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Soupe Opéra

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Soupe Opéra
Title card
Created byChristophe Barrier
Frédéric Clémençon
Music byGarlo
Country of originFrance
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes26
Production
Running time2 mins
Production companyMarlou Films
Original release
NetworkFrance 3
Release1991 (1991) –
2000 (2000)

Soupe Opéra (often referred to in English as Soup Opera) is a French children's stop motion television show by French animation studio, Marlou Films.[1] Featuring fruits and vegetables turning themselves into different creatures and objects,[2] the name of the series is a pun on the term "Soap Opera." A total of 26 two-minute episodes were made. In France, the series aired on the France 3 channel.

Visuals

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The title sequence of each episode shows a fruits-and-vegetables slot machine, with an accompanying score as well as foley and sound effects. Episodes have no dialogue and are composed of several short animated sequences, each under a minute in length. In-between each segment, there are transition cards consisting of animated food sliding horizontally to the left.

The show's central animated sequences take place against a black backdrop and are realised entirely in stop-motion. In these sequences, various food objects (nearly always fruit and vegetables) appear to spontaneously exit a basket and 'cut' themselves up into pieces, which then re-assemble to form animals, faces, and various other objects. The food then 'performs' actions related to the object or animal that the food has been 'assembled' into, often incorporating other pieces of food as part of the activity. For instance, a typical segment may consist of a collection of small fruits slicing themselves up to re-assemble in the shape of a chicken, which then proceeds to 'peck' at several stray kernels of corn.

The food that emerges from the basket is usually fruit or vegetables, however, other foods may be used - such as an egg that is hard boiled, a packet of chips or a bag of baking soda. Non-edible items are also featured occasionally, such as a pot and portable gas stove.

Several of Marlou Films' subsequent productions also feature themes of food and other objects re-arranging itself to form animals. In 1993, Marlou produced Poubelles (Dustbins), a show featuring rubbish coming out of a bin to create an animal, and their 1998 programme Les animaux des quatre saisons (The Four Seasons Animals) followed the lives of various animals, all of which are made from fruit and vegetables as on Soupe Opéra. A similar concept of food being turned into animals was again used by Marlou in their 2007 TV series Miam Miam! (Yum Yum!).

Soundtrack

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Soupe Opera features a distinctive soundtrack, composed specifically for the show by French artist Garlo. The score consists of several short pieces used for title cards, transitions, and stop-motion sequences respectively.

The music used for the main animated scenes progresses through several iterations, and consists almost entirely of pitched recordings of various human voices, manually played back on a keyboard sampler. Each iteration features a soprano voice singing the words 'Soupe Opéra,', before progressing to the aforementioned sample-based groove. At points, the use of the sampler allows for particular vocal samples to be played back at pitches lower than generally achievable with a human voice.

Additionally, a short title theme resembling the jingle of a slot machine accompanies the title cards and transitional sequences, while the credits theme is an instrumental synth-funk arrangement of the main animation's score.[3]

Sound effects for the series were sourced from Sound Ideas.

International broadcast

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Internationally, Soupe Opéra aired in Australia on ABC1 and its sister channel, ABC2, during the ABC 4 Kids line-up.[4] In the UK, it aired on ITV during its CITV children's block and later on the CITV channel. In the United States and Latin America, the series aired on Cartoon Network as part of its Small World anthology series, which featured foreign-made shorts. The show had also been broadcast in other countries, such as CBC Television in Canada, as well as Canal Once in Mexico.

Following

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The show has developed a cult following. Long after broadcast ceased, non-official uploads of Soupe Opéra episodes attained hundreds of thousands of views on YouTube. (Marlou Films has since uploaded the entire series of 26 episodes to their own YouTube channel.) Australian audiences in particular have noted an appreciation for the show due to its broadcasting on free-to-air children's television in the 2000s,[5] with several publications writing retrospectives on the show's popularity. An article by Buzzfeed noted that its monochromatic backdrop and synthesised vocal score led to it being perceived by children as esoteric and occasionally frightening,[6] and Australian youth publication Junkee described the programme as 'unintentionally horrifying'. In 2023, Melbourne funk group Playlunch released a single titled Soupe Opéra with lyrics describing the show's cultural impact on Australian youth.

References

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  1. ^ "Marlou Films- Soupe Opéra". Marloufilms.com. 2008-05-28. Retrieved 2012-03-08.
  2. ^ "Dalla Francia l'ultima frontiera, i cartoon di verdura - Galleria". Repubblica.it. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  3. ^ "CIPAUDIO". Cipaudio.com. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Soupe Opera - ABC for Kids". Abc.net.au. Archived from the original on 2013-01-31. Retrieved 2022-01-22.
  5. ^ "A Fond Look Back At 'Soupe Opéra', The Nightmarish Kid's Show That Turned Fruit Into Animals". Junkee.com. 29 April 2020. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  6. ^ "For Everyone Who Remembers That Cooked Fruit And Veg Kids' Show Called "Soupe Opéra"". BuzzFeed.com. 14 April 2021. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
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