Pib and Pog (lost original college animation of stop-motion short; early 1990s): Difference between revisions

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==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Aardman's various ads (partially found stop-motion animated commercials; 1980s-2010s)]]
*[[Aardman Animations (found Cuprinol stop-motion TV ads from British animation studio; 1988-late 1990s)]]
*[[Aardman Animations (partially found stop-motion commercials from British animation studio; 1980s-2010s)]]
*[[A Grand Day Out (lost Peter Hawkins' "Gromit" dialogue from stop-motion animated film; 1989)]]
*[[A Grand Day Out (lost Peter Hawkins' "Gromit" dialogue from stop-motion animated film; 1989)]]
*[[Lurpak commercials (partially lost British adverts; 1990s)]]
*[[Lurpak (partially lost Aardman Animation commercials for Danish butter brand; 1990s)]]
*[[Sumitomo "Wallace & Gromit" (partially found Japanese commercial; 2000-2001)]]
*[[Shaun The Sheep (lost pilot of British stop-motion TV series; early to mid 2000s)]]
*[[Sumitomo Life (found "Wallace & Gromit" commercial for Japanese insurance company; 2000-2001)]]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 00:16, 3 October 2022

Pibandpog95still.png

Still from the 1995 short.

Status: Found

Date found: 9 Dec 2017

Found by: Aardboiled

Pib & Pog is a stop-motion animated short from Aardman released in 1995. It parodies a simple toddler-targeted TV show, starting out quiet and friendly but growing increasingly violent and dark in its humor. It went on to receive five mini-episodes in 2006 as well as a successful ad campaign for Dairylea Dunkers.[1]

Much like The Powerpuff Girls, Johnny Bravo and The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy, the series began as a college project. Peter Peake (the short's writer and director) originally approached Aardman with the idea of the film, using a crude version he made in college as a model. He would later refine the ideas, characters, and animation for the short released in 1995.

The email.

Availability

This original college-era version of the short has not been released and has not surfaced online. Peter Peake was contacted by email as to if a copy of it still exists, and he responded with stating one probably only exists on an old U-matic tape in his loft.

Gallery

Footage

The full 1995 short.

See Also

References

External Links