Thursday, April 11, 2013

Kris Taylor And Chris Frechette Talk About How They Designed The New Look For Heroes in a Half Shell For Nickelodeon's Upcoming "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out Of The Shadows" Video Game

The video gaming website GameSpot has unveiled a exclusive article which reveals how video game developers Kris Taylor and Chris Frechette developed and designed the new look of the Heroes in a Half Shell for Nickelodeon's upcoming brand new "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" video game, called "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows" for Red Fly Studio, which, based on Nick's all-new CGI-animated TMNT television series, will be released on PlayStation Network, PC and Xbox Live Arcade during Summer 2013. The article also features various character concept art for Leonardo, Donatello, Raphael and Michelangelo, and a online streaming video featuring the trailer for the brand new TMNT video game:
The Anatomy of a Ninja Turtle

Chris Frechette and Kris Taylor of Red Fly Studio explain the development of this striking new look for the heroes of TMNT: Out of the Shadows.

Strange. Stylish. Hideous. Awesome. This modern, realistic take on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles lineup has been called a lot of things. But no matter the verdict, all will agree that it's certainly distinct--and distinction has always been the goal for developers Kris Taylor and Chris Frechette of Red Fly Studio. As Turtles fans themselves, they relished the opportunity to make their mark on Turtles history with a style unlike anything the franchise has seen before. Learn how Red Fly Studio pulled it off.




Before deciding on their designs for the turtles, Frechette and Taylor knew Out of the Shadows was going to feel different. Having experienced the height of Turtles mania in the late '80s and early '90s, both designers decided early on that they wanted their game to have a more mature theme that older audiences would gravitate toward.

The world came first. Their vision of Manhattan was much darker and grittier than what had come before and would therefore need a new breed of turtle. To help find a jumping-off point for this new breed, the pair reached out to veteran character designer Carlos Haunte, who inked the concept art shown above. Frechette and Taylor were floored. Never before had they seen designs quite like this. From the patterns on their skin to the articulate musculature, these turtles could almost be real.

That distinction--that realism--quickly became one of the team's guidelines. They wanted not only for their four heroes to stand apart from the franchise's past, but for each turtle to have his own unique style as well. As Taylor explains, "One of our main goals when we started this project was: if you see one of these turtles alone and without any color identification, you need to know who it is."

"We worked really hard with [Haunte] to develop these shape symbols, which helped define the turtles both mentally and physically. You'll notice Leonardo is a triangle, which is a focused and sharp shape because he's the focused leader of the group. That shape is worked into his physique, his face, and even the angles of his eyes. I think that really helped us get these characters feeling as unique as they do. Now when I see them, I have no question of who's who. They all have their own identities."




Those identities didn't just start and end with Haunte's work; they were just the beginning. Red Fly still had a lifetime of Turtles artwork to draw from. "[In the piece above] I have three versions of Donatello," said Taylor. "The one on the far left is based on the toys and old cartoons, combined with being more realistically defined. The one on the far right was based on [Haunte's] original works. We then tried to meet in the middle with a blend of styles. The piece is all about that transition."

As the designs evolved, the team found its stride in balancing designs old and new, unique and original. The character shapes, skin tones, and sheer grit of Haunte's work was married with the distinct character patterns found in the current Nickelodeon cartoon. In the image below, you can see how Donatello is tall and lanky, while Raphael is a bit shorter and much stockier. Striking this balance was important for the team as a way to honor the franchise's long and colorful history.

"There are fans that cherish the original comics, fans who love the '90s cartoon, and now fans who are into the new generation of Turtles," explained Frechette. "There have been so many incarnations of [the Turtles] that I think everybody has something different they enjoy about a specific look or feel. Having the chance to put our own stamp on these designs--as fans--has been a huge deal for us."




As Turtles fans, the team spent a lot of time sweating the finer details of their designs. Some issues, such as the inclusion of tails, were easier to resolve than others. "We opted to lose the tail," Frechette stated. "Starting out, we said to ourselves, 'Let's go back to the original comics and put the tail back in.' But then, as we were thumbing through some of the older comics, we noticed every time those guys would do the splits, [the tail] stopped looking like a tail…and started looking like something else!"

