top of page

“There is another way”: making The Wild Robot

“... in my research I stumped upon a group called Sandbox Percussion, who play on random scraps of metal and glass and tree branches. That kind of found percussion felt an interesting way to introduce a wild texture that I hadn’t really heard before.” Kris Bowers


Excerpts from interview by Nick Bradshaw

For Sight and Sound, British Film Institute

Universal Pictures / DreamWorks Animation


"The Wild Robot screened in the BFI London Film Festival as a special presentation on 13 October and is released across the UK on 18 October."

"“Nothing beats hearing live musicians, especially here in this city, which is just remarkable when it comes to the level of musicianship,” says Kris Bowers, the composer for DreamWorks Animation’s new production The Wild Robot. It’s June, and Bowers is at a converted north London church turned sound studio, recording choral tracks for the film’s soundtrack. Scenes are still being worked up in California while Chris Sanders, the director, Jeff Hermann, the producer, and Mary Blee, the editor, accompany Bowers on his London recording stop en route to the Annecy animation festival, where they’ll screen a handful of scenes to industry watchers.


On screen, a gosling is learning to fly. The odds are against him not only because he’s the runt of its nest, but because he’s an orphan – raised by a robot, Roz, who is now trying to help him into the sky to join his migrating flock. There’s a lot of improvisation involved (Roz has not been programmed for goose-flight coaching) but as take-off is achieved, the choir sing rising harmonies and the flock soar up into an indigo and violet sky and away from the robot left standing alone on her wild island, her gosling charge now successfully raised and gone. “Chris [Sanders] had wanted the feeling here of a train leaving a station: from the first note, you feel ‘this is going, we can’t stop it’,” says Bowers."


"“I also knew I didn’t want to go in the direction of ‘ethnic’ instruments that are often used to portray the wild, because I didn’t want to articulate through the music where we were or what culture we’re pulling from. But in my research I stumped upon a group called Sandbox Percussion, who play on random scraps of metal and glass and tree branches. That kind of found percussion felt an interesting way to introduce a wild texture that I hadn’t really heard before.”"


Read full article here.


Comments


bottom of page