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Nick park的个人简历

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发表于 2003-5-27 20:48:06 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
感兴趣,需要的话,我稍后翻译...

Nick Park
         
AKA: Nicholas Park
            
OCCUPATION: animator, director, and screenwriter; also producer
         
BORN: Nicholas Park in Preston, Lancashire, England, 1958.
            
NATIONALITY: English
           
EDUCATION: Attended Sheffield Art School in Sheffield, England. Majored in
           communication arts (BFA 1980).
           Attended National Film and Television School in Beaconsfield,
           England. Majored in animation.
            
MILESTONES:
      1971: Made first animated film at age 13 (date approximate)
      1975: Professional debut on British television, "Archie's Concrete
            Nightmare", an animated short
            Began working on "A Grand Day Out" while enrolled at the
            National Film and Television School
      1985: Joined Aardman Animation in Bristol, England
      1986: Earliest credit at Aardman, the Peter Gabriel video
            "Sledgehammer"
      1989: Produced "Lyp Synch", a series of short films for Channel Four
            Television; Park animated, wrote and directed the five-minute
            short "Creature Comforts" which earned his first Oscar in 1990
      1989: Completed and released first Wallace and Gromit short, "A Grand
            Day Out"
      1993: Second Wallace and Gromit short, "The Wrong Trousers", aired on
            BBC2 in December; film earned Park his second Oscar for Best
            Animated Short Film
      1995: Third Wallace and Gromit short, "A Close Shave" earned Park his
            third Oscar for Best Animated Short
            Created Reebok TV commercial featuring Wallace and Gromit
      1996: Briefly made headlines when the clay models of Wallace and
            Gromit were left in the trunk of a NYC taxi cab
            Wallace and Gromit were selected to assist in fundraising for
            the Royal Hospital for Children
      1996: First project as executive producer only, Steve Box's 11-minute
            short "Stagefright" (made for Channel Four)
      2000: With Peter Lord, co-directed feature "Chicken Run"
     
