Aida of the Trees
Aida of the Trees | |
---|---|
Directed by | |
Written by | Guido Manuli Umberto Marino |
Produced by | Lanterna Magica |
Starring | Filippa Giordano |
Edited by | Eoin Murphy |
Music by | Ennio Morricone |
Distributed by | Medusa |
Release date | December 21, 2001 |
Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | Italy |
Language | Italian |
Aida of the Trees (Italian: Aida degli alberi) is a 2001 Italian animation film written and directed by and with soundtrack by Ennio Morricone. It is the third movie produced by the studio Lanterna Magica after How the Toys Saved Christmas and Lucky and Zorba, and it is loosely inspired by Giuseppe Verdi's opera Aida.[1][2][3]
Plot[]
Arborea and Petra are two neighbouring countries perpetually at war with one another. Only the romantic relationship between Aida, the daughter of the Arborean king, and Radames, the brave son of the high general of Petra, will change the situation. The couple's worst enemy is Ramfis, the high priest of the evil god Satam, who would like his clumsy son Kak to marry the princess of Petra (who's engaged to Radames). After a series of adventures and fierce battles, Aida and Radames will manage to defeat Ramfis, to end the war between their countries and to live happily ever after.
Cast[]
- Filippa Giordano as Aida /
- Simone D'Andrea/ Peppe Servillo as Radames
- Enzo Iacchetti as Kak
- Massimo Lopez as Ramfis
- as Goa
- as Kanak
- as Raz
- as Satam
- as Amonastro
- as Amneris (voice) / Helena Hellwig as Amneris (sing)
- Ciro Imparato as Diaspron
- Michele Di Mauro as Moud
- Gino Lana as Uzi
Production[]
This Italian musical adventure fantasy animated film was produced by Lanterna Magica in Turin, Italy. It uses both traditional animation (2D animation) and computer animation (3D animation) with Adobe After Effects (compositing and visual effects), Adobe Photoshop (background art), Autodesk Maya (compositing, computer animation and modeling), Autodesk Softimage (computer animation and sculpting), Avid Media Composer (video editing), oil-paint and paper (background art and oil-painting animation), Pegs (compositing, digital ink and paint and traditional animation), pencil and paper (hand-drawn animation and storyboards), Softimage 3D (computer animation and sculpting) and Toonz Premium (compositing, digital ink and paint and traditional animation).
References[]
- ^ Simone Isola (2010). Cinegomorra: luci e ombre sul nuovo cinema italiano. Sovera Edizioni, 2010. ISBN 978-8881249183.
- ^ Deborah Young (February 15, 2002). "Review: 'Aida of the Trees'". Variety. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
- ^ ""Aida" di cartoon Animazione all'italiana firmata Guido Manuli". Il Tirreno. December 15, 2001. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
External links[]
- Italian-language films
- 2001 films
- 2001 animated films
- 2000s fantasy films
- Italian animated fantasy films
- Italian animated films
- Italian films
- Films scored by Ennio Morricone
- Films based on operas
- Animated musical films
- Animated films based on literature