The 13 short films commissioned through Animation 2018 have been revealed.

Animation 2018 is the programme run by the BFI and BBC Four designed to find and support emerging UK animators.

Each of the films supported through Animation 2018 will receive production grants between £2,000 and £10,000 towards the completion or creation of an original film and the opportunity to be broadcast on BBC Four following a premiere at BFI Southbank.
 
The selected films take different approaches ranging from hand-drawn images to live-action puppetry, stop motion, CG, 2D and 3D and covering genres from science-fiction to documentary. The films will each be 2-10 minutes in duration and showcase fresh animation talent from all nations and regions of the UK.
  
Animation consultant Helen Brunsdon will be working with the filmmakers. Brunsdon has worked for numerous clients including Aardman Animations, BBC, CBBC, The Brothers McLeod as well as for Animation UK and on the British Animation Awards. Her film credits include Wife Of Bath, Morph, The Pearce Sisters, Nina Needs To Go, Children Of The Holocaust, Isle Of Spagg, Quiff In Boots. Development and delivery of the animations will be managed by independent production company Wingspan Productions.
 
The selected filmmakers
•               Tom Adriani will create a hand-drawn animated fairy tale set in a war-torn London.
•               Jordan Buckner will use CG and 2D animation to consider one man’s strange encounter in a dying industrial town.
•               Edward Bulmer, Shereen Ali and Andrew Eu will combine live-action puppetry with sketchy, hand-drawn animation to explore one man’s sleepless night, as he obsesses over a bad joke he told at work.
•               Jonny Eveson uses black and white 3D animation to tell the story of an alien city powered by a strange light, and a child who unwittingly threatens to bring it down.
•               Sophie Koko Gate will explore one woman’s relationship with a beautiful giant slug.
•               Astrid Goldsmith will use stop motion to tell an allegory for our times of a maverick, Morris dancing badger who risks expulsion from the band by dancing forbidden steps and making forbidden friends.
•               Katherine Hearst and Maria Pullicino will create a short 2d animation about a lonely bird working in an oppressive factory, who finds an ingenious way to escape.
•               Ieuan Lewis and George Warren are co-directing a stop frame animation following an Inuit struggling with his dog to survive after an oil tanker leaks oil off the coast of Alaska.
•               Carla MacKinnon is collaborating with composer Hannah Peel on an experimental mixed-media film using real-life interviews and exploring the experience of romantic love.
•               Mary Martins is drawing on autobiography and unravels her earliest childhood memory in Lagos, which she believes has been crucial in forming her sense of identity.
•               Tom Rourke will create a bold and colourful 2D animation whose heroine lacks a limb but is determined it won’t hold her back – and she happens to be a penguin.
•               Ed Smith will use 2D animation to tell the dark but funny story of Archie and Mary, a couple who obsessively shave themselves, and the conflict this leads to.
•               Co-directors Victoria Watson and Chris Watson will use stop motion to explore an old man’s life as he confronts loneliness and loss and discovers that love never dies.
 
Emma Cahusac, Commissioning Editor, BBC Arts, said: “I’m delighted that BBC Arts and BBC Four is part of this ambitious initiative which champions new talent.  We’re delighted to be partnering with the BFI on this project and can’t wait to see what the animators have in store for us.”
 
Gillian Scothern, Broadcast Producer, BFI, said: “We were blown away by the quality and quantity of submissions we received for Animation 2018, and the wealth of talent across the country using animation to create boundary-pushing work. The 13 films we’ve selected use traditional techniques alongside cutting-edge technologies to tell a diverse range of stories in new and exciting ways.”
 
Deborah Lee, Executive Producer, Wingspan Productions, said: “We are looking forward to working with such an impressive range of up-and-coming animation talent and helping them shape their first film for broadcast. These filmmakers promise to showcase the unique potential of animation to take on complex subjects and make something impactful, entertaining and often extraordinary. Prepare to be delighted.”
 
The broadcast for BBC Four will be commissioned by Cassian Harrison, Channel Editor, BBC Four and Emma Cahusac, Commissioning Editor for BBC Arts.  The project is part of Culture UK – an alliance between BBC and Arts Council England, Arts Council of Wales, Arts Council of Northern Ireland and Creative Scotland.   

Staff Reporter

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