
  • Victor and Verbal are a vulture comedy double act: Victor, a comedian, and his wisecracking partner, Verbal, who acts as his ventriloquist dummy for the bit. They are vegetarians, unlike normal vultures.
  • Rombolt is a black rhinoceros and the head boss of the Fluttervision Office.
  • The Creeper (voiced by Joey Lotsko) is an villanious long-tailed weasel who was once part of the Community Team until he was banished for using the secret portals to steal from the Animalians' homes. The Creeper, whose real name is Wooster Q. Weasel, plans to overthrow Animalia by taking control over the Core. At the end of the series, he is defeated when Livingstone touches the Core while the Creeper is inside, causing him to be shot out like a Core-spore into the Wind of No Return.
  • The Toucans (both voiced by Robert Mark Klein) are a colorful band of birds who, whenever they talk, speak only one word in every sentence. Sometimes they get the words mixed up and confuse their sentences, sometimes having disastrous results; this was especially evident in "Long Story Short".
  • Butterflies – In the world of Animalia, rather than television sets, the residents watch Fluttervision. Large beautiful butterflies fly from home to home and arrange themselves as a large screen where the Animalians can watch the latest happenings from the Animalian news. They only do this for a short time as they do get worn out if watched for too long.
  • Peter Applebottom (voiced by Chris Hobbs) is a mad gorilla scientist.
  • Dagmont Dragon is an ally who captured Zee and Zed Zebra.
  • Whim (voiced by Peta Johnson) is a unicorn in "Over and Beyond". She made her first appearance in "Over and Beyond". When Zoe and Iggy touched her horn, they got transferred back to Animalia, which she didn't know.
  • Carmine Chameleon is Iggy's grandfather.
  • Echo Elephant is Elni and Erno's daughter.
  • Hope and Harmony Hogs are a pair of warthog sisters who are far more ladylike then their male kin, enjoying skipping through the jungle. They are the love interests of Herry and Horble, who they appear to like, despite briefly falling for G'Bubu and Iggy.
  • Mail Snail is a snail who serves as the Animalian equivalent of a mailman, but is extremely slow, often taking years to get the letter to the recipient.

Corespore types

There have been many different types of Corespores throughout the series, each causing a wide variety of adverse effects on Animalia and its inhabitants when they blast off from the Core.

  • Memory spore: This makes all Animalians lose their memories.
  • Rhyme spore: This makes all Animalians have to speak in rhyme.
  • Time spore: Causes time to randomly loop, slow down, or stop.
  • Nature spore: Causes all nature to slowly dry up.
  • Cooperation spore: Causes Animalians to become uncooperative.
  • Generosity spore: Causes Animalians to become consumed by material greed.
  • Truth spore: Causes Animalians to lie and written truth to disappear.
  • Writing spore: This makes all the writing in Animalia disappear.
  • Deep thought spore: This corespore causes all Animalians to not think clearly. According to Peter Applebottom, it can be changed in many ways like making everyone yodel, hop around non-stop, or become babbling ninnies.
  • Hope spore: Causes Animalians to lose hope.
  • Portal spore: A spore lost long ago that lets all Animalians see the portals.
  • Word spore: This makes all Animalians forget words to describe things.
  • Origin spore: This makes all Animalians speak in their original animal languages.
  • Speech spore: Causes Animalians to lose their ability to speak.
  • Stability spore: This causes earthquakes.
  • Peace spore: This causes turmoil amongst Animalians.
  • Agreement spore: Causes Animalians to disagree with each other.
  • Intelligence spore: This causes Livingston and Allegra to switch intelligence.
  • Superspore: Also known as the Corespore of miracles. Completely heals the Core.

Episodes

Note: All episodes of the series were directed by David Scott.

Series overview

Season 1 (2007–08)

Season 2 (2008)

Production

The series is computer-animated, and 40 half-hour episodes were produced by Animalia Productions, based at Village Roadshow Studios in Queensland, and visual effects companies Photon VFX, and Iloura Digital Pictures. The animation was rendered by Autodesk Maya.

Development

The series was first conceived in 1999 when Australian producer Ewan Burnett met with Base, and obtained the rights to an adaptation of the best-selling book. In early 2002, Burnett finalised the funding arrangements with Australian and international broadcast partners and investors, but the project was delayed when the British government revised the United Kingdom's taxation laws so that projects claiming special tax status had to be delivered in the financial year they were claimed. After three years of re-financing, Animalia began production in 2005.

The book on which the series was based is a picture book with each spread depicting an elaborate illustration in which every animal and object begins with a particular letter of the alphabet. As there was no coherent narrative or central characters, these were developed with the concept of a fantasy world where animals of all kinds intermingled and interacted becoming the central theme.

As the series was to be broadcast internationally, the alphabetical theme central to the book was dropped, as it was based on the English language alphabet and would lose its meaning if the program were dubbed into other languages.

Broadcast

BBC Worldwide initially handled distribution in all territories except for North America, where PorchLight Entertainment distributed the series. In December 2009, Cyber Group Studios took over global distribution rights from both companies.

The series began running in Australia on Network Ten at noon on Sundays beginning on 11 November 2007, and also on Nickelodeon since May 2008. In the United Kingdom it aired on CBBC on BBC One beginning on 19 November 2007. The series also aired in the United States on PBS Kids Go! beginning on 5 January 2008.

As of 3 November 2008, the show is also running on NRK in Norway. In Latin America, the series began running on Animal Planet and later in Venezuela on Tves. In India, the show is broadcast on Cartoon Network India.

The other broadcast partners and investors in the series have not yet announced their broadcast schedules. The international networks involved in the production are: the BBC in the United Kingdom and CBC in Canada. The series will also be broadcast by SABC 2 in South Africa, Al Jazeera and in Israel.

Home media releases

  • On 30 June 2008, the first seven episodes of the series were released on DVD in the UK by 2Entertain, entitled Animalia: Where Animals Rule!.
  • Four episodes from season one were released on DVD and Blu-ray in the US by PorchLight Home Entertainment on 23 September 2008.
  • On 8 September 2009, the first season was released on DVD by Imavision in Canada.

Reception

Critical response

A reviewer for The New York Times commented that the phrase based on the book by' may never have been stretched so far" in the creation of this TV series, while characterizing it as "weird" and "intermittently interesting."

Awards

In 2008, Animalia was nominated for BAFTA Children's Kids Vote Award.

In 2009, composer Christopher Elves won a Daytime Emmy award for Outstanding Music Direction and Composition for his work on Animalias musical score.

APRA-AGSC Awards

The annual Screen Music Awards are presented by Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) and Australian Guild of Screen Composers (AGSC).

  • 2008 Best Music for Children's Television win for Animalia – "Butterfly Winter" composed by Christopher Elves.

Merchandise

PorchLight Entertainment owned worldwide licensing and merchandising rights to the series while BBC Worldwide handled the UK, Australia and New Zealand.

In 2008, BBC Children's Books and the Penguin Group published four books by Mandy Archer based on the series: the Animalia Colouring Book, the Animalia Sticker Activity Book, plus two storybooks, Animalia: Hello, we must be going and Animalia: Goodbye, we must be staying which were based upon the first and second episodes of the same name and adapted from the scripts by Tom Ruegger. All four books have text and design by Children's Character Books and all but the colouring book are heavily illustrated with colour screenshots from the series.

References

External links