From rickmay@cinenet.net Tue Jan 28 15:49:21 1997 Message-ID: <32EE73A6.53E7@cinenet.net> Date: Tue, 28 Jan 1997 13:46:14 -0800 From: Rick May To: daemons@uiuc.edu Subject: Spirit of Christmas (****INFO****) Hi there.. Dont know if you are the correct person to receive this.. But I came across this info- and thought you would want to know about it. Has author info, as well as whats next for the two artists.. :) >SUNDANCE SCENE >The Long and Short of 'Spirit' > >By Kenneth Turan > > PARK CITY, Utah--Sundance success stories, >Hollywood success stories, they're a glut on the market. >But there's never been one quite like the saga that >surrounds "The Spirit of Christmas," a five-minute >animated short on which hangs a million-dollar tale. > For openers, though the shorts situation is highly >competitive, with 60 selected from 1,200 submitted, >"Spirit" is here because the festival called filmmakers >Trey Parker and Matt Stone and asked if it could be >shown. That's because bootleg tapes of this anarchic, >outrageous, obscenely funny film, which features a >fierce battle between Jesus and Santa Claus, have gone >all around Hollywood and the world, making this the >hottest home screening item in memory. > It started when a Fox executive they'd met through >contacts made at Sundance gave them $2,000 to make a >video he could send as a Christmas card. "I did the >animation using construction paper cutouts," Parker >says, "and we both improvised the dialogue, screaming >obscenities at each other in my basement while my >mom was baking fudge upstairs. It cost $750 and we >pocketed the rest." > The exec sent the video out at Christmas 1995 to 80 >people, who promptly made it their card as well. And >so on. "By February, we were hearing about it from >every state, friends of friends in New York were telling >us 'Metallica saw your video and they loved it.' We'd >never bothered to put our name on it, so the whole thing >came full circle when a friend from Ohio sent us a copy >and said, 'You've got to see this.' " > Though their career as live-action filmmakers had >already started (their "Cannibal the Musical" was a >Sundance midnight show that was picked up by Troma), >this short put them into orbit. "First everyone was >trying to figure out who we were, and then there was >like a little bidding war going on, studios offering >three-picture deals." The team sold Comedy Central a >series called "South Park," based on the shopping mall >world "Christmas" takes place in, and they're about to >go into production with a full-length animated feature. >The budget: $1.5 million. "Pretty amazing," Parker >says, and who's going to argue? > -- Rick May Freelance Animator CG-CHAR List Guy http://www.cinenet.net/~rickmay