With museum exhibit, Laika seeks to boost Portland profile
PORTLAND, Ore. — None of Laika’s films takes place in Portland, but the animation studio says the city is in every scene you see on screen.
Portland’s quirky, do-it-yourself vibe informs Laika’s style of handcrafted animation, its filmmakers say, and inspires the offbeat stories the studio tells.
“There’s a corps of brilliant artistry here, and we were able to set up a studio here and find a lot of local talent as well as the international talent that were brought in,” said Georgina Hayns, who left England to work on Laika’s first film, “Coraline,” 11 years ago. She stayed, supervising the puppets in every Laika film since, because the city had a sensibility that encouraged creativity and artistry.
“Portland was the place that Laika could grow in, it was made for it,” she told an audience last summer.