~|~  Mondo Magic Winx ~|~

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view post Posted: 5/10/2021, 17:34 Bambole e Giocattoli Winx 2021 - News Winx Club
* Ufficialmente aperto il sito ufficiale di Witty Toys.

Qui: www.witty-toys.com/

* Nuove bambole Winx:


* Bambole Winx Club.
La collezione comprende: Bloom, Flora, Stella and Tecna.



* Bambole Winx Club Bling The Wings:
La collezione comprende: Bloom, Flora, Stella e Aisha.




* Bambole Winx Club Magic Reveal:
La collezione comprende: Bloom, Flora, Stella e Musa.

view post Posted: 5/10/2021, 17:20 Winx e SL Lashes - News Winx Club
Collaborazione tra il marchio Winx e SL Lashes.

Dal sito ufficiale di SL Lashes:

The Sl Lashes x Winx collection is now live on www.sl-lashes.com!

Discover 6 different falsies inspired by your favorite fairies 🧚:
Bloom: A wispy and captivating look
Aisha: For the dreamers and the bold
Tecna: A gradual length and volume
Stella: Your go-to for a night out
Musa: Perfect for the no make-up look
Flora: Discreet but make it sexy

Available worldwide with the PR Box and the 2 eyeliners!




THE VIP PR BOX - 166€
SL LASHES invites you to join the prestigious school of magic, ALFEA. Usually reserved for press and celebs, here's an exclusive chance to get the entire collection in the exclusive SL Lashes x WINX VIP PR Box.
Available in very limited quantities while supplies last.



Video:



CHARMIX - 162€

WELCOME TO ALFEA! Why make a choice when you can have it all! With this limited edition boxed set you can treat yourself with 6 pairs of false eyelashes and 2 eyeliners. A great gift for yourself or for your loved ones.

This set contains: x1 TECNA Lashes, x1 STELLA Lashes, x1 FLORA Lashes, x1 AISHA Lashes, x1 BLOOM Lashes, x1 MUSA Lashes, x1 Black adhesive felt tip eyeliner and x1 Transparent adhesive felt tip eyeliner.


NATURALIX - 60€

Who has never wished to obtain a captivating look with a natural finish? Everyone will ask THE famous question when looking at you straight in the eyes: real or fake eyelashes? And that's definitely the effect you're looking for with the TECNA and MUSA falsies. Discreet, they will bring volume and the necessary length as well as they will blend out perfectly with your natural lashes.

This set contains: x1 TECNA Lashes, x1 MUSA Lashes and x1 Black adhesive eyeliner or x1 Transparent adhesive eyeliner.



DAY & NIGHT - 60€

First ray of light... Your day begins. 6 PM, your new crush waits for you to get a drink. Eight o'clock, your BFFs take over for an after "debriefing" party. To keep up with this busy schedule, you'll definitely need different pairs of false eyelashes! Fall for the DAY & NIGHT kit, which offers charming and discreet false lashes for the day (TECNA) and sexy falsies for the evening (STELLA).

This set contains: x1 TECNA Lashes, x1 STELLA Lashes and x1 Black adhesive eyeliner or x1 Transparent adhesive eyeliner.



ALFEA NIGHT - 60€

You are invited to THE party of the year and you don't want to go unnoticed? The ALFEA NIGHT set will save your life! The AISHA and FLORA falsies are perfect for enlarging your eyes and giving them a chic, romantic, distinguished and explosive effect at the same time.

This set contains: x1 AISHA Lashes, x1 FLORA Lashes and x1 Black adhesive eyeliner or x1 Transparent adhesive eyeliner.



DRAMATIX - 60€
As a good drama queen, the false lashes of the DRAMATIX kit are sophisticated and voluminous. Perfect to speak your truth, wear them if you want to make an impression! BLOOM and STELLA will offer you an intense and audacious look, one thing is for sure, you won't go unnoticed.

This set contains: x1 BLOOM Lashes, x1 STELLA Lashes and x1 Black adhesive eyeliner or x1 Transparent adhesive eyeliner.



STELLA - 22€
The STELLA lashes have an even length on the whole band. They open the eye and enlarge the look. Sophisticated and elegant, they will be perfect for your wild nights or your little parties. They'll look great with a dramatic eyeliner.
With an ultra-thin adhesive strip, they're lightweight and will stay on your lids until you decide to remove them. They are waterproof, windproof and can be reused up to 40 times. Made of premium synthetic fibers, these high-quality falsies are lightweight and will give you the length and volume that you've always been looking for.




BLOOM - 22€
BLOOM false lashes are the perfect combination of volume and intensity. Ultra-light and rounded, they will match your eyes for a result as glamorous as natural. The harmonious length of the lashes allows to enlarge the eye and to offer depth to your glance.
With an ultra-thin adhesive strip, they're lightweight and will stay on your lids until you decide to remove them. They are waterproof, windproof and can be reused up to 40 times. Made of premium synthetic fibers, these high-quality falsies are lightweight and will give you the length and volume that you've always been looking for.




