Christopher Panzner
Christopher Panzner (born 1959) is an American artist/writer/producer living and working in France. He has worked for a number of pioneers in the television and film industry, notably as Technical Director for the inventor of interactive television shopping, the Home Shopping Network and as Operations Director, France, for the inventor of the colorization process for black-and-white films, Color Systems Technology. He has developed animation software (Pixibox),[1] designed theme channels (Canal +) and was Managing Director of the Luxembourg-based studio, Luxanima, which shared an International Emmy in 1994 for French CGI series Insektors[2], the first computer-generated TV series ever made. He went on to set up an animation/FX studio (motion capture/motion control), Image Effects, where he supervised the creation of 2D animated series The Tidings for Entertainment Rights before creating his own studio in the east of France the following year, Talkie Walkie, specializing in pre-production (design, storyboard and layout) and computer production (ink-and-paint/compositing) and whose clients included a Who's Who of international television animation producers such as SIP,[3], RTV Family Entertainment,[4] Alphanim (now called Gaumont Animation) and Cinar (bought by WildBrain.) He joined Paris-based production company TEVA in 2001 and was instrumental in the financing and/or the making of five animated features there in 2002–2004: double-Oscar nominated The Triplets of Belleville, Venice Film Festival selection The Dog, the General and the Birds[5] written by Tonino Guerra (L'Avventura, Blow-Up, Zabriskie Point, Amarcord, Ginger and Fred, etc.), Jester Till[6] produced by Oscar-winning Eberhard Junkersdorf (for Best Foreign Film, The Tin Drum), Blackmor’s Treasure[7] (Associate Producer) and T'choupi (Co-Producer). In 2002, TEVA and Mistral Films won the grand prize at IMAGINA[8] for an experimental short film, The Tale of the Floating World directed by Alain Escalle,[9] beating such prestigious competition as Shrek, Amélie and The Lord of the Rings, and was entirely responsible for the fabrication of Storimages’ Pulcinella-winning[10] and International Emmy-nominated special, Marcelin Caillou,[11] based on the book by famous French illustrator Jean-Jacques Sempé. In 2006, The Triplets of Belleville, The Dog, the General and the Pigeons and Blackmor’s Treasure were part of an eight-film retrospective of contemporary French animation at the Museum of Modern Art in New York called "Grand Illusions: The Best of Recent French Animation."[12]
Mr. Panzner has written original animated television shows, adapted into English a number of other television shows and feature films and writes regularly for Animation World Network,[13] Animation Magazine, ASIFA, Stylus Magazine,[14] Arts Editor,[15] Artnow Online,[16] etc.
In 2005, he developed a series (5 X 52') of high-definition television documentaries on communication with animals, Talk to Me, and two one-hour specials, The Hermione and Lafayette,[17] about the reconstruction of the ship the Marquis de Lafayette sailed to America on during the American Revolutionary War for Woods TV, Paris.[18] He also did the English adaptation of Michel Fessler's, author of Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature March of the Penguins, latest feature film in development Henri Bosco's L'Enfant et la Rivière.
In 2006, Mr. Panzner was Director, Short Form Programming for Discovery Communications and was responsible for the development and production of math (80 X 10’) and social studies (100 X 5’) shorts for Discovery Education's www.unitedstreaming.com.[19] As part of his responsibilities, he also did development of short form programming for the diverse Discovery networks and new media platforms.
Since leaving Discovery, Mr. Panzner has dedicated his time to the development of a new audiovisual industry he has invented, "Re:Naissance" [20] is a revolutionary new concept in animation, conceived as a means of transforming aging catalog and archives into salable, low-cost, high quality audiovisual products. For the first time ever in the 100-year history of animation, Re:Naissance [21] is going to invert the adaptation process by taking existing live-action films and faithfully reproducing them in animation, in a totally original graphic style unique to every film. As astonishing as it might sound, this has never been done. The first Re:Naissance film is George A. Romero's 1968 cult horror classic Night of the Living Dead.
In the Spring of 2010, he also had his first one-man show of drawings/collages in Paris, "Décollage", at Etains du Campanile (95 rue de Seine.)
As an illustrator, a work of his was included in "The Graphic Canon: The Definitive Anthology of the World's Great Literature as Comics and Visuals" from Mike Schneider's adaptation of Lewis Carrol's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, exclusively in images, "What is the Use of a Book Without Pictures". One of his works was also included in a special traveling exhibition of “Guard Dog: Global Jam” (2011), a shot-by-shot remake of Bill Plympton’s Oscar-nominated short Guard Dog (film) [22] where each sequence was assigned to “a willing volunteer who would reanimate it in any chosen style or medium.” Described as “a flicker frame extravaganza where every individual frame was outsourced to a different artist to interpret in their own way,” the sequence the still is from—a collaboration within a collaboration—was also from Mike Schneider, who spearheaded the similar mass collaboration project Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated.” "Guard Dog: Global Jam" won the award for Best Experimental Animation at ASIFA-EAST 2011.
Mr. Panzner created New Art and Culture magazine LHOOQ in 2011, a vanity project, and is currently a freelance writer and illustrator. He recently completed his first solo illustration project (2015), a mash-up of French illustrator Gustave Doré’s collected works for Friedrich Nietzsche's masterpiece Thus Spake Zarathustra. The 103 illustrations ink drawings, done to resemble engravings, correspond to the approximately 90 chapters of the work (as well as title page, frontispiece, chapters, etc.)
A series of fifty-five watercolor and ink Illustrations commemorating Jack Kerouac’s Beat Generation classic called “The Illustrated On the Road”, has been approved by the Jack Kerouac Estate and is on permanent loan to their website at www.jackkerouac.com. The series debuted on Kerouac’s ninety-eighth birthday on March 12th, 2020, fifty years after his passing (October 21st, 1969.)
References
- AWN (August 1, 1998). "Animation World Magazine". Mag.awn.com. Archived from the original on August 27, 2007. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Insektors". Animation World Network. Archived from the original on June 19, 2013. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on October 22, 2006. Retrieved October 13, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- "Ravensburger.de: Entdecken, was wirklich wichtig ist! | Home". Rtv-family.com. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Le chien, le général et les oiseaux". Bacfilms.com. Archived from the original on October 11, 2011. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Till Homepage". Nightflight.it. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- https://web.archive.org/web/20071009114704/http://folioscope.awn.com/distribution/BlackMor/accueil.html. Archived from the original on October 9, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2016. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - https://web.archive.org/web/20070314152251/http://www.imagina.mc/layout05.php?lang=us&&page=78&rub=IMAGINA%3Cbr%3EGAMES+AWARDS. Archived from the original on March 14, 2007. Retrieved February 19, 2016. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - Alain Escalle Homepage Archived January 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- "Cartoons on the Bay – Home Page". Cartoonsbay.com. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Storimages Cartoon Episode Guide". Marcellin Caillou (Harold Peeble). 2001. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Film Exhibitions | 2006 | Grand Illusions: The Best of Recent French Animation". MoMA.org. Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- AWN. "Animation World Network, the Hub of Animation on the Internet". Awn.com. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Manderlay – Movie Review". Stylus Magazine. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "features: The Ninth Art". ArtsEditor. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Birth of the Cool: "Aura" and the Displacement of Painting". artnowMAG. Archived from the original on October 6, 2011. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Accueil FR".
- "Dubbing, Production & Programming". Woods TV. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- "Discovery Education streaming". Unitedstreaming.com. Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- http://licensetoillustrate.blogspot.com/
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEPTEhdt-Ys
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wyYYSCpG9eM