Eyes were another animal altogether. Some team members favored having irises and pupils, while others preferred the all-white style. "My stance was: it has been established both ways, so there's really no wrong answer here," said Taylor. "But we also wanted to have a lot of story-driven scenes, and eyes are a subtle thing we connect with as viewers. If we went all white all the time, it would make that emotional connection very difficult."

Even so, Frechette was a diehard advocate of the imposing, all-white eyes. Eventually, as Frechette explains, a compromise was reached. "In the Nickelodeon show, [the turtles] have irises and pupils until they get into combat, and then BAM they have all-white eyes. We adopted that style for our game as well, and it really pops. A lot of our environments are pretty dark, so when you draw your weapons and see those eyes pop, it feels really good."

See how the Turtles new style translates in the game with this announcement trailer.



Comment on this video | Watch this video in High Def

Redesigning such beloved characters is always a tall order, and the only guarantee is that you won't please everyone. Still, the team insists that the challenge is worthwhile. "I think it's a little lazy to just fall back on what's already been done and what has already been seen," said Frechette. "But I think it is important to respect the franchise and find that sweet spot between meeting the fans' expectations and giving them something they eventually grow to appreciate and are glad it happened."

"It was a long process to get to the end," Taylor added, "but we put a lot of work into it, and everyone here is really proud of what we've come up with. We think we got a really good feel for these characters, and we're excited to hear what the fans think about them." You can see these new Turtles in action when Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows is released on Xbox Live Arcade, PlayStation Network, and PC this summer.

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Ciro Nieli Talks About Upcoming Plots For Season 1 And Season 2 Of Nickelodeon's "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles", Including The Return Of Mutagen Man And A Old-School TMNT Reunion!

The official website of the national American daily newspaper USA Today has unveiled a interview they recently held with Ciro Nieli, who is a executive producer on Nickelodeon's new CGI-Animated "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" television series! As part of the interview, Ciro Nieli revealed a few of the upcoming exciting storylines and plans TMNT fans can look forward to towards the end of season one and during season two, including, towards the end of season 1, viewers will get to learn more about Turtle confidant April O'Neil (Mae Whitman) watch more explosions, and the story line with the Kraang pays off a little more. The end of season one will also see the return of Mutagen Man, a villain who was created when mailman Seymour Gutz fell in a vat of mutagen and turned into a living pile of guts and organs. Ciro Nieli also told USA Today that Mutagen Man will also have a big role during the second season. Ciro Nieli also revealed to USA Today that, to help make season two of Nick's "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" even more epic than season one, the second season of TMNT will feature a one-hour special episode with will feature special cameos by the original voice actors from the 1987 cartoon in their old roles, including Cam Clarke (Leonardo), Townsend Coleman (Michelangelo), Barry Gordon (Donatello) and Paulsen (Raphael)! Booyakasha!:
'TMNT' embraces animated Turtle power in five ways

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

* New 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' cartoon is in its first season

* Mutagen Man will be making his debut soon

* Second season will feature a reunion of original '80s 'TMNT' voice actors



Donatello and Leonardo are on the case in an episode of the new "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" animated series.
(Photo: Nickelodeon)

Nickelodeon series features villains such as Baxter Stockman and Mutagen Man, as well as an old-school Turtles reunion.

Ciro Nieli grew up with Donatello being his favorite member of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, but as an executive producer of the new Nickelodeon TMNT animated series, he'd yell "Cowabunga!" for any of them.

"They've taken on a new meaning for me," Nieli says. "I'm single right now and I have no children. I'm at that age where a lot of my friends are married and have kids. They go, 'Who's your favorite Turtle?' And I go, 'That's (expletive) rude. I'm not going to single one of them out. Then the other ones won't feel loved.'

"They've all had kids, and now all of a sudden I have four teenagers. It's literally that demanding, but I love all of them. And every day I see myself a little bit more in one of them than the others."

