Netflix shares new materials from Oscar-winning ‘Dear Basketball’ director’s new animated musical adventure, co-directed by Oscar-winner John Kahrs and produced at China’s Pearl Studios, coming October 23.
Netflix has just dropped the final trailer and new series of stills from their highly anticipated animated musical adventure, Over the Moon, directed by the legendary Oscar-winning director Glen Keane (Dear Basketball) and co-directed by Oscar-winning director John Kahrs (Paperman). The film, produced by Pearl Studios, the animation house that co-produced last year’s Abominable with DreamWorks Animation, will premiere on the streaming giant this coming October 23.
In the film, Fei Fei, a bright young girl fueled with determination and a passion for science, builds a rocket ship to the moon to prove the existence of a legendary Moon Goddess. There she ends up on an unexpected quest, and discovers a whimsical land of fantastical creatures. In the trailer we learn a bit more about our feisty heroine and her seemingly impossible quest to build a rocket to the moon; despite the odds, she succeeds, though her miraculous journey to prove the Moon Goddess is not just a childish myth puts her in the middle of a contest no one could have predicted.
One of Chou’s first initiatives when she joined Pearl, known then as Oriental DreamWorks, was to host an annual Brain Trust summit that brought together animation and entertainment talent for a series of meetings at the studio’s Shanghai facility. It was during that first summit in 2015 that Chou first heard a pitch, from executive producer Janet Yang (The Joy Luck Club), about a little girl who builds a rocket to the moon to see if the legendary moon goddess, Chang’e, exists. Chou brought in screenwriter Audrey Wells (The Hate U Give, Under the Tuscan Sun), who began fleshing out the story in Spring of 2016. The film had been in development for with Pearl for over a year when Wells broke the news to Chou that she was dying with cancer, and was unsure how much time she still had.
Chou’s determination to get the film made took on an additional sense of urgency; her search for a director became a mission. She met Keane that June at the Annecy Festival. Fresh off his Oscar win for Dear Basketball, the famed Disney animator hadn’t seen Chou since they’d worked together at Disney 20 years earlier developing Rapunzel, which eventually became Tangled. Once Keane got the script, he was quickly hooked. According to the director, “Walt Disney was always talking about the ‘plausible impossible.’ And I thought, a 13-year-old girl building a rocket to the moon? I don’t know... But as I was reading it, I got to the page where Fei Fei’s rocket launches and then it runs out of power and starts falling back, like they're going to die. And I thought, Yes! Now I believe it. But you've got to save them somehow! I was suddenly invested. It was when that beam of light hit them and the moon lions leapt onto the page that I knew I had to direct this movie.”
Sadly, Wells, whose other writing credits include A Dog’s Purpose (2017), The Game Plan (2007), George of the Jungle (1997) and Under the Tuscan Sun (2003), which she also directed, succumbed to her illness on October 4, 2018. Her screenplay for The Hate U Give, based on author Angie Thomas’ critically acclaimed 2017 novel, was turned into a film that was released in theaters on October 5, one day after her passing.
“There has never been a time when this film has been more relevant, or perhaps when the world needed it more,” Chou says. “The themes of Over the Moon, which Audrey portrayed with passion and integrity, are all about opening your heart and learning to accept new things. It tells us that in challenging or difficult times, the answer to almost anything is always love.”
Over the Moon is produced by Gennie Rim (Dear Basketball) and Chou (Abominable), and is written by Wells; the film is executive produced by Yang, Keane, Ruigang Li, Frank Zhu, and Thomas Hui. Emmy-winner Céline Desrumaux (The Little Prince, Age of Sail) serves as production designer. The film stars newcomer Cathy Ang, Grammy winner Phillipa Soo (Hamilton), newcomer Robert G. Chiu, Ken Jeong (Crazy Rich Asians), John Cho (Searching), Ruthie Ann Miles (All Rise), Emmy nominee Margaret Cho, three time SAG winner Kimiko Glenn (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse), Artt Butler and two time Golden Globe winner Sandra Oh (Killing Eve). Christopher Curtis, Marjorie Duffield, and Helen Park are writing the film’s songs; the movie is being scored by Oscar-winner Steven Price.
Netflix will release the film October 23 worldwide except in China; Pearl Studios will distribute the film in the Middle Kingdom.
Source: Netflix
Dan Sarto is Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Animation World Network.