Bad Jubies

"Bad Jubies"
Adventure Time episode

"Bad Jubies" was filmed via stop motion techniques.
Episode no. Season 7
Episode 20
Directed by Kirsten Lepore
Written by Kirsten Lepore
Story by Kirsten Lepore
Production code 1034-205
Original air date January 14, 2016
Running time 11 minutes
Guest actors

"Bad Jubies" is the twentieth episode of the seventh season of the American animated television series Adventure Time. The episode was written, storyboarded, and directed by Kirsten Lepore; the episode was filmed via stop motion. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on January 14, 2016. The episode guest stars Kevin Michael Richardson as both a sentient storm and an automated weather alert system.

The series follows the adventures of Finn (voiced by Jeremy Shada), a human boy, and his best friend and adoptive brother Jake (voiced by John DiMaggio), a dog with magical powers to change shape and grow and shrink at will. In this episode, a deadly storm hits the grasslands, forcing Finn, Jake, BMO, and Lumpy Space Princess to build a bunker. In the end, Jake is able to use a beat box made up of nature sounds to calm the storm.

"Bad Jubies" is the fourth guest-animated episode of Adventure Time, after season five's "A Glitch is a Glitch", and season six's "Food Chain" and "Water Parks Prank". Lepore was approached about helming the project after showrunner Adam Muto saw her CalArts thesis film, entitled "Move Mountain". The episode took roughly one year to make and was animated by Bix Pix Entertainment. "Bad Jubies" was met with mostly positive critical reception, and upon its debut was viewed by 1.22 million people.

Plot

A nefarious storm forces Finn, Jake, Lumpy Space Princess, and BMO to build an ad hoc storm shelter. Finn, Lumpy Space Princess, and BMO all chip in to help construct the refuge, but Jake spends most of the time wistfully contemplating nature. When the storm hits and the quartet is cut-off from the outside world, the isolation begins to drive everyone mad. It is then that Jake reveals what he had been doing out in nature earlier: collecting sounds. He begins beat boxing, using the sounds he collected as samples. Soon, the sentient storm (voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson) breaks into the shelter, but Jake's nature beat box manages to tame the tempest.

Production

"Bad Jubies" is the fourth guest-animated episode of the series, after season five's "A Glitch is a Glitch", and season six's "Food Chain" and "Water Park Prank".[1][2][3] At the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con, head writer Kent Osborne first revealed that the show was wanting to create a stop motion episode.[4] On October 24, 2014, Kirsten Lepore, an alumna of both the Maryland Institute College of Art's and CalArts's experimental animation programs,[5][6] announced via her Twitter that she would be working on a "new project"; in tandem with this cryptic message, she posted a picture of an Adventure Time storyboard title sheet that listed her as the supervising director and storyboard artist for an episode.[7]

Lepore first got involved with the show after her CalArts MFA thesis, the short film entitled "Move Mountain", was viewed by Adventure Time showrunner and executive producer Adam Muto in early 2014. He emailed Lepore, asking if she would be interested in working on the show. Muto was drawn to Lepore’s work because her style—especially that which was exhibited in “Move Mountain”—was reminiscent of the spirit of Adventure Time; in an email correspondence with Lepore, Muto reportedly told her that the producers had "been wanting to do a stop motion episode for a very long time, [but they] were waiting for the right time and the right fit."[6] In an interview The A.V. Club, she noted: "I knew this was a huge opportunity and such a huge honor […] It was really, really exciting for me to be able to get the project."[6] With this being said, prior to the email, Lepore had never seen an episode of Adventure Time, and she soon started to watch the show to get a feel for its aesthetic. Eventually, however, she came to genuinely enjoy the show, and she now claims it is one of her favorites.[8]

The episode took roughly one year to make. Approximately five or six months were devoted exclusively to writing, storyboarding, and pitching the episode’s plot to the show’s writers and the network. Lepore was initially worried because she had limited experience with writing lines for the character, as her previous films had almost exclusively lacked dialogue. To overcome this issue, Lepore claimed to have relegated herself to her bedroom for five weeks while she wrote and storyboarded the entirety of "Bad Jubies". After her storyboard was approved, Lepore was teamed up with Bix Pix Entertainment. This production company constructed all of the backdrops, props, and puppets, while Lepore directed the endeavor. The production of the episode presented many technical challenges which Lepore had limited experience with. Because she had mostly taught herself how to animate, she soon had to learn specific industry methods that prevented puppets from falling over, or shots from being interrupted by human error.[6] Lepore directed four separate animators, who each worked on a different set; this allowed for four times as much footage to be captured in a single day.[8] The episode’s intro, which Lepore created almost entirely by herself, was the last bit of stop-motion made for the show. According to Lepore, the fleeting characters that appear were made "quick and dirty" out of clay, since they were only going to be in frame for a few seconds.[6]

Reception

"Bad Jubies" aired on January 14, 2016. It was seen by 1.22 million viewers and scored a 0.3 Nielsen rating in the 18- to 49-year-old demographic (Nielsen ratings are audience measurement systems that determine the audience size and composition of television programming in the United States), which means that the episode was seen by 0.3 percent of all households aged 18 to 49 years old were watching television at the time of the episode's airing.[9]

The episode received largely positive reviews from critics. Oliver Sava of The A.V. Club awarded the episode an "A–", arguing that the episode was both about "how the act of creation can alienate the artist from others, but ultimately unites people with the finished product", and a meditation on negativity, depression, and the beauty of the natural world.[10] Sava was impressed with Lepore's handle on the characters and their voices, especially given that her previous short films had made little to no use of dialogue. He was also appreciative that while Lepore did bring a unique and striking change by using a new medium, tonally, the episode is consistent with other episodes of Adventure Time.[10]

Robert Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the episode "catches the show's combination of cosmic consciousness and domestic farce and takes it some places you never knew you wanted it to go. It's everything a special should be."[8] He wrote highly of Lepore's medium, contrasting it with 3-D animation by saying, "In stop-motion, the space is real; the materials are real; their texture is not modeled texture but just, you know, texture. The light is light."[8]

References

  1. Webb, Charles (October 12, 2012). "Cartoon Network Announces 'Adventure Time' Fifth Season, Return Of Neil Patrick Harris". MTV Geek. MTV. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
  2. B, Jonathan (April 20, 2014). "Adventure Time Panel Wondercon 2014". Retrieved April 20, 2014.
  3. Sava, Oliver (May 21, 2015). "Adventure Time: 'Water Park Prank'". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  4. TV Equals crew (2014). "Adventure Time (2014): Adam Muto & Kent Osborne Interview". YouTube.com. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  5. "Alumni Accomplishments: 04/29/2012". CalArts.edu. May 27, 2012. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Sava, Oliver (January 14, 2016). "Adventure Time's Kirsten Lepore on the Joys and Pains of Stop Motion Animation". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
  7. Lepore, Kirsten (October 28, 2014). "New project in the works... #WhatTimeIsIt?". Twitter. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Lloyd, Robert (January 14, 2016). "Kirsten Lepore Brings a Real Third Dimension to 'Adventure Time'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  9. Porter, Rick (January 15, 2016). "Thursday Cable Ratings: Republican Debate Numbers Fall, Plus ‘Lip Sync Battle,’ ‘WWE Smackdown’". TV by the Numbers. Zap2it. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  10. 1 2 Sava, Oliver (January 14, 2016). "Adventure Time’''s stop motion Episode Praises the Healing Power of Art and Nature". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
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