Cassiopeia (film)

Cassiopeia is a 1996 Brazilian CGI animated feature film, produced and released by NDR Filmes in Brazil on April 1, 1996.

Cassiopeia
DVD cover for Cassiopeia.
Directed byClóvis Veira
Produced byNello de'Rossi
Written byAloisio Castro
José Feliciano
Robin Geld
Clóvis Vieira
StarringOsmar Prado
Jonas Mello
Aldo César
Marcelo Campos
Cassius Romero
Rosa Maria Barolli
Music byVicente Sálvia
Edited byMarc de'Rossi
Distributed byNDR Filmes (Brazil)
Hoyts (Australia)
Release date
April 1, 1996 (Brazil)
June 21, 1996 (Australia)
Running time
80 minutes
CountryBrazil
Australia
LanguagePortuguese
BudgetUS$ 1.5 million

The film is an adventure about the invasion of planet Ateneia by intruders trying to steal their energy. It was the second computer generated feature film ever.[1] The film's creators claimed it was the first CGI animated feature film in February 1996, because its production started in January 1992, before the production of Toy Story. The film was released soon after Toy Story.[2] Production of Toy Story began on January 19, 1993.[3]

Plot

The planet Ateneia, located in the constellation of Cassiopeia, is attacked by space invaders who begin to drain its vital energy. A distress signal is sent into outer space by the local astronomer, Liza, and received by four heroes who travel across the galaxy to the rescue.

The four heroes (Chip, Chop, Feel and Thot) venture through the galaxy facing many dangers as they try to rescue the planet of Ateneia. Each has a specific function in their spaceship: Chop is the captain and pilot, Feel and Thot monitor space, and Chip is the gunman, working also as comic relief. Liza is an astronomer in Ateneia's main lab, working on all of the scientific details of the planet's life.

On the way to defeat the evil forces of Shadowseat, the foursome meet Leonardo, a scientist from an undeveloped planet who creates crazy gadgets.

Development

Production began in January 1992 with environment and character modeling and the creation of the script. Animation began in January 1993, and the image generation work was completed on August 1995. The soundtrack was finished in December 1995, and the first copy was printed in January 1996.

The film was animated using Crystal Graphics' Topas Animator, running on 17 486 DX2-66 computers. The first character model was made on a 20 MHz 386 SX. Cassiopeia animation team was composed of seven computer animators, three traditional animators (who served as consultants and directors of animation), and some freelancers.

Midway through production, some of the computers were stolen, requiring some scenes to be re animated.

Voice cast

Actor Character
Osmar PradoLeonardo
Jonas MelloShadowseat
Marcelo CamposChip
Cassius RomeroChop
Fábio MouraFeel
Hermes BarolliThot
Rosa Maria BarolliLiza
gollark: It's part of a more complex system, but basically:- Lasers (from Plethora) were on ComputerCraft turtles (robot things), which could fire them in arbitrary directions- The turtles ran a program which connected to a relay-type service I run on my web server, which let them receive commands like "fire at this position" or "fire in this direction"- That relay service passed commands from clients to turtles and the results back to said clients- The Python script connected to the MC server's dynmap (popular service for web maps for Minecraft servers) web API, which, among other things, provides positions of players, and sent commands to fire at the reported position of players.
gollark: Which aren't particularly big, but somewhat useful.
gollark: I have random Python scripts for things I wanted to do at some point which computers could do more easily than I could, like a̦̾̋p͍̫̿p͊̃̇l̜̋̓y̱ͫ̃i̴̔ͫn̲̲͡g͎͏̈́ ̯͋̿r̫͢͡a̲͜͝n̦̽̄d͈̮̤o̻̳̭ṃ̱ͦ ̼͌͠d̵̼̗ǐ̡̕ȧ̰̫ċ̔ͯr̀͠͠ì̄ͥt͓̼͌î͚̘c̞͋̀s͓̬̦ to text, controlling a bunch of laser turrets I had on a Minecraft server over the internet, bulk-converting some music to a different format, and generating beepy noises.
gollark: Putting together simple scripts or whatever to do some random task more easily.
gollark: Random bodging? It's what I do.

See also

References

  1. "Movies, Plays, Best-seller books in Brazil - August 96". Retrieved April 7, 2009.
  2. Paulo Camargo (February 1, 1996), "'Cassiopéia' disputa pioneirismo com 'Toy Story'", Folha de S.Paulo
  3. "Production begins on "Toy Story"". history.com. 19 January 1993. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
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