Mad God: Shudder releases a second trailer for Phil Tippett’s stop-motion animated film

The Shudder streaming service has released a second trailer for Phil Tippett's Mad God, a stop-motion animated film 30 years in the worksThe Shudder streaming service has released a second trailer for Phil Tippett's Mad God, a stop-motion animated film 30 years in the works
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLyU1tRp6WY

Last month, we shared a trailer for Oscar-winning visual effects artist Phil Tippett’s long-in-the-works stop-motion animated feature Mad God, along with the information that the movie will be receiving a limited theatrical release on June 16th – the same day it will also be available for viewing on the Shudder streaming service. With another month to go before Mad God is released, Shudder has unveiled a second trailer, which you can watch in the embed above.

Here’s the background story that was provided when Mad God was about to make its premiere at the Locarno Film Festival last year:

Phil Tippett had the idea for Mad God during a lull in his schedule after Robocop 2. After sketching and designing a few creatures and sets, he and his stage and stop motion team at Tippett Studio shot the first few scenes of Mad God, including the shot of the Beast strapped to a table and a tracking shot of the Shit Men walking through a desiccated subterranean city.

When he received the call to supervise the dinosaurs for Jurassic Park, Phil suspended work on the project. Jurassic Park proved to be a watershed moment in the evolution of visual effects. With a shift from handmade visual effects, the likes of which Tippett was best known for, to computer generated graphics and imagery (CGI), Phil saw the writing on the wall and thought the kind of work he was doing with Mad God had gone extinct overnight.

Some 20 years later, while cleaning out the back storage areas of Tippett Studio’s Berkeley stages, several of his key artists and supervisors stumbled across original puppets and sets from those early shots. Revisiting the original footage and models, this new generation of artists, trained primarily on computers, longed to learn from Phil and assist as he revived his long-since abandoned film. Together with a volunteer crew, Phil taught a new generation of artists and craftspeople as they brought his labor of love to life.

In 2020, while the world sheltered through a global pandemic, Phil continued, alone, and completed the final scenes of what is now a complete, feature length experimental mostly-animated adult-oriented cinematic masterpiece. Mad God invites its viewers not so much as to watch a story unfold as to be transported from their world to another world entirely – one of monsters and war pigs – where traditional narrative structures are mere suggestions, and the world we live in can be viewed as if through the lens of Hieronymous Bosch crossed with Buster Keaton.

Tippett had this to say about the Shudder release:

It’s been over 30 years, but thanks to the team at Tippett Studio we finally made the dream a reality. I’m proud to partner with Shudder on the release of Mad God, and it’s an honor that my original vision can now be shared with audiences across the country.”

Mad God really appears to be something special. Shudder’s Craig Engler has described it as a “sure-to-be timeless” film. So I look forward to checking it out. Will you be watching Mad God? Let us know by leaving a comment below.

Source: Arrow in the Head

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