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> Oceania (ex Serie TV) - riconvertita nel film Oceania 2, Disney+
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messaggio 17/8/2022, 17:57
Messaggio #25


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L'italiana Cristina Fiumara sta lavorando alla serie tv di Oceania.


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messaggio 8/1/2023, 19:09
Messaggio #26


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Dal sito Style Caster, intervista a Auli'i Cravalho che parla un po' della serie tv:

(ow-lee-ee) AULI'I CRAVALHO Makes a Name For Herself

The silver elevator doors open and Auli’i Cravalho walks through. It’s an early morning in April and Cravalho is at her Pride cover shoot, her last stop on a week-long press tour in New York City for “Crush,” Hulu’s queer romantic comedy about two high school rivals who fall for each other. After the shoot—for which she cut two nails short on her right hand in honor of the LGBTQ+ community (“This is for the gays.”)—Cravalho has an immediate six-hour flight back home to Los Angeles. She’s dressed comfortably for the occasion: a gray oversized hoodie, matching sweatpants and a pair of fuzzy boots someone mistakes for Uggs. “These are mukluks. They’re indigenous Uggs,” she corrects them. “They’re waterproof. Uggs could never.”

Words are important to Cravalho. Her first name, Auli’i, means dainty, perfect and new shoot in Hawaiian. Her name is an inoa pō, a word that came to her mother in a dream before Cravalho was born that she was destined to be called by. Her last name, Cravalho, is a misspelling of the Portuguese name, Carvalho, a reminder of her family’s immigrant history. “My name carries so much meaning that when I leave my house, that’s what I’m striving for,” Cravalho says weeks later over a Zoom call from her apartment in Los Angeles. “I’m trying to live up to my name.”

Cravalho never dreamed of becoming an actor. As the only child of a single mother (her parents divorced when she was young), Cravalho lived on food stamps in a one-bedroom apartment with her mom in Oahu. Her mom slept on a couch, and they didn’t own a TV. Before that, the two shared a single bedroom in a family member’s home. When she was a freshman in high school, Cravalho and her friends made an audition tape to be the performers at a local nonprofit event. If they were chosen, they would receive extra credit in their glee class. Cravalho was never picked, but her tape was seen by the casting director of “Hawaii Five-0,” who reviewed the auditions. The director also happened to be casting for a new Disney movie named “Moana.” “She was like, ‘Hey, who’s that girl in the last row, second from the left?’” Cravalho recalls. “I was like, ‘Hi. That’s me. What’s up?’”

The director asked if she wanted to audition for “Moana,” an animated Disney film about the daughter of a Polynesian chief who embarks on an adventure to save her island from a volcanic monster. Though Cravalho sang in choir and had minor acting experience—she played Mrs. Clause in a fifth-grade play and portrayed a woman crying as Jesus was crucified in a church theater production—she never considered a career as a performer. “I was in molecular cell biology the summer I got the audition for ‘Moana,’” says Cravalho, who wanted to be a scientist. Still, she had nothing to lose. A few days later, she and her mom went to the “Hawaii Five-0” casting studio, where she read for her first audition for “Moana.” “I still have a picture at the studio,” she says. “I went to a mall beforehand to buy a new sweater.” The producers loved her and flew her to Burbank, California, where she was put up in a hotel that put her one-bedroom apartment to shame. “I was like, ‘Even if I don’t get the role, this is incredible. I’ve been to Hollywood,’” she says.

