Animation Magazine Special Annecy June/July #311 2021 Issue

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Features

Unchained Memories Danish director Jonas Poher Rasmussen brings the turbulent life of an Afghan friend to animated life in the prize-winning feature, Flee. By Ramin Zahed

W

hen Danish filmmaker Jonas Poher Rasmussen was a teenager, he befriended a young Afghan refugee who had moved to his neighborhood. A couple of decades later, he finally got the chance to tell the story of his friend’s challenging life in the animated documentary Flee. The feature, which won the Grand Jury Prize: Documentary at Sundance earlier this year, has been praised for the way it uses the medium to tackle a difficult subject and cast a light on how early traumatic events can alter the way a victim recalls the past. “I had asked my friend to make a live-action documentary about his experiences for many years, but he kept saying no,” recalls the Danish filmmaker during a recent Zoom interview. “Finally, when I decided to tell his story as an animated documentary, he agreed to let me do it since animation offers a certain level of anonymity.” The film chronicles the harrowing life of “Amin”(a pseudonym), a gay Afghan refugee, who leaves his home to escape the mujahideen and the Taliban, only to be victimized by corrupt police in Russia before finding a new life in Denmark. The upcoming Neon release made head-

lines for attracting Riz Ahmed and Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as exec producers and voice actors for the English-language version. Produced by Final Cut for Real, Sun Creature Studio, Vivement Lundi!, Mostfilm, Mer Film and several other companies, the 89-minute film was written by Rasmussen and Amin. The film’s art director was Jess Nicholls, animation director was Kenneth Ladekjær and animation producer was Charlotte de La Gournerie.

Drawn to Reality The director first sketched out the outline for the movie at Anidox, a creative workshop

that brings together documentary and animation professionals to help them work on projects together. Production on the film, which was made for around $4 million, began about three years ago. The 2D animation was produced using TVPaint. “The animation was mainly produced in Denmark, but we had some people working remotely in France and Georgia. Overall, we had about 40 people working on the animation,” recalls Rasmussen. So, why did the live-action doc-maker decide to use animation to tell Amin’s story? “This is a story about memory and trauma, and truths that are buried in the past,” ex-

www.animationmagazine.net 18 june|july 21

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Articles inside

This month, we visit Lisa Hanawalt’s nest as a new season of Tuca & Bertie flutters to Adult Swim.

1min
pages 67-70

Autonomous Animator

3min
page 66

Tech Reviews

5min
page 65

A Good Year to Watch Toons

28min
pages 54-64

Northern Star

7min
pages 50-51

Ready for the Spotlight

3min
pages 52-53

Sophisticated Snapshots

6min
pages 48-49

A Dynamic Force for Positive Change

8min
pages 44-45

Desirable Mutations

6min
pages 46-47

Pets With Issues

6min
pages 42-43

Short-Form Magic

18min
pages 30-35

The New Rugrats Are Here

8min
pages 40-41

Films in the Spotlight at Annecy

4min
pages 36-37

Exploring New Horizons

5min
pages 38-39

Wonder Woman

7min
pages 28-29

Unchained Memories

6min
pages 20-23

June/July Animation Planner

3min
pages 8-9

Stuff We Love

3min
pages 6-7

Return to the Mirrorlands

5min
pages 26-27

In Praise of Mediterranean Sea Serpents

8min
pages 10-13

A Froggy Trip

3min
pages 24-25

George & Abe’s Excellent Adventure

6min
pages 18-19

Equine Majesty

8min
pages 14-17
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