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Aleksandr Petrov (animator)

Aleksandr Konstantinovich Petrov (also Alexander or Alexandre) (Russian: Александр Константинович Петров) (born 17 July 1957 in Prechistoye, Yaroslavl Oblast) is a Russian animator and animation director.

Biography[edit]

Petrov was born in the village of Prechistoye (Yaroslavl Oblast) and lives in Yaroslavl. He studied art at VGIK (state institute of cinema and TV) and was a disciple of Yuriy Norshteyn at Moscow's Advanced School for Screenwriters and Directors.


After making his first films in Russia he moved to Canada where he adapted the novel The Old Man and the Sea, resulting in a 20-minute animated short — the first large-format animated film ever made. Technically impressive, the film is made entirely in pastel oil paintings on glass, a technique mastered by only a handful of animators in the world. By using his fingertips instead of a paintbrush on different glass sheets positioned on multiple levels, each covered with slow-drying oil paints, he was able to add depth to his paintings. After photographing each frame painted on the glass sheets, which was four times larger than the usual A4-sized canvas, he had to slightly modify the painting for the next frame and so on. It took him over two years—from March 1997 through April 1999—to paint each of the 29,000+ frames. For the shooting of the frames a special adapted motion-control camera system was built, probably the most precise computerized animation stand ever made. On this an IMAX camera was mounted, and a video-assist camera was then attached to the IMAX camera. The film was highly acclaimed, receiving the Academy Award for Animated Short Film[1] and Grand Prix at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival.[2]


After this, Aleksandr Petrov has maintained a close relationship with Pascal Blais Studio in Canada, which helped fund The Old Man and the Sea, where he works on commercials.[3] He returned to Yaroslavl in Russia to work on his latest film, My Love, which was finished in spring 2006 after three years' work and had its premiere at the Hiroshima International Animation Festival on 27 August, where it won the Audience Prize and the Special International Jury Prize. On 17 March 2007, My Love was theatrically released at the Cinema Angelika in Shibuya, (Japan) by Studio Ghibli, as the first release of the "Ghibli Museum Library" (theatrical and DVD releases of Western animated films in Japan).[4]


In a 2009 interview, Petrov stated that he was jobless and using-up the last of his previously earned money.[5] A 2010 article stated that Petrov wants to create an animated feature film with his technique, but cannot start because of lack of funds.[6] Four years later he directed a three-minute animated sequence for the Sochi Paralympic Games called Firebird (Жар-птица). In an interview later that year, Petrov confirmed that if he can find the funding, he would like to work on a feature film in the future using his signature style, and stated that he is currently working on a film project but that it is progressing with great difficulty.[7]


In July 2016 Petrov sat on the board of directors for the International Film Festival of Poetic Animation held in Pergola, Italy.

Artistic style[edit]

Petrov's style from the late 1980s onward can be characterized as a type of Romantic realism.[8] People, animals and landscapes are painted and animated in a very realistic fashion, but there are many sections in his films where Petrov attempts to depict a character's inner thoughts and dreams. In The Old Man and the Sea, for example, the fisherman dreams that he and the marlin are brothers swimming through the sea and the sky. In My Love, the main character's illness is represented by showing him being buried beneath freshly fallen snow on a dark night.

Marathon, Марафон (Marafon) (directed and animated with Mikhail Tumelya)

1988

The Cow, Корова (Korova) (after Andrey Platonov)

1989

The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, Сон смешного человека (Son smeshnovo cheloveka) (after Fyodor Dostoevsky)

1992

Mermaid, Русалка (Rusalka) (after Alexander Pushkin)

1997

—Participated in Winter Days, 冬の日 (Fuyu no hi)

2003

My Love, Моя любовь (Moya lyubov) (after Ivan Shmelev)

2006

Firebird, Жар-птица' (Zhar-ptitsa)

2014

Ottawa International Animation Festival: Welcome, "Grand Prix"

1988

Berlin International Film Festival: The Cow, "Honorable Mention" in the category "Best Short Film"

1990

1990—: The Cow (nominated)

Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film

1990—: The Cow, "OIAF Award for Best First Film"

Ottawa International Animation Festival

Bombay International Documentary, Short and Animation Film Festival: The Cow, "Golden Conch for Best Animation Film"

1992

1992—: The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, "Audience Award" and "OIAF Award for Best Production Between 10 and 30 Minutes in Length"

Ottawa International Animation Festival

Cracow Film Festival: The Dream of a Ridiculous Man, "Special Mention for the depiction of a crucial subject in the form of animation"

1993

Cinanima: The Mermaid, "Grand Prize"

1997

1997—: The Mermaid, "Honorable Mention" in the category "Animated Films and Videos"

International Leipzig Festival for Documentary and Animated Film

1997—: The Mermaid, "Best Animator of a Drawn Film", "3rd Place Rating by Audience Vote"

2nd Open Russian Festival of Animated Film

Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film: The Mermaid (nominated)

1998

1998—: The Mermaid, "Craft Prize" in the category "Best Story"

Ottawa International Animation Festival

1998—: The Mermaid, "Grand Prize"

Zagreb World Festival of Animated Films

Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film: The Old Man and the Sea

1999

—11th Hiroshima International Animation Festival: My Love, "Audience Prize" and "Special International Jury Prize"[9]

2006

2006—: My Love, "FIPRESCI Prize for Best Animation"[10]

International Leipzig Festival for Documentary and Animated Film

Animation Show of Shows; My Love

2006

12th Open Russian Festival of Animated Film: My Love, "Grand Prix", "Best Direction" and "Best Visuals"

2007

XVII International "Message to Man" Film Festival: My Love, "Grand Prix"

2007

Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film: My Love (nominated)

2007

(2007) Secrets of Oscar-Winning Animation: Behind the Scenes of 13 Classic Short Animations. (The Old Man and the Sea) Focal Press. ISBN 978-0-240-52070-4

Olivier Cotte

at IMDb

Aleksandr Petrov

- here you can see clips of Petrov's films (enter the English site, then click on "directors")

Pascal Blais Studio

at animator.ru

Aleksandr Petrov

English interview with AWN

Trailer for the upcoming Ghibli DVD release of "My Love"

FIPRESCI review of "My Love"

(in Russian)

Interview about his latest film (17 August 2006)

Fragment from Aleksandr Petrov's My Love with Esperanto subtitles