Narrative
Working Title
A Drop in the Pond
Character



Top Row: Varying potential textures for Raindrop (matte, ice, water).
Lower Right: Sad Raindrop, as shown by the slumped shaped and dimmed
colour, playing up Raindrop’s ability to morph.
Lower Left: Raindrop upon colliding with another object. Again, morphing allows him to splash for
dramatic effect. The lighter colour,
especially around the normally-darker outline, indicates alarm.
Outline
Character
|
Raindrop
(Begins as smaller particles and coalesces into a
full-sized droplet.)
|
Story-world
|
1.
Raincloud
(Begins as a
light grey, then slowly becomes darker, until Raindrop falls off of it)
2.
The ground
(Post-fall;
includes an umbrella and a puddle)
|
Problem
|
Raindrop wants to stay on his cloud, and to avoid the
ground, but he engages in an altercation with another raindrop, forcing him
off.
|
Metaphors
|
1.
Raindrop’s ability to morph exemplifies how we
change as we age.
2.
As Raindrop falls, he realises the size of the
world and that he is very small.
Raindrop eventually falls into a puddle, creating little more than a
ripple, re-establishing that feeling.
3.
More raindrops fall, and the puddle grows,
showing what combined effort can do.
The camera lowers into the pond to see a fish swimming—
it can only
live there because the raindrops have created its home. At the edge of the new pond, a plant
grows. A tidal wave (that looks like
Raindrop) destroys a city. People in
numbers can be good or bad.
4.
In the end of the film, after everything
settles down, small particles rise up from the puddle and begin to form a new
raindrop, symbolic of rebirth and resilience.
|
|

Sound
Primary a foley-based soundtrack.
Inspirations
Flowerpots
by Rafael Sommerhalder
The film is neatly hand-drawn—or designed to look
hand-drawn—and is soothingly simplistic in its feel. Its sound is limited to foley, which works
well because it does emphasise that
simplicity. In our film, we would like
to use a similar sound-technique, so that each action is exaggerated.
The
Hedgehog in the Fog by Yuriy
Norshteyn
The Hedgehog in the Fog truly exhibits
the importance of texture in cut-out animation, as each feature is a different
texture, and thus each feature feels as though it is its own entity. The hedgehog and the owl, for example, are
made of two different materials, rather than both being drawn coloured-pencil
style. Though these two characters look
different on a structural level, it suggests that using unique textures could
be a way to differentiate characters whom would otherwise look very
similar. In our plan for A Drop in the Pond, we mention two
raindrops battling atop a cloud, and they could be composed of different
materials or fills (one gradient, one shimmery) to distinguish them.
Rabbit
by Run Wrake
From
this film, we would like to learn from the cut-out style used, as we also plan
to use chiefly After Effects to compose our scenes. Here, the emphasis would be on the
incorporation of background, as the backgrounds are very detailed, yet do not
draw too much attention to themselves so as to take away from the main
characters.
Angry
Man by Anita Killi
This
is a cut-out style animation that takes advantage of both available textures
and hand-drawn aspects. The background
pieces feel like found objects, but the movable characters have a
coloured-pencil quality to their faces and a construction-paper quality to
their clothes. Such a character designed
is reminiscent of childhood art projects, and concerning the film’s story about
a young boy and a violent father, makes the message more poignant. While we have mentioned the importance of
texture before, this is another place where it works, and therefore it is
another place we can learn from.
Skills Needed
·
Basic drawing
·
Basic Anime Studio Pro (to animate Raindrop)
·
Photography (to gather textures)
·
After Effects (to compile images: characters and
background)