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The Village (animated short film)

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The Village
The Village, 1993
Directed byMark Baker
Written byMark Baker
Produced byPam Dennis
StarringAnnie Griffin, Dave Western, James Baker
Edited byAnnie Kocur
Music byJulian Nott
Animation byChristine Anders, Lynne Anderson, Neville Astley, Mark Baker, Sally Baxter, Sharon Boxall, Guy Brockett, Juliet Bunce, Christine Courtney, Caroline Cruikshank Martin Davey, Roxanne Ducharme, Alyson Hamilton, Lynne Holzer, Flora Keen, Sara Kent, Angela Kovacs, Chris Lambrou, Berni Leroy, Vanessa Luther-Smith, Gaston Marzio, Tom Newman, Isabel Radage, Paul Ray, Sandra Roach, Sharon Smith, Rachael Stedman, Paul Stone, Peter Western, Pete Wood, Julia Woolf, Rosemary Young
Production
company
Pizazz Pictures
Distributed byPizazz Pictures
Release date
  • May 1993 (1993-05)
Running time
15 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Village, a Vila or a Village is an Oscar-nominated short film by Mark Baker released in 1993[1][2][3][4] in the United Kingdom. The short film was animated with traditional hand drawn animation. The film was directed and written by Baker, produced by Pam Dennis and other actors and crew members,[5] the animation tells the story of an isolated circular village located in the middle of a large forest in Northern Britain. The Church rules over the village as a figure of authority. The people in the village are devout Christians following the church and obeying the village priest, the villagers who are presented as hypocritical "Sinners" most of the time spy on each other by looking out their windows and peeping into one another's houses. The village is filled with distrust which causes many conflicts and tension between everyone. The protagonist of the film is a large bald man wearing glasses, a light grey long sleeved shirt and dark grey pants who is a gardener, in one of the first scenes the man is seen digging soil planting apple trees just outside the village. The rest of the village is seen after with the main focus being about the villagers staring at each other.

The Village was initially made for the British television channel Channel 4,[6] Pizazz Pictures which was the studio where the crew worked in managed the production with Baker serving as director, Pizazz Pictures also distributed the animation. The Village aired on Channel 4 TV station as a "Pizazz Pictures production".

Today, The Village is available to watch on Baker's official website and YouTube channel.[1]

Plot

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In a small village, the houses abut each other, forming a ring around the central square. The majority of the villagers are cruel and hypocritical: the cleaning woman steals apples from the tree in the square; the parish priest is an alcoholic and spits on the prisoner; the miser hoards his gold coins; a nosy old woman spies on her neighbours; and a married man berates his wife whenever she prepares meals he hates.

The only time the mistreated wife is happy is when she is in the company of the gardener, whom she is having an affair with. One Sunday afternoon after the Mass, the gardener and his girlfriend are having sex outside the village when the woman's husband uses a ladder to climb up into the miser's house, kills him by throwing him out the window, and steals his gold. The gardener spots the miser's corpse, but when he climbs up the ladder to investigate, the old woman-mistakenly believing that he had killed the miser-screams for help and the gardener is arrested for the crime.

As the gardener sits in prison, a funeral is held for the miser, with the real murderer filling the grave with soil. While the villagers are building the gallows to hang the gardener on, his girlfriend secretly gives him a shovel which he then uses to dig a tunnel and escape. However, the prisoner sounds the alarm, and the villagers form an angry mob and look for the gardener, who has hidden himself on his girlfriend's roof. That night, the murderer confronts the gardener on the rooftop and takes his glasses, while the woman tries to stop him. In a twist of fate, the gardener saves himself and his girlfriend by punching her husband in the head, sending him falling to his death. The woman quickly guides her near sighted lover out of the village as a colony of ants strip her dead husband's body down to the bone.

When the villagers wake up to find the murderer's skeleton clutching the stolen glasses, they believe the gardener to be dead and dismantle the gallows.

Outside the village, the runaway lovers look at it one last time before leaving to start a new life together.

Cast

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The cast consisted of three voice actors: Annie Griffin who played the roles of all the female villagers-including the old woman and the adulterous wife-and Dave Western and James Baker who both played the roles of the male villagers such the gardener, the miser, and murderer.

Production

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Production in 1993

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The production of the short animation film took about 3 months[1] as stated by Baker, the film was produced by a team of 32 animators including Baker, 5 sound engineers, one Cameraman and electrical engineer, one editor, one producer and one more person for additional crew. Baker, who directed and wrote the screenplay, explained how the animation was created stating "Since leaving the National Film & Television School in 1988, I had worked for a time at TVC, London before joining Pizazz Pictures. At Pizazz I designed and directed adverts and title sequences, but right from the start I was also working on The Village. Pam Dennis and Mario Cavalli, were keen to help me get my next film in production and together we approached Clare Kitson at Channel Four".

"I liked the idea of the village having a definite inside and outside, with most of the characters staying in their houses and occasionally scuttling across the courtyard from one building to another. I worked out a basic plan for the layout of the houses and who was going to live in each one.

Since the characters walk about a lot, this layout was one of the few things that remained constant through all the drafts of the script and storyboarding."