Soon after, Cravalho learned she was cast as Moana and became the voice of Disney’s first Polynesian protagonist. What came next is somewhat of a blur: She went on a worldwide press tour to London, Japan and Singapore. She performed at the Oscars with Lin-Manuel Miranda. She even won a Teen Choice Award, beating stars like Harry Styles and Zendaya, for the title of 2017’s Breakout Movie Star. “I truly didn’t know how large the world was outside of my small island,” Cravalho says. “Moana was a young Polynesian [woman] who wanted to go beyond the reef and I was the same.” A day after her Oscars performance, Cravalho was cast as the lead in “Rise,” a teen drama series created by “Friday Night Lights” showrunner Jason Katims. The show, which moved her from Hawaii to New York City, was canceled after one season. After it ended, Cravalho moved to Los Angeles, where she found her own apartment and adopted a black and white cat named Rocco. By then, the “Moana” phenomenon had calmed down, and as the dust settled, Cravalho found herself lost on what to do next. “I was really afraid I was a one-off,” she says. “Iconic to play Moana, but what are you supposed to do after that?” As a singer, voiceover work came naturally to her. “My mom says I’ve been a singer since birth because I was one of those colic babies who wouldn’t stop screaming, so I developed great lungs,” she says. What proved to be more difficult was her transition from animation to live action, and where she fit in Hollywood. “People didn’t know my face, and when casting did see my face, they’d say, ‘You’re racially ambiguous,’” Cravalho says. “I’m like, ‘That’s a new term. I’ve never heard that one before,’ which left me even more internally confused because my identity has always been Hawaiian.”

[...]

Cravalho still has a relationship with Disney. Next year, fans hope to see her reprise her role as Moana in Disney Plus’ “Moana: The Series,” an upcoming TV adaptation that picks up after the events of the 2016 film. While fans have long called for Disney to introduce its first queer princess, Cravalho doesn’t believe that Moana—who is the first Disney princess to not have a love interest—is the right vessel to tell that story. “I do think we need more queer representation in Disney films. I would love to lend my voice to that,” she says. “Moana is a character that so many people relate to in her strength and in her courageousness. To have her storyline not be centered around a love interest, she’s already the first for that, and I almost think that’s a more important narrative to tell.”

[...]


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messaggio 18/3/2023, 14:34
Messaggio #27


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Ecco la scheda della serie che dal 2025 è stata inserita come Coming Soon...
la situazione degli spostamenti di date su Disney + riguarda sia Oceania, sia Tiana sia diversi progetti animati Marvel...



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messaggio 3/4/2023, 22:49
Messaggio #28


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L'annuncio oggi del film live action aveva fatto preoccupare le persone sulla serie tv, e il regista Jared Bush è intervenuto per riferire che la serie si farà.

Da Twitter:

Samuel blank @BlankSamuel In risposta a @thejaredbush , @TheRock e altri 6:

Is the Moana the series still coming

Jared Bush @thejaredbush In risposta a @BlankSamuel, @TheRock e altri 6:

Oh yes. And it’s phenomenal.



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Mr. Hook
messaggio 3/4/2023, 22:53
Messaggio #29


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Non capisco la preoccupazione.
Una cosa mica esclude l’altra e comunque se alla fine questa serie non si farà non sarà certo perché hanno annunciato il live action.
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messaggio 3/4/2023, 23:08
Messaggio #30


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Bravo Mr. Hook, la pensiamo come te... spesso si confondono i reparti ma in realtà il reparto animazione è distinto dal reparto live action. Secondo noi occorre proprio differenziare.
Tra l'altro la serie è ancora in lavorazione e continuerà ad esserlo per un po', pare che i lavori vadano bene quindi proseguono sul progetto.


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Daydreamer
messaggio 4/4/2023, 6:36
Messaggio #31


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Differenziare è l’ultima parola che si può usare in questa filiera commerciale che è diventata la Disney. La parola corretta è saturare.

Un tempo si curava la qualità ora la quantità, sembra dare il semaforo verde a tutto ciò che crea polemica sui social. La pubblicità più becera, del tipo, purché se ne parli…
Io non ci sto a far parte di un pubblico medio basso stile Uomini e Donne, ad ognuno la sua scelta. Ovviamente non parlo di questo film in particolare, ma della piega che ha assunto la Company con le scelte degli ultimi tempi.
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messaggio 21/5/2023, 20:40
Messaggio #32


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Sul suo profilo Twitter, alla domanda di aggiornamenti sulla serie tv di Oceania, Jared Bush, pur non sbilanciandosi troppo, conferma che la serie è attualmente in lavorazione...

