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Asim
Fida Khan is a rare find: a Pakistani success story in Hollywood.
He may not be a big-screen leading man, but he may be on his way
to becoming one of its leading animators.
In
just five short years, Khan hopped continents, earned his Master's
in Computer Animation and bagged gigs on two major Hollywood productions:
last year's effects-loaded thrill-ride, Stealth, and Will Smith's
2003 summer blockbuster, I, Robot. And now he has made the move
to animated features, landing a job with Omation Studios, which
has partnered up with Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies
to produce the upcoming film Barnyard.
"With
two live action films under my belt, I was interested in working
on an animated feature," says Khan. "I wasn't aware of
Omation Studios at that time," he continues, but he had heard
about Steve Oedekerk's newest talking-animal flick. He did a little
legwork, discovered an open spot on the production team and, as
he says, "the rest is history."
Not
bad for a boy from Lahore who initially had less glitzy dreams of
being an architect. In fact, it was while pursuing his BA in Architecture
at the National College of Arts, where he was "creating a 3D
building walkthrough" for one of his school projects, that
computer animation first gripped his imagination. And then Hollywood's
golden glow sealed his fate. After the animation gurus, Pixar Studios,
produced several box-office hits, says Khan, "I became convinced
to take this up as a career." So just like an artist at his
drafting table, he took out a fresh sheet of paper and started sketching
out new plans for the future.
The
transition from storyboard to real life seems picture perfect. Now,
his early success has him hoping that other Pakistanis get into
the animation game too.
"The percentage of [Pakistani] people involved with
this profession is very limited." Unfortunately, Pakistan has
a dearth of high-quality educational institutions dedicated to this
field of art. As such, Khan offers the following advice to kids
trying to teach themselves through books and the Internet: Stay
motivated and inspired by watching good movies with great animation
and special effects. "3D production can be tedious, laborious
and very slow," says Khan. "One can burnout easily."
But
Khan is showing no signs of burning out just yet. He wants to get
involved in the character-development side and maybe shift back
home one day. "I am really looking forward to setting up my
own projects back in Pakistan. I can't say exactly when that would
be, but it certainly is on my list."
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