FLORA - 22€
Looking for a natural look? The FLORA falsies are made for you. They will match your natural lashes but add volume and length. Think of them as... a little help to bring intensity to your eyes.
With an ultra-thin adhesive strip, they're lightweight and will stay on your lids until you decide to remove them. They are waterproof, windproof and can be reused up to 40 times. Made of premium synthetic fibers, these high-quality falsies are lightweight and will give you the length and volume that you've always been looking for.




AISHA - 22€
AISHA false lashes are an intense, length-changing design that provide the perfect touch of density for a lifted look. For a romantic evening or dinner, they are a fuller version of your natural lashes.
With an ultra-thin adhesive strip, they're lightweight and will stay on your lids until you decide to remove them. They are waterproof, windproof and can be reused up to 40 times. Made of premium synthetic fibers, these high-quality falsies are lightweight and will give




MUSA - 22€
With an ultra-thin adhesive strip, they're lightweight and will stay on your lids until you decide to remove them. They are waterproof, windproof and can be reused up to 40 times. Made of premium synthetic fibers, these high-quality falsies are lightweight and will give you the length and volume that you've always been looking for.




TECNA - 22€
With an ultra-thin adhesive strip, they're lightweight and will stay on your lids until you decide to remove them. They are waterproof, windproof and can be reused up to 40 times. Made of premium synthetic fibers, these high-quality falsies are lightweight and will give you the length and volume that you've always been looking for.




ADHESIVE EYELINER BLACK OR CLEAR - 17€
The new adhesive eyeliner SL Lashes x WINX is a revolution. Thanks to its adhesive properties, it fixes the false lashes on the eyelids without glue or magnets. Easy to apply, it is equipped with an ultra-fine and flexible point which accompanies your gesture and simplifies drawing the line. It is waterproof and smudge proof. Its unique formula allows for a pleasant application that lasts all day (or evening for the party people). The clear is ideal to put your lashes on without getting an eyeliner too.

view post Posted: 5/10/2021, 17:03 Winx e il brand di abbigliamento Dolls Kill - News Winx Club
Da Dollskill:

Vieni a far parte del Club dal 15 settembre!

Le Winx collaborano con il famoso sito di abbigliamento e accessori Dolls Kill! Iscriviti al sito per vincere tutta la collezione!


Qui la pagina del sito ufficiale: Click


Foto:




Video:
view post Posted: 5/10/2021, 16:52 Winx Club - Season 9 - News Winx Club
Novità:

* Il logo "Winx Club Shorts" apparso di recente sul web è un logo rielaborato dello spettacolo cancellato "Light Party".

* "Winx Club Shorts" è il titolo provvisorio della stagione 9.

Il logo finale è stato mostrato su un recente poster delle Winx.


Foto:

view post Posted: 20/7/2021, 17:10 Fate: The Winx Saga - Season 2 - Fate: The Winx Saga
Dalla pagina twitter di Netflix:

Netflix Italia
@NetflixIT

Questo è un segreto che non possiamo più nascondere: è iniziata la produzione della stagione 2 di FATE: THE WINX SAGA


Video qui:

Click

Video:

view post Posted: 20/7/2021, 16:29 Fate: The Winx Saga - Season 2 - Fate: The Winx Saga
Novità:

* Paulina Chavez sarà Flora.

* Si aggiungono: Éanna Hardwicke nel ruolo di Sebastian e l'attore asiatico-inglese Brandon Grace nel ruolo di Grey (il ragazzo transgender che farà innamorare Aisha).

Da TvLine:

Fate: The Winx Saga Casts Flora and More Characters for Season 2

By Andy Swift / July 20 2021, 7:00 AM PDT

We’ve got some fairy exciting news, Winx Nation: Flora is finally coming to Alfea.

The beloved character from the animated Winx Club series will make her debut in Season 2 of Netflix’s Fate: The Winx Saga, played by Paulina Chavez (The Expanding Universe of Ashley Garcia), TVLine has learned.
Winx Fairies: Live-Action vs. Animated
Fate Netflix Winx Club Changes
Launch Gallery

Additionally, Season 2 will welcome Éanna Hardwicke (Normal People) as a character named Sebastian and newcomer Brandon Grace as Grey.

They join returning cast members Abigail Cowen as Bloom, Hannah van der Westhuysen as Stella, Precious Mustapha as Aisha, Eliot Salt as Terra, Elisha Applebaum as Musa, Sadie Soverall as Beatrix, Freddie Thorp as Riven, Danny Griffin as Sky, Theo Graham as Dane, Jacob Dudman as Sam, Ken Duken as Andreas and Rob James Collier as Silva.

Fate: The Winx Saga, which dropped its six-episode first season in January, “follows the coming-of-age journey of five fairies attending Alfea, a magical boarding school in the Otherworld where they must learn to master their powers while navigating love, rivalries, and the monsters that threaten their very existence,” per the official synopsis. It’s the first live-action adaptation of Iginio Straffi’s animated world.

