Lifeboat Luke

Lifeboat Luke is an animated 52x5 min TV action adventure series set in the magical town of Donaghadoo.[1] Directed and designed by Alastair McIlwain, produced by Richard Morss and Darryl Collins (first 13 episodes), the series has aired in Ireland on RTÉ Two on DEN TOTS[2] and in over twenty territories worldwide.

The search and rescue series for 4-7 year olds[3] is fast, fun, full of visual jokes and eccentric characters with strong sea safety messages for children running through the episodes.

Lifeboat Luke is the first 52 part animation series to be originated and produced in Northern Ireland and has been financed through a combination of private investment and Northern Ireland Screen Lottery Production Fund [1] including the Irish Film Board, the Broadcast Commission Ireland Sound & Vision,[4] Northern Ireland Screen Commission, Banjax Studios (first 13 episodes), and RTÉ.[5] The series was a co-production with Kavaleer in Dublin.[4]

Luke the Lifeboat Ltd, producers of the series, are working in an exclusive partnership with the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.

The first 13 episodes were produced at Banjax Studios based in Belfast with LTL Production, based in Holywood, Northern Ireland, producing the remaining 39 episodes and delivering the entire 52 episode series. The licensing and commercialisation of the property is now being carried out by Straandlooper Animation.

References

  1. 1 2 Luke out Homer! There's a new cartoon king coming to town, by Victoria O'Hara, Belfast Telegraph, 15 March 2007
  2. Lifeboat Luke - Weekdays on RTE 2, Northern Ireland Screen, 28 August 2008
  3. Monster Sails Away with Lifeboat Luke, by Ramin Zahed, Animation Magazine, 11 June 2007
  4. 1 2 RTE Sails With Lifeboat Luke, by Ryan Ball, Animation Magazine, 6 Oct 2006.
  5. ‘Lifeboat Luke’ Drops Anchor at RNLI, Irish Film and Television Network, 20 Feb 2008
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 2/24/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.