Nitrogen Studios

Nitrogen Studios Canada, Inc.
Industry Animation
Founded October 2003 (2003-10)
Founder Greg Tiernan
Nicole Stinn
Headquarters Vancouver, Canada
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Nicole Stinn (President and CEO)
Greg Tiernan (CCO)
Owner Greg Tiernan
Nicole Stinn
Number of employees
51 - 200
Parent Cinesite
Website www.nitrogenstudios.com

Nitrogen Studios Canada, Inc. (commonly referred to as Nitrogen Studios) is a Canadian animation company founded by husband and wife duo Greg Tiernan and Nicole Stinn.

On March 7, 2017, it was acquired by British visual effects and feature animation studio Cinesite Studios.[1]

Filmography

Feature Films

Theatrical

Year Title Co-production Notes
2007 Happily N'Ever After
(uncredited)
Vanguard Animation
Odyssey Entertainment
Lionsgate
2016 Sausage Party Point Grey
Annapurna Pictures
Columbia Pictures
[2]
2018 Arkie Passion Pictures [3]

Direct-to-Video

Year Title Co-production
2009 Hero of the Rails Hit Entertainment
2010 Misty Island Rescue
2011 Day of the Diesels
2012 Blue Mountain Mystery

Television

Premiere Date End Date Title Channel Note
January 9th 2008 December 25th, 2012 Thomas and Friends PBS Kids
Channel 5
100 episodes: CGI series; co-produced with Hit Entertainment
February 26th, 2011 June 23rd, 2012 Dan Vs. Hub Network 27 episodes: lip sync; co-produced with Film Roman, The Hatchery, and Starz Media
December 23rd, 2016 present Trollhunters Netflix 2 episodes: co-produced with DreamWorks Animation and Double Dare You

Other projects

Year Title Medium
2005 God of War (uncredited) Video game with SCE Santa Monica Studio, Sony Computer Entertainment, and JP: Capcom
2010 Kodee’s Canoe Interactive app series

Controversy

Several days after the release of Sausage Party, allegations of poor treatment of Nitrogen Studios employees surfaced in the comments section of an interview with Tiernan and co-director Conrad Vernon, featured on the website Cartoon Brew.[4] Various anonymous posters, purporting to be animators who worked on the film in question, made claims including that Nitrogen forced them to work overtime for free and that some employees were threatened with termination. One poster stated that Tiernan had developed a reputation for "disturbing behaviour and abusive management style".[5] Publications such as the Washington Post[6] the Los Angeles Times[7] and /Film[8] have picked up the story.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.