Da Twitter:

Lonely Abandoned Beagle @AbandonedLizard:

So, what’s going on with the @DisneyPlus #Moana series? It was supposed to come out in 2025 per the @DisneyAnimation website. Now it only says “Coming Soon.” So, what’s going on with it?

Jared Bush @thejaredbush:

Can’t reveal any details aside from I think it’s spectacular.


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messaggio 8/6/2023, 22:06
Messaggio #33


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Dal sito The Hollywood Reporter:

The 75 Most Powerful People in Kids’ Entertainment

For today’s young viewers, it’s Saturday morning all day, every day. As kid-targeted content — and the platforms offering it — proliferate, the creators and executives listed here have figured out how to capture children’s precious attention and better reflect their worlds.

[...]

Jennifer Lee

Walt Disney Animation

As chief creative officer of the defining American animation studio, Lee is both a guardian of a treasured family brand and a creative force charged with evolving a 100-year-old company for modern audiences. She came into the job after writing and directing the box office juggernaut Frozen films with Chris Buck, taking over in a tumultuous era after the departure of John Lasseter. Lee is writing the studio’s original feature, Wish, a musical due Nov. 22, and overseeing production on the Moana and Tiana series for Disney+, as well as the Toy Story, Frozen and Zootopia sequels.

[...]




Da un articolo di Hollywood Reporter si apprende che le serie tv di Oceania e Tiana sono attualmente ancora in lavorazione sotto la supervisione di Jennifer Lee.


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messaggio 28/6/2023, 21:32
Messaggio #34


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Da LinkedIn:

David VanTuyle

Story Artist at Walt Disney Animation Studios

Story Artist
Walt Disney Animation Studios
ago 2019 - Presente 3 anni 11 mesi

Burbank, California

Story Artist on “Untitled project”
Story Artist on “Moana” series for Disney+
Story Artist on “Encanto”
Story Artist on “Raya and the Last Dragon”
Story Artist on “Baymax” shorts for Disney+



David VanTuyle, story artist presso la Disney, sta lavorando alla serie tv di Oceania.

Come vedete ha lavorato (e lavora tuttora) su lungometraggi Disney quindi la qualità della serie è confermata che sarà quella di un lungometraggio





Sempre da LinkedIn


Tamara Lusher
Animation story and development artist from Hercules to Moana+, Also- head of story, director, and writer.

Story Artist at Walt Disney Animation Studios on the Moana series. I've been a story and development artist for Netflix, Walt Disney Animation Studios, Pixar, Rainmaker, and Blue Sky. I have also been a writer and director for an original feature at Lucasfilm and Wildbrain and the Head of Story for an animated feature at Netflix. I live in Los Angeles, California. Manager Alison Mann, Fourth Wall Management. Legal Representative Peter Nichols, Lichter Grossman Nichols Adler Feldman Clark. https://tamaralusherstoryboards.myportfolio.com/

Story Artist and Story Development
Walt Disney Animation Studios
gen 2022 - Presente 1 anno 6 mesi

Burbank, California, United States

Moana
Tiana



La veterana Tamara Lusher che ha lavorato a Hercules e altri lungometraggi sta occupandosi della serie di Tiana e Oceania


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messaggio 10/7/2023, 21:50
Messaggio #35


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Rumor:

Da Twitter:

Guto Collector@gutocollector:

Moana será adulta na nova série dela!


Guto Collector @gutocollector:

E também terá uma irmã chamada Simea.



Traduzione: Vaiana sarà adulta nella nuova serie e avrà una sorella chiamata Simea.


