Last Days of Coney Island

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Last Days of Coney Island

A still from the project.
Directed by Ralph Bakshi
Produced by Ralph Bakshi
Written by Ralph Bakshi
Cinematography Eddie Bakshi
Jess Gorell[1]
Country Flag of the United States United States
IMDb profile

Last Days of Coney Island was a project written by and being produced, directed and animated by filmmaker Ralph Bakshi, about a NYPD detective, the prostitute he alternately loves and arrests, and the seedy characters that haunt the streets of New York City's run-down amusement district.

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[edit] History

Animation on Last Days of Coney Island was drawn traditionally and completed with the use of Toon Boom software.
Animation on Last Days of Coney Island was drawn traditionally and completed with the use of Toon Boom software.

Ralph Bakshi had previously pitched the film to major studios such as Pixar and DreamWorks, but was unable to find anyone who wanted to take on the project.[2] When technology began advancing to the point where Bakshi could begin the project on a lower budget, he decided to take on the project himself and produce it independently. Bakshi is quoted as saying that the animation is "probably higher quality than anything I ever made, at a cost so low it's embarrassing. Everything I used to do in my old movies that required hundreds of people and huge salaries is now done in a box. It took 250 people to make Heavy Traffic, now I'm down to five. I kiss the computer every morning—fuckin' unbelievable!"[2]

Since being announced the film has gotten a lot of interest, but no official funding. According to Bakshi, "I had about eight minutes of film and a completed script. I thought budget was a slam dunk. For a Bakshi comeback film, it seemed like a no-brainer. [...] I asked one guy [in Hollywood], 'Should I have a budget of $150 million and pocket the rest?' He said, 'Yeah, but you have to make it PG.'"[3] Bakshi ended the production to rethink his approach towards the film. Its current production status is uncertain.[4]

[edit] Production

Much of the production was aided with the use of Toon Boom Studio, computer software designed to assemble 2D animation. Ralph Bakshi is quoted as saying "Eddie [Bakshi's son] began some coloring and refining of artwork in Photoshop then gradually moved over to doing this in Toon Boom Studio. The crossover was relatively painless. The programs worked well together. [...] I set up the picture in a traditional manner then Eddie uses Toon Boom Studio to do everything else. My animator Doug Compton also uses Toon Boom Studio to assemble and send pencil tests and animatics. Toon Boom Studio essentially becomes the studio. [...] I feel Toon Boom Studio has freed all cartoonists to make any film they want to make at an affordable price. This is more important in my opinion than Walt Disney being born."[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Silverstein, Joel. "Jess Gorell's photographic memory". The Inquirer and Mirror. Retrieved on 2007-06-04.
  2. ^ a b "Who flamed Roger Rabbit?". The Guardian (August 11, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-06-04.
  3. ^ "Pixels to the people". The Boston Globe (September 24, 2006). Retrieved on 2007-06-04.
  4. ^ Segundo, Bat (May 21, 2008). "The Bat Segundo Show #214: Interview with Ralph Bakshi". Edward Champion's Reluctant Habits. Retrieved on 2008-06-25.
  5. ^ "April 2006 Newsletter". Toon Boom. Retrieved on 2007-06-04.

[edit] External links

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