“When the primary Shrek film got here out, it was fairly groundbreaking,” Joel Crawford, co-director of Puss in Boots: The Final Want, advised Polygon in a current interview. “With CG, it was so spectacular [with] the element that you could possibly really feel, and audiences had been wowed by that chasing of photorealism. So in an effort to make, 20-something years later, Puss in Boots: The Final Want really feel like a fairy story for our time, we stated, We have to push it.”
And he and co-director Januel Mercado did. In contrast to the 4 Shrek motion pictures and the primary Puss in Boots film, which all take a regular method to photorealism in lighting and design, The Final Want is extra stylized. The backgrounds are lush. The lighting seems to be much less photographic and extra like an impressionist portray. The actions are extra exaggerated and attention-grabbing. It’s an enormous departure from what audiences have come to count on from the Shrek franchise, however it was a departure the filmmakers had been wanting to take.
“It’s been over 10 years because the final Puss in Boots, and over 20 years because the first Shrek got here out,” Mercado says. “We’re at all times speaking about simply how marvelous animation know-how and its visible storytelling has advanced over time. We felt like there’s been sufficient time the place we may retain the essence of this world and these characters, however we may take full benefit of the brand new know-how and kinds [with] which to share these tales. We weren’t about to overlook that chance.”
Mercado and Crawford had been impressed by animated tasks like Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Arcane, and The Dangerous Guys, not only for their use of stylized animation, however for his or her celebration of the mediums that impressed their tales. For Spider-Verse, that was comedian books. And for The Final Want, that meant fairy-tale illustrations.
“I keep in mind rising up with youngsters’s books,” recounts Mercado. “Particularly fairy-tale books and illustrations, and the way vivid these spreads could be, and the way easy they’re for youths, with simply easy texts and storytelling. However I keep in mind as a child spending hours simply trying on the drawings and the work, and seeing all the main points which are within the environments. […] We wished to do the identical with the movie medium for Puss in Boots.”
“Our manufacturing designer, Nate Wragg, was actually the one who helmed how you can categorical our particular story,” explains Crawford. “Particularly on this fairy-tale type. And so it was a trial-and-error factor the place we have a look at issues and go, Oh, that’s too flat and graphic, or That’s too practical. And so it’s actually a technique of discovering it.”
The animation wasn’t the one ingredient Crawford and Mercado hoped to evolve with The Final Want. In any case, again in 2001, Shrek was groundbreaking not only for the CG, however for the edgy humor and extra mature references that impressed a tonal shift in American animation for the subsequent decade or so. To maintain Puss in Boots related for the 2020s, the filmmakers wished to revisit that sharp wit, but additionally increase the themes the film may take care of and inform a deeper story.
“With the unique Shrek motion pictures, there’s a enjoyable play on what we all know as fairy tales and Disney princesses that we love. There’s at all times that subversive take that’s intelligent and hilarious to expertise,” says Mercado. “It’s at all times identical to, Oh man, that is enjoyable. I’ve by no means considered it this fashion. It’s cool to show issues on its head. That was one factor we wished to return to and proceed as one a part of the fold. And the opposite facet of it is usually a real message, and [an] emotional story to inform.”
Puss in Boots: The Final Want is at present obtainable on demand and on DVD and Blu-ray.