Just like 10-year-old Cieli was first introduced to them in the 1980s, kids today are watching the new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon (airing Friday nights at 7 p.m. ET/PT) and being introduced to katana-slinging leader Leonardo (voiced by Jason Biggs), nunchucks-swinging fun guy Michelangelo (Greg Cipes), bo-staffed gadget man Donatello (Rob Paulsen) and sai-wielding brawler Raphael (Sean Astin).

There have been many different ways to enjoy the Turtles in the nearly 30 years since the first 1984 comic book by Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird, from video games to live-action movies. Yet it's beginning to look like a new golden age for the pizza-loving heroes, with new LEGO sets, action figures, an upcoming movie produced by filmmaker Michael Bay starring Megan Fox, and Nieli's animated show, which has already been handed a third season when it hasn't even finished its first yet.

"The imagination is fertile in the Ninja Turtle world and it's just wide open. And the characters are a reflection of that," Nieli says.

With so much coming up, Nieli gives five upcoming aspects of the animated series that will make you want to embrace Turtle power sooner than later.

Big things for Baxter Stockman

So far in the Turtles series, the off-kilter and insane villain Baxter Stockman (Phil LaMarr) has mostly been doing grunt work for bad guy the Shredder and getting yelled at a lot. But Friday's episode focuses on Baxter and shows some of the inner machinations of the criminal mastermind.

Fans will begin to see how he interacts with other villains and the Turtles when he puts together a scheme along the lines of longtime X-Men foe Arcade, Nieli says. "He's kind of sick of being pushed around and decides to trap them all and torture him.

"Sometimes when you get stuck in the actual canon of the ninja revenge story and the family feuds with the Foot Clan and Hamato Yoshi and Oroku Saki, it can get real heavy," he adds. "And then you have this other shade, which is the alien threat with the Kraang. It's nice to have a character as odd and obtuse as Baxter — you see him lashing and doing something, and you forget about those guys. It makes the world bigger."

The scale gets more epic closing in on the season finale

Nieli feels TMNT ups its game every episode in terms of visuals and scale, but also in terms of story. Getting closer to the end of the season, viewers will learn more about Turtle confidant April O'Neil (Mae Whitman) and the story line with the Kraang pays off a little more.

"Fans can guess there's a lot in there that needs to come to a point. The trick is not letting that point burst," the executive producer says. "There's a million things we can do, but we have to temper ourselves so we can have a good series overall and not just a good season."

And there will be explosions. "I always try to end episodes with an explosion," Nieli admits. "Sometimes we can't afford it and they get dust clouds, and I get disappointed and sad. It's kind of a fail. A perfect show ends with a boom."

The grand return of the Mutagen Man

One of the luxuries Nieli has with the show is a few decades' worth of material, and that means having goop and guts in a jar with arms and legs is going to take on an awesome new life.

The toy version of the oozy baddie Mutagen Man was always a favorite of Nieli's, he says. "All of us have one sitting on our desks and it's just a matter of time: 'Well, when are we going to do Mutagen Man?'

"It was just important to figure out a special way to do it so that he didn't just show up like, OK, monster of the week is Mutagen Man. We definitely wanted to have a little bit more of an investment in him as an integral character in that universe and ultimately the responsibility of the Turtles as heroes."

Mutagen Man, who plays a big role in the second season but will appear near the end of the first, had a distinctive look from the old '80s cartoon and toy, and the TMNT producers didn't want to get too wacky with a new design.

"We could have done anything," Nieli says. "I think we just put things in a better place, but in general he's very recognizable."

Making plans for an old Turtles reunion

[

"Can we get tattoos? I wanna get one of my face on my face!" - Mikey Click here for an animated GIF]

The second season of TMNT will feature a one-hour special with special cameos by the original voice actors from the 1987 cartoon in their old roles, including Cam Clarke (Leonardo), Townsend Coleman (Michelangelo), Barry Gordon (Donatello) and Paulsen (Raphael).

It'll be a story point, too, that brings classic and current Turtles together.

"We all have a nostalgia for these characters in all their incarnations, and any time we can serve it up, we take the chance," Nieli says. "The trick is finding a way to do it where it doesn't feel wedged in, where you don't even see it coming.

