Anabel (Brazilian TV series) explained

Genre:Animated series, comedy, fantasy, thriller
Creator:Lancast Mota
Director:Lancast Mota
Denise Ehlers
Voices:Adriana Gimenez
Adriane Azevedo
Carlos Badia
Gabriela Paparelli
Opentheme:Sou a Anabel (Season 2)
Endtheme:Instrumental
Composer:Carlos Badia
Country:Brazil
Language:Portuguese
Num Seasons:2
Num Episodes:26
Executive Producer:Sérgio Martinelli
Runtime:7 minutes (Season 1)
10 minutes (Season 2)
Company:Martinelli Films
Estúdio Gato Amarelo
Channel:Nickelodeon Brazil (Season 1)
TV Rá-Tim-Bum (Season 2)

Anabel is a Brazilian animated television series created by Lancast Mota and produced by Sergio Martinelli. It was the first Brazilian animated series on Nickelodeon Brazil, starting with a series of animated shorts that aired during commercial breaks in 2004, until the full series debuted on February 26, 2005 on the TV show Patrulha Nick.[1] From the following year onwards the show was moved to TV Rá-Tim-Bum,[2] where the second season premiered on February 5, 2011.[3] The show also aired on TVE and its successor TV Brasil.

A comic strip adaptation also ran in the children's magazine Recreio between 2008 and 2011.

Premise

Set in the 1930s, the show revolves on a girl named Anabel, who lives with her unnamed parents in the city of Porto Alegre. She goes to school by riding the city's tramcars. Anabel also travels to fantastical and supernatural adventures from literary novels, encountering monsters and creatures. She also solves mysteries and stops dangers in the city.

In the second season the show went through big changes, moving the character into modern times and focusing more on slice-of-life stories and less on monsters and supernatural adventures, as well as introducing the character Ulisses as Anabel's best friend.

Characters

Production

Lancast Mota devised and developed the concept of Anabel in the 1990s. He picked the 1930s as the time setting of the series due to its distinctive popular culture field placed apart from electronic-driven media of the present day, which includes television and video games. Mota and his team wanted the show to take advantage of creative elements not widely utilized in other animated works, including but not limited to strong literary themes and a lack of violence. Mota also avoided cliches seen in such other animated works, such as a "villain who wants to take over the world."[6] The team made the protagonist motivated by non-visual media such as books and radio, which was prevalent in the 1930s.

The show was financed by the Rouanet Law and TV Cultura in 2000.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Anabel será o primeiro desenho animado brasileiro . Portuguese . terra.com.br . . 2005-01-17 . 2014-08-14 .
  2. News: Canal infantil TV Rá Tim Bum estréia na Net nesta sexta . Portuguese . 26 April 2017. Folha de S. Paulo. 29 August 2006.
  3. News: Animação "Anabel" ganha episódios inéditos na TV Rá Tim Bum . Portuguese . . Folha da Manhã . 2011-02-03 . 2014-08-19 .
  4. News: Castro . Natalia . TV Rá Tim Bum estreia segunda temporada da animação 'Anabel' . Portuguese . TV Rá Tim Bum premieres second season of 'Anabel'. . . GDA . 2011-01-30 . 2014-08-13 . Apesar da pouca idade, adora ouvir radionovelas e a literatura está entre suas atividades favoritas. Principalmente, os livros do escritor americano Edgar Allan Poe..
  5. News: Canônico . Marco . A brasileira "Anabel" remete a Poe e aos anos 30 . Portuguese. . Folha da Manhã . 2005-02-26 . 2014-08-14 . subscription .
  6. News: Estréia Anabel, primeira animação brasileira do canal Nickelodeon . Portuguese . Midiativa . 2005-02-25 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080618192054/http://www.midiativa.tv/index.php/educadores/content/view/full/1656 . 2008-06-18 . 2014-08-14 .