Pirate Baby's Cabana Battle Street Fight 2006

Pirate Baby's Cabana Battle Street Fight 2006 is a 12-minute, black and white animated movie by Paul Laurence Robertson, featuring music by Cornel Wilczek,[1] also known as Qua. It depicts a fictional side-scroller video game, "heavily influenced and inspired by anime, cult 1980s games such as Double Dragon, Bubble Bobble and R-Type, and Australian popular culture"[2] in which two male characters must fight their way through a building full of zombies, humans, giant grubs and octopuses to rescue a woman being held captive by the main antagonist, a pirate baby. The animation was created with Autodesk Animator and Adobe Flash, and contains considerable gore and some nudity.[3]

The title screen, featuring the Pirate Baby.

Sponsored by Melbourne's Living the Arts program, it was first shown at the 2006 Next Wave Festival. It was released on the internet as a 113 MB MPEG video on April 20, 2006.

Synopsis

The fictional game begins with an introductory title sequence. There are five play levels, each with a boss at the end. The two heroes each have a preferred fighting style; one primarily uses a baseball bat, though he also uses Uzis at one point, and the other utilizes a variety of kicks. Numerous special attacks are used, including three which are specifically named:

It ends with credits and stills depicting events after the pirate baby is defeated.

Legacy

The video was generally well-received, but considered inappropriate for children due to intense violence and some nudity. Robertson later made a second movie, Kings of Power 4 Billion%, also featuring music by Wilczek. Robertson later became involved in the art direction for the videogame, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World: The Game, based on the Scott Pilgrim series of graphic novels, which was released on August 10, 2010. He was also involved in the creation of the official music video of Architecture in Helsinki's 'Do The Whirlwind'.

gollark: Bees aren't apioforms.
gollark: Hash it plus a random salt. Release the guesses and salt later.
gollark: https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.11041
gollark: Okay, yes, I am wildly stereotyping very incorrectly, bipolar is over days to weeks.
gollark: You are unique in being very annoyed then regretting it, however.

References


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