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Arts

Kam Williams
Arts
“Rise of the Guardians” is Peter Ramsey’s first feature film.

“Rise of the Guardians” is Peter Ramsey’s first feature film after directing the hit DreamWorks Animation Halloween special “Monsters vs. Aliens: Mutant Pumpkins from Outer Space.”

This project followed the feature film, “Monsters vs. Aliens” on which Ramsey served as Head of Story. While at DreamWorks Animation, Ramsey also served as a story artist on “Shrek the Third,” and as a storyboard artist on “Shark Tale.”

Before joining DreamWorks Animation in 2004, Ramsey’s talent as a storyboard artist was on display while working on a number of live action feature films, including “Adaptation,” “Minority Report,” “A.I. Artificial Intelligence,” “Cast Away,” “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” “Fight Club,” “Men in Black,” “Independence Day” and “Batman Forever.”

Ramsey’s directing skills were also honed early, as he served as Second Unit Director on live action feature films including “Godzilla,” “Tank Girl,” “Higher Learning” and “Poetic Justice.”

A lifelong resident of Los Angeles, Calif., Ramsey grew up in Crenshaw, and graduated from Palisades High School before attending UCLA.

Let me start by asking you what it meant to make history as the first African American hired by a big studio to direct a full-length, animated feature?

I thought about it a little bit when I first got the job, but then rapidly got lost in the work. It wasn’t until later, when my mom and dad read that fact about me in the newspaper, and I saw how it affected them, that it came back to me. Since I talk to a lot of groups at schools, one good thing is that kids can look at me and have direct knowledge of someone who’s doing something they might be dreaming of doing themselves.

How did you get the gig? Judging from your bio, it seems like you’ve been a storyboard artist most of your career until now.

Right. I got into film as a storyboard artist, but my dream was always to be a director. The way I was able to get into the industry was through drawing. As a storyboard artist, you basically pre-visualize the whole film through drawing. So, I spent a lot of my career doing that with many different directors. That was really film school for me, my training ground, because I got to work with so many great people.

So, what was your academic background? Did you study art?

I’m pretty much self-taught. I took a couple of art classes in high school, and I entered college with the intention of majoring in art. But I was a little too young when I started at UCLA at 17, and I wasn’t ready for the concept of art that was being taught there. I was intimidated by Art History, and didn’t get it. All I was interested in was drawing. I wish I had been able to hang tough, but I dropped out after a couple years. Of course, I did learn a bunch of that stuff later on.

Is the film faithful to the book series it’s based upon?

An interesting thing about the movie and the books is that they were both being developed at the same time. The books’ author, Bill Joyce, in his talks with the studio, said, “It would be really cool if I could do a series of books about the origins of these characters, how they came to be and their back stories while you guys were simultaneously developing a movie about the first time they all came together.” So, they’re all the same characters and they share the same mythology, but the movie and the books are pretty different.  

What message do you want children to take away from your movie?

The main message of the film is that you have the power to create magic through your imagination and to bring it into the world, whether that’s in the form of the Guardian characters who represent a lot of things we need, or whether it’s just anybody creating something. That is the best way to fight fear. That’s probably the central idea of the movie.

Why did you tweak these familiar characters, like giving Santa a Russian accent and making him look a little different from what we’ve come to expect?

The basic idea behind the books was to suggest that you grew up with a made-up version of all these characters, as if there’s a secret world alongside our world, and we’ve never known the whole truth about it. What you see in the movie and the books is the real truth about what these guys are. And it’s pretty cool, more like a Lord of the Rings kind of epic, fantasy world they all operate in as opposed to the cute, fluffy image you get from greeting cards. That was the central idea of the books. We thought that was pretty interesting and a really fresh way to get people to take another look at these characters.     

Are you ever afraid?

Of course! Are you kidding? [Laughs] But you have to realize that fear is something that lives in your mind, just like all the positive things that reside there. The key is to try to find a balance or a way for the positive to at least cancel out what the fear is telling you. Most of the time, fear is taking something that sounds very rational and blowing it out of proportion, and letting your mind run away with it.

Will your next film be live-action or animated?

I don’t know. So much depends on how this one is received and how well it does. I’d love to make another animated film, because I feel like I’m really just beginning to learn how to use all these tools. It’s a real experience working in a big studio system. It’s like learning how to command a battleship.