BIOGRAPHY:
    When Nick Park joined Aardman Animations in 1985, it was the
    realization of an avocation that began when he was a child. Born in
    1958 in Preston, Lancashire, this filmmaker began his career creating
    animated featurettes while in his early teens. One of his early
    efforts, "Archie's Concrete Nightmare", aired on the BBC in 1975.
        Park went on to study at the Sheffield Art School before attending
    the National Film and Television School. While still attending the
    latter, he began work on "A Grand Day Out" (1990), a stop-motion clay
    animation short featuring his signature characters, Wallace, an
    eccentric inventor with a love of cheese, and Gromit, his faithful yet
    put-upon dog. When Park joined Aardman, he simultaneously worked on
    completing this first Wallace and Gromit adventure as well as on other
    projects. The world first saw his work in Peter Gabriel's
    award-winning music video "Sledgehammer" (1986). Along with the
    Brothers Quay and Aardman co-founder Peter Lord, Park created the
    dazzling visuals using a combination of claymation and traditional
    animation. Over the next few years, he contributed to Aardman's series
    "Lip Synch", which matched pre-recordings to animation, including
    Lord's "War Story" (1990), which illustrated the remembrances of a
    WWII veteran, and the Oscar-winning "Creature Comforts" (also 1990),
    which depicted unhappy zoo residents commenting on and complaining
    about their climate, diet and accommodations. Its success led to a
    popular advertising campaign for electricity on British TV.
        When "Creature Comforts" earned a 1990 Oscar nomination, Park was
    in the unusual position of competing with himself as "A Grand Day Out"
    was also nominated. That short, written and directed by Park, told a
    fairly simplistic tale: Wallace discovers to his horror that he is out
    of cheese and builds a spaceship to travel to the moon because
    "everybody knows it's made of cheese". Paying passing homage to George
    Melies' "Le voyage dans la lune/A Trip to the Moon" (1902), "A Grand
    Day Out" was six years in the making. Like his work on the "Lip Synch"
    series, it featured tiny plasticine figures with narrow eyes, wide
    mouths, bulbous noses and oversized extremities, what have become the
    trademarks of Park's animations. Wallace's personality owed much to
    the exaggerated synchronization to the vocal work of actor Paul Sallis
    while the mute Gromit was made xpressive through body language and
    facial expressions. The work succeeds despite its sketchy tale because
    of the animator's attention to detail (i.e., Gromit reading the
    newspaper and absent-mindedly tapping his foot, the interior design of
    the spacecraft).
        Tapping into the resources of Aardman Animations, Park was able to
    successfully build on his initial creation. Working with co-writer Bob
    Baker, he fashioned "The Wrong Trousers" (1993), a quirky tale that
    invoked Ealing comedies, Hitchcock's thrillers and heist films
    (particularly 1954's "Rififi"). Park adopted a more cinematic approach
    in the lighting (including a nod to 1949's "The Third Man"), score
    (Julian Nott's homage to Bernard Herrmann), art direction, sound and
    other technical matters. Adding a mysterious lodger, an expressionless
    penguin, to the mix, the resultant parody of mystery-thrillers
    features two brilliant set pieces: the actual heist (featuring the
    penguin controlling Wallace's invention of robotic trousers) that
    calls to mind nearly every genre film; and a chase sequence atop a
    model train, that conjures memories of everything from "The Great
    Train Robbery" (1903) to "The Seven Per-Cent Solution" (1976).
    Produced over a two-year period, "The Wrong Trousers" earned Park his
    second Oscar.
        Expectations ran high as to what Aardman and Park would do for an
    encore. Since the first shorts had aired on British TV, audiences
    embraced the characters and wanted more. Park agreed to create a third
    entry in the series. In April 1994, the head of the BBC animation unit
    set an air date of Christmas 1995, leaving barely 18 months to produce
    the film. Again working with Bob Baker, Park devised the story for "A
    Close Shave" (1995). For the first time, the director ceded some
    control and worked with a staff of over 25 camerapersons, animators
    and model-makers. Park was unable to personally animate key sequences
    (as he had in the past) and (in his own words) functioned more as a
    director than on any other project to date. With references to such
    movies as "Frankenstein" (1931), "Brief Encounter" (1945), "Alien"
    (1979), "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (1981) and "The Terminator" (1984),
    the short was a mix of romance, sci-fi and mystery. The helmer
    employed stylish camerawork and the overall piece was enhanced by
    Julian Nott's atmospheric score. Using conventions of slapstick
    (fleshed out with Wallace's Rube Goldberg-inspired inventions) and
    subtle humor, Park told a tale of sheep rustling which included a
    framed Gromit being incarcerated. A daring jailbreak and amazing chase
    sequence follow, ending with a wonderful set piece that also alluded
    to "Metropolis" (1926) and "Modern Times" (1936). The subplot romance
    between Wallace and Wendolene, a distaff doppelganger, was both
    touching and appropriately noirish. Again Park was cited by the
    Academy, earning a third Oscar.
        As the popularity of the characters has evolved (there are now
    merchandising tie-ins like alarm clocks and the requisite clothing, as
    well as boxed video sets), Wallace and Gromit have become a cottage
    industry. Nevertheless, Park has temporarily abandoned them (as
    perhaps subconsciously demonstrated when he accidentally left them in
    the trunk of a NYC taxi cab during a press junket). He subsequently
    served as executive producer on "Stagefright" (1996), an 11-minute
    short by animator Steve Box (who contributed to both "The Wrong
    Trousers" and "A Close Shave") and developed a feature length
    claymation film, "Chicken Run" (scheduled for release in 2000), about
    two chickens in love who plot an escape from a poultry farm in
    Yorkshire. Park is co-director with Peter Lord. Park, however, has
    promised to eventually revisit with Wallace and Gromit.  
   
                                                   --Written by Ted Murphy
发表于 2003-5-27 22:59:27 | 显示全部楼层
这位代号耐克公园是谁阿?英国普雷斯顿!到那看动画片太远了吧~
去看英超!哈
 楼主| 发表于 2003-5-28 22:49:07 | 显示全部楼层
Nick park是《掌门狗》、《小鸡快跑》和《动物园纪实采访》的导演啊!
发表于 2003-5-28 22:54:31 | 显示全部楼层
是他!!我喜欢!
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