The Economic Times
India emerges as global centre for animators
2 January 2008
London: India is emerging as a global centre for animators with some of the top international companies planning huge investment in the country.
India-animated
Freefonix, a 10 million pounds budget, is one of the BBC's biggest ever
animation projects. The futuristic tale of mismatched musicians was two years in
the making across three continents and involved more than 200 people.
The Bollywood-BBC tie-up on Freefonix is the first of many, according to the BBC children's series to be aired this week, the series' UK-based producers Cinnamon Entertainment said. Managing director Anthony Bouchier said more readily available funding and skilled animation teams are drawing TV show-makers to India.
"We saw that there were opportunities not only to outsource but to actually get investment for animation out of India. In the UK there is a major problem with animation for children because the broadcasters do not have sufficient budgets to finance animation, so it all has to come from private sources," he said.
Bouchier said Freefonix, a 40-episode series launching on Friday is the first of its kind for the 7-11 age group. "The BBC is involved in some very exciting projects and the majority of those are financed out of India. India is coming to the rescue of BBC animation."
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