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Il secondo lungometraggio di Gints Zilbalodis, Flow, sul set in Lettonia, Belgio e Francia

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- Il nuovo film d'animazione segue un gatto testardo che è costretto a condividere una piccola barca con un gruppo di altri animali dopo che una terribile alluvione ha devastato il mondo

Il secondo lungometraggio di Gints Zilbalodis, Flow, sul set in Lettonia, Belgio e Francia
Flow di Gints Zilbalodis

Questo articolo è disponibile in inglese.

Young Latvian helmer Gints Zilbalodis’s sophomore 3D animated feature, Flow, is in the works. The 29-year-old director is best known for his Annecy Contrechamp winner Away [+leggi anche:
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trailer
intervista: Gints Zilbalodis
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]
(2019), an animated feature that he made all by himself after creating several shorts. Zilbalodis’s debut feature revolved around a boy and a little bird embarking on a journey across a strange island and trying to get back home.

The new picture, previously pitched at last year’s edition of Cartoon Movie (see the news), is penned by the director himself along with Matīss Kaža (Neon Spring [+leggi anche:
recensione
scheda film
]
) and Ron Dyens (producer of the festival hit My Sunny Maad [+leggi anche:
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intervista: Michaela Pavlátová
scheda film
]
). The synopsis reads as follows: “After a terrible flood wreaks havoc on the world, a stubbornly independent Cat is forced to share a small boat with a group of other animals. Getting along with them turns out to be an even greater challenge for him than surviving the flood.”

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Flow is being produced by Kaža and Zilbalodis for Latvia’s Dream Well Studio, Dyens for France’s Sacrebleu Productions and Gregory Zalcman (The Island [+leggi anche:
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scheda film
]
, Why Not You [+leggi anche:
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trailer
scheda film
]
) for Belgium’s Take Five. Animation work is being handled in France and Belgium.

The project, backed by the National Film Centre of Latvia, also received the support of the State Culture Capital Foundation of Latvia, France’s CNC, Arte, Belgium’s RTBF, the Belgian Tax Shelter and Eurimages. The Strasbourg-based body in particular handed out a generous €400,000 bursary, one of the highest ever granted to a Latvian-led production.

The release is tentatively slated for 2024.

(L'articolo continua qui sotto - Inf. pubblicitaria)

(Tradotto dall'inglese)

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