"Once I had completed what I regarded as the final draft of the script, I translated it into a drawn storyboard by first printing out the typed script under blank storyboard squares. Filling in these blank squares with drawings was a very fast process, since I had been imagining the action, and writing about it for so long. I think the final storyboard took about two days to draw (compared with a year, off and on between commercial work at Pizazz, working on the script)".

"The Village started life as a sort of reaction to The Hill Farm. I wanted to show a darker side of rural or isolated life, and I wanted the whole story to come from elements within the location, rather than having other characters turning up to get the action going. I spent a lot of time just trying to invent elements that could fit into this kind of situation. During this period I couldn’t settle on a final plot line, so my first proposals to Channel Four, were more along the lines of describing the characters and possible ways the story might go".[1]

"I had animated The Hill Farm on my own, but it had taken three years… The production time allowed for animating The Village was just over three months, and I was going to work with a team of animators. This was one of the reasons the character designs had to be translated into detailed model sheets. I also laid out the whole film on sheets of animation paper, before the animation started. A large proportion of the budget was made of animators’ wages, so we had to keep the process as organized as possible.[1]

The team of animators were, Neville Astley, Mark Baker, Sally Baxter, Roxanne Ducharme, Caroline Cruikshank, Alyson Hamilton, Vanessa Luther-Smith, Gaston Marzio, Tom Newman, Isabel Radage, Sharon Smith, Paul Stone, Pete Western & Julia Woolf.

Pam Dennis, the producer, and her assistant, Angela Cocker, would check with us on a weekly basis to find out if we were keeping up with the schedule. We were always behind, but somehow we got the animation done, only straying a couple of weeks over schedule",[1] "Annie Kocur edited the rushes and Julian Nott composed his score to the final picture edit. Danny Hambrook started track-laying the sound effects. We had less time than on The Hill Farm, but we worked in more or less the same way, track-laying in the day and recording effects at night. The main difference was that we worked digitally and in Dolby stereo. Certain effects proved harder to get than others – in particular the scratchy noises made by the ants, which ended up being a mixture of several sounds. Extra voices and effects were recorded by Dominique Wolf and the final sound mix was by Adrian Rhodes".[1]

4K scan and restoration by Modern Film Labs California (2016)

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In October 2016 a 4K scan and restoration of the film was made to improve the quality. The restored version is available on YouTube and Mark Baker's website.

Reception

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Mark Baker's personal description of The Village

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"The film is set in a small, isolated village where everyone has something to hide. The villagers spend about half their time trying to find out their neighbours’ secrets and the other half trying to preserve their own. One villager seems to have no interest in this way of life, and is considered an outsider. He comes under special scrutiny from the rest of the village, and his every move is noted..."

"The Village is a 14 minute long animation film that uses the traditional animation technique of cel and painted backgrounds. It has virtually no dialogue. It was funded by Channel Four Television and produced by Pam Dennis at Pizazz Pictures, London."

General reception

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The Village first aired at evening in May 1993 on Channel 4. The reception of the short film was mainly very positive,[7] many critics loved the film with some[who?] describing it as a "near perfect animated short movie".[citation needed]

Awards and nominations

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Nominations

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In 1994 The Village was nominated twice, an Oscar award for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film[8] with Mark Baker attending and also for the British Academy of Film and Television Arts awards as a nominee for best animated short film.

Awards summary

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The Village was given 8 awards,[1] it was awarded the best "Animated Production Especially Produced for Television and Not Part of a Series" at the Ottawa International Animation Festival in 1994, in the same year the Hiroshima International Animation Festival awarded The Village the "Hiroshima prize", Carrousel International du Film awarded it the best short film award, in the Annecy International Animation Film Festival the animation was awarded the prize of "Special Jury Award", Cartoon Forum, Europe awarded it the prize of "Cartoon d'Or", The Village was awarded the best animated film and FIPRESCI prize at the 1993 Kraków Film Festival. It was also awarded the best short film prize at the Chicago International Film Festival in 1993.

List of Awards, 1993–1994

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Ottawa International Animation Festival Prize for "Animated Production Especially Produced for Television and Not Part of a Series" 1994
Hiroshima International Animation Festival The "Hiroshima Prize" 1994
Carrousel International du Film Best Short Film 1993
Annecy International Animation Film Festival "Special Jury Award" 1993
Cartoon Forum, Europe "Cartoon d'Or" 1993
Kraków Film Festival Silver Dragon (1st prize) for Best Animated Film and FIPRESCI Prize 1993
Chicago International Film Festival Best Short Film, Silver HUGO prize 1993
Stuttgart International Film Festival 2nd place for best animated short film 1993
Festival du Mons, Belgium 1st Prize 1994

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Mark Baker Films – The Village". www.markbakerfilms.com. Retrieved 2023-06-09.
  2. ^ Solomon, Charles (1994-04-22). "ANIMATION REVIEW : Festival Draws on British Humor". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
  3. ^ The Village, retrieved 2023-06-13
  4. ^ Hayes, Derek (2013-03-05). Acting and Performance for Animation. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-136-13598-9.
  5. ^ The Village (1993) – IMDb, retrieved 2023-06-06
  6. ^ The Village (S) (1993), retrieved 2023-06-09
  7. ^ Cavalier, Stephen (2015-06-11). "100 Greatest Animated Shorts / The Hill Farm / Mark Baker". Skwigly Animation Magazine. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
  8. ^ "1994 | Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences". Oscars.org.