"I really like doing that stuff because I do have respect for the old stuff," he adds. "I try not to geek out but it's more like you just feel some pride in what you've been able to be responsible for. Like, yep, there they are — Turtle reunion. It's not as cool as a Zeppelin reunion, but being able to bring something together, I'm thrilled I get to do that.

Maintaining what's great about the Turtles

Nieli sums up the appeal of TMNT as being like a Saturday when he was a kid: full of cartoon action, kung-fu moves from Shaw Brothers movies, and monsters like you'd see in an old Universal or Hammer horror flick.

And while they may be considered part of the superhero genre, the Turtles are a little bit different — and a lot more affable — than the likes of Superman.

They stepped outside of the genre, Nieli says, "and it was a rule that I didn't think could be broken. We're so used to characters like Batman or these really perfect archetypes. They're almost like statues or totems or this ideal. And then the Turtles came along and broke all that. They were more part of a peer group and you could relate to them so much easier."

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Nick Jr. UK To Show Brand New Episode Of "A Bedtime Story" On Friday 12th April 2013, Featuring TV Personality Kimberly Wyatt Telling The Story "Sausage On Sticks"

Nick Jr. UK has announced on their official Twitter profile page (@NickJrUK) that Nickelodeon UK and Ireland's preschool channel, Nick Jr. Channel UK and Ireland, will premiere and show a brand new episode of Nick Junior's popular Bedtime stories series "A Bedtime Story" that will guest star the American singer, dancer, choreographer and television personality Kimberly Wyatt, best known as a former member of the American pop/R&B girl group and dance ensemble the Pussycat Dolls, on Friday 12th April 2013 at 6.30pm (repeated at 7.45pm on Nick Jnr., and at 7.30pm and 8.45pm on Nick Jr. UK's plus-one (+1) timeshift channel, Nick Jr.+1), as part of Nick Jr. Channel UK's nightly 'Bedtime' programming strand (block). Nick Junior UK's Twitter Tweet (post), below, also features an exclusive photograph of Samantha Womack with Nick Junior UK's puppet presenters Arnie and Barnie (The Wiggly Worms; "The Wiggle Song") on the studio set filming an episode of Nick Jr UK's "A Bedtime Story" bedtime story series:
The lovely @KimberlyKWyatt will be reading on Bedtime Stories with Arnie & Barnie this Friday @ 6.30pm #NickJrBedtime pic.twitter.com/Pm2qR8RFai

According to Nick Jr. UK and Ireland's "What's On" schedule section on the official Nick Jr. UK and Ireland website, NickJr.co.uk, Nick Jr.'s brand new "A Bedtime Story" episode will feature Kimberly Wyatt reading the children's tale "Sausage On Sticks" with Nick Junior UK's puppet presenters Arnie and Barnie (The Wiggly Worms; "The Wiggle Song") for Nick Jr. viewers and fans:
6:30pm - A Bedtime Story: Kimberly Wyatt reads tonight's bedtime story, 'Sausage On Sticks'.

UK's ITV And CITV To Start To Show Nickelodeon's "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" From Sunday 14th April 2013

CITV, the children's television arm of ITV, the free-to-air British commercial public service TV network, has announced in a Tweet (post) on their official Twitter profile page (@ChildrensITV) that ITV, formally ITV1, and CITV will start to show Nickelodeon's brand new CGI-Animated "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" television series from Sunday 14th April 2013 as part of the networks Spring 2013 highlights. ITV, ITV HD and CITV will simulcast each episode Sunday's at 7.30am, with each episode repeated at 8.30am on ITV's plus-one (+1) timeshift channel, ITV+1)! It is currently unknown whether ITV will be adding episodes of Nick's all-new TMNT series to the networks online video on demand (VoD) service:
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are coming. Make sure you're here Sunday at 7:30am on ITV & CITV (or at 8:30am on ITV+1 if you're lazy!)
Viacom International Media Networks (VIMN) announced in October 2012 that ITV had picked up the free-to-air broadcast rights to Nickelodeon's TMNT at MIPCOM 2012.