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messaggio 11/7/2023, 6:41
Messaggio #36


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Dai, Vaiana adulta??? La cosa mi rende il progetto molto più interessante!


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messaggio 5/9/2023, 22:29
Messaggio #37


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Dal sito E Cartelera, intervista a Jennifer Lee che parla della serie tv di Oceania e Tiana:

eC: The Disney legacy is very much alive, not only with live action remakes or nods like the scene of the princesses in ' Ralph Breaks the Internet ' and other Easter Eggs, but also projects like the ' Tiana and the toad '. Have you ever considered going back to one of the most classic films, from the Golden Age or the Renaissance, and making an animated sequel in high-budget feature film format?

JL: I love that Disney+ allows us to introduce experimentation and freshness while also exploring our legacy. Combining celebration and narrative innovation. In that sense we can play more with the Disney+ series. We're doing the ' Moana ' series and it's been a lot of fun, I love it. 'Tiana' is a new world for her, a new direction and a new voice. I think it's a very good platform to start playing with things that have meant a lot to many of us.
For me, it is also recognizing that there is no turning back, only moving forward stronger and stronger. How technology has allowed us to maintain the importance of traditional animation through the artists is what excites me the most. There is a balance between the sequels and the original content. There are more 'Frozen' and more ' Zootropolis ' on the way because they invite their stories to grow, the filmmakers want to expand them.
But we also have a wonderful list of originals from a whole new, diverse and different generation of filmmakers. New types of stories. That's why we have to keep pushing the original movies. Regarding the stories of the past: if the right story comes along and the right director fights for it, it will happen.


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messaggio 17/10/2023, 21:36
Messaggio #38


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La Lee parla della serie tv di Oceania:

Dal sito EW:

But another, perhaps greater experiment is the plan for a Moana animated Disney+ series that acts as a sequel to the 2016 fantasy epic. "One of the things that I don't think is quite what we aim to do here is a Simpsons or a Phineas and Ferb, where it's a series formula," she explains of that project. "The filmmakers tend to work more in a miniseries kind of concept that's closer to features. In some ways, if it's five episodes, I think of it as a five-act play, but that's because of how a lot of us grew up. Some of us here have worked in series, so we help each other. But for me, it's more about the storytelling. No matter what format we're going to do it, it has to be as big, bold, epic, and of the same quality."


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Daydreamer
messaggio 7/2/2024, 22:53
Messaggio #39


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La serie tv è stata riconvertita in film sequel pensato per il cinema, ovvero Oceania 2. Uscirà a fine novembre.

Articolo su Deadline
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messaggio 7/2/2024, 23:57
Messaggio #40


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chissà se anche Tiana subirà la stessa sorte...


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GayFairytale
messaggio 8/2/2024, 0:46
Messaggio #41


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CITAZIONE (veu @ 7/2/2024, 23:57) *
chissà se anche Tiana subirà la stessa sorte...

Non credo che vorranno rischiare
Rilanciare il 2D con Tiana riciclando gli episodi di una serie è la cosa peggiore che si possa fare, riconvertirla in 3D non avrebbe senso dopo aver annunciato che sarà in 2D, scontentano i fan dopo Wish che tutti volevano animato a mano
Sarebbe un flop ancora peggiore del primo film
Inoltre proporre l’ennesima principessa nera in questo periodo alimenterebbe le polemiche sul woke in maniera allucinante, facendo scappare a gambe levate chiunque sia saturo della politica e l’inclusione a tutti i costi
Se mai decideranno di tornare al 2D dovrà essere per forza con una storia nuova ( possibilmente una fiaba romantica con principessa bianca europea perché sarebbe l’unico modo per mettere tutti d’accordo )
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Daydreamer
messaggio 8/2/2024, 7:26
Messaggio #42


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CITAZIONE (veu @ 7/2/2024, 23:57) *
chissà se anche Tiana subirà la stessa sorte...

Ammetto che per questo avrei fatto una cauta eccezione.
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