![]() ![]() We’re always afraid of that unknown, aren’t we? That kid with dark blue spots when all the other kids have light blue spots. ‘Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken’ composer Stephanie Economou at Abbey Road Studios ( DreamWorks Animation) “I think with anyone with any insecurity about something, that feels, for her, literally monstrous,” Clooney adds. “That secret becomes too big to hide anymore.”Ĭooney describes her as “a really normal teenager” who then finds out she’s a kraken, this monster creature from the deep. “She’s quirky and lovable and empathetic - empathy is her superpower– she has a wonderful group of friends, but she has a secret that she’s hiding from the world,” ,” says Kelly Cooney, the film’s producer. Ruby’s an ordinary girl living under extraordinary circumstances. Ruby Gillman, Teenage Kraken debuts at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival on Thursday, June 15, and will be theatrically released worldwide on June 30. You know, the kind of place where pupils take a boat to school. That’s how we’re first introduced to her she’s a 16-year-old high school student living in the seafaring town of Oceanside. They’ve had the most awful reputation to deal with these past few centuries all those arms and legs flailing about in the ocean depths.īut having spent awhile getting to know her during a scoring session at the fabled Abbey Road Studios in London (yeah, yeah, yeah, the Beatles recorded there), Ruby Gillman seems like such a nice young girl. Alfred Tennyson wrote a sonnet called “The Kraken” - “far beneath the abysmal sea,” it sleepeth - and the mythical sea creature has made terrifying guest appearances in Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest, the animated movie Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation and other deep-sea escapades made for the screen over the years. ![]()
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