British Columbia

Meet the Vancouver animators behind the Super-Pets movie that's sitting pretty atop the box office

Animators at a Vancouver studio helped bring Superman and his canine friend to life in DC League of Super-Pets, a new animated film that has earned top spot at the box office. 

Animal Logic studio plans to expand with a new 110,000-square foot facility in the city creating 300 jobs

Animators at Animal Logic studios in Vancouver worked on the film DC League of Super-Pets. (CBC)

Animators at a Vancouver studio helped bring Superman and his canine friend to life in a new animated film that has earned top spot at the box office. 

DC League of Super-Pets, which opened in theatres on Friday, was produced by Animal Logic, an animation studio headquartered in Sydney, Australia, with offices in Los Angeles and downtown Vancouver. 

The movie, which features the voices of Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson, Kevin Hart, Kate McKinnon, and John Krasinski, centres on Krypto the Super-Dog developing his powers while working together with a group of rescue animals to help save Superman. The superhero spinoff earned $23 million US, according to studio estimates Sunday, enough to top the box office.

Dave Burgess, animation supervisor at Animal Logic's Vancouver studio, said they worked hard to give the computer-generated animation the look and feel of a comic book.

Inside the Vancouver animation studio behind DC League of Super-Pets

2 years ago
Duration 1:55
Animators at a Vancouver studio helped bring to life the new movie DC League of Super-Pets, featuring the voices of Dwayne (The Rock) Johnson and Kevin Hart. CBC took a behind-the-scenes look into the animation studio.

Burgess says being an animator is sometimes described as being an actor, but with a pencil or computer mouse. 

"I think you have to understand performance," he said. "You have to understand how to make an idea come across clearly and be able to show an expression that someone looking at it will understand the emotion of the character."

Burgess said animators also have to think about how things move. Super-Pets features animals, including a dog, pig and squirrel, which all have different motion patterns. 

Superman makes his debut

38 years ago
Duration 9:03
Co-created by Canadian artist Joe Shuster, the famed Man of Steel makes his first appearance in comic racks across the nation.

"We know how those things move in the real world, so for the animator we have to take that information and we have to know it and be able to apply it to our character performance … If you make a mistake with a dog walking, in animation, I think an audience knows enough about dogs to go, 'That looks funny. That doesn't look like a dog.'" 

More than 380 staff in Vancouver worked on the film. Animal Logic's Vancouver team also worked on The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part

Animation as a career path

Animal Logic was recently purchased by Netflix. Chief Operating Officer Sharon Taylor says it has plans to build a 110,000-square-foot facility in Vancouver's Mount Pleasant neighbourhood and create 300 new jobs. 

Like so many other industries, finding workers can prove to be a challenge. 

"I think our job ads will always be up for every single role because there's always a need and we always want to be building out those teams," Taylor said.

Burgess said aspiring animators have plenty of options for training, including art colleges, film schools, and schools specially for animation.

When he was young, he said, he never thought of animation as a career path.

"There's no way that I could have told my parents I wanted to be an animator and they would have gone, 'Gee, Dave, that's great. What a great idea.' Because it didn't exist."

Dave Burgess, animation supervisor at Animal Logic's Vancouver studio, says aspiring animators have plenty of options for training: art colleges, film schools, and schools dedicated to animation. (CBC)

That, he says, is changing as animation has grown in popularity.  

"People that grow up with animation, watching these films, they get inspired and they want to do that too," he said. "And it seems like it's not a closed door and people are aware of it. So I do know people that have told their parents they want to be animators and the parents said, 'Oh, OK.'"

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jon Azpiri is a reporter and copy editor based in Vancouver, B.C. Email him with story tips at jon.azpiri@cbc.ca.

With files from Caroline Chan, The Associated Press