Brian Young will once again serve as showrunner, executive-producing alongside Judy Counihan, Kris Thykier, Joanne Lee and Cristiana Buzzelli.

Production on Fate: The Winx Saga Season 2 is currently underway in County Wicklow, Ireland. A premiere date remains TBD.

Your thoughts on Flora’s long-awaited arrival?


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Articolo tradotto in italiano da Leganerd:


Fate: The Winx Saga 2 – Paulina Chavez sarà Flora nella serie Netflix

Per Fate: The Winx Saga 2 è stata scelta l'attrice che vestirà i panni di Flora: stiamo parlando di Paulina Chavez.

di Davide Mirabello

20—Lug—2021 / 5:03 PM


In Fate: The Winx Saga 2 farà il suo esordio un personaggio molto atteso: stiamo parlando di Flora, che sarà interpretata da Paulina Chavez. L’attrice ha già lavorato nella produzione intitolata The Expanding Universe of Ashley Garcia.

Oltre a Paulina Chavez che interpreterà Flora, in Fate: The Winx Saga 2 ci saranno anche Éanna Hardwicke ( già comparso in Normal People) che interpreterà un personaggio chiamato Sebastian, e Brandon Grace che farà Grey.

Il personaggio di Flora è molto amato dagli appassionati delle Winx: si tratta della Fata della Natura e Fata Guardiana di Lynphea, che è il suo pianeta di provenienza. Flora è figlia di Rodols e di Alyssa, due studiosi di botanica.

Gli altri membri del cast già presenti dalla prima stagione sono: Abigail Cowen che fa Bloom, Hannah van der Westhuysen che veste i panni di Stella, Precious Mustapha è l’interprete di Aisha, Eliot Salt come Terra, Elisha Applebaum è Musa, Sadie Soverall fa Beatrix, Freddie Thorp veste i panni di Riven, Danny Griffin è Sky, Theo Graham fa Dane, Jacob Dudman sarà ancora Sam, Ken Duken fa Andreas e Rob James Collier sarà Silva.

Fate: The Winx Saga è stato rinnovato da Netflix per una seconda stagione. Lo show vede protagoniste cinque fate che frequentano Alfea, il collegio di magia di Oltre Mondo. Le fate dovranno imparare a gestire i propri poteri magici mentre affrontano l’amore, le rivalità e mostri che minacciano la loro esistenza.


Foto:

Paulina Chavezz (Flora):




Éanna Hardwicke (Sebastian):





Brandon Grace (Grey):



Foto del cast:
view post Posted: 15/6/2021, 17:57 Mia and me: The Hero of Centopia - Mia and me
Da Animation Magazine:

Studio 100’s ‘Mia and Me: The Hero of Centopia’ Readies for Cannes with Raft of Sales


ByMercedes Milligan

Published on June 2, 2021

Studio 100 Film will be presenting The Hero of Centopia at this year’s Marché du Film. The movie, based on the internationally popular and highly successful brand and hybrid CGI/live-action TV series Mia and me, is currently in production and will be available at the end of 2021. A co-production between Studio 100 Media GmbH, Studio B Animation Pty Ltd. and Broadvision Services Private Ltd., Constantin Film Verleih will release the movie in Germany in 2022 following its distribution agreement with Studio 100 Media.

International sales are rapidly progressing with countries such as Spain, Poland, Bulgaria, Israel, Taiwan and Vietnam on board. Studio 100 Film looks forward to closing more deals at the virtual Marché du Film in Cannes this July.

The company has also unveiled new, official key art for the movie, featuring Mia as the heroine and introducing Iko, her partner throughout the story, as well as several new friends and a strong opponent. As an ancient prophecy entwines around the magical gem in Mia’s bracelet, she embarks on an adventurous journey to the most remote islands of Centopia. There, Mia not only faces a powerful enemy but also takes her destiny into her own hands. Together with Iko, she is ready to face any challenge that comes her way.

In the Mia and me series, Mia’s tale began when her parents mysteriously disappeared after a terrible accident, presumed dead. Mia was sent to a boarding school close to Florence, Italy. One day she discovered an amazing secret: From her parents, Mia inherited an ancient book and a magical bracelet that allows her to enter the enchanting world of Centopia. In Centopia, Mia is an elf and the only one who can understand and talk to unicorns living there. In the fairytale realm, she finds friends among the fantastical creatures. Always at her side are her best friends, the elves Yuko and Mo, the unicorn Onchao and the pan Phuddle.

The imminent new movie recounts Mia’s first theatrical adventure: She must stand up against Toxor, a monstrous evil toad. Toxor threatens Centopia and seeks to make it his personal poisonous pit. On top of that, he holds the key to her parent’s mysterious disappearance…

To date, three seasons of the series recount Mia’s adventures in the real world and in the fantastic world of Centopia with her elf and unicorn friends. A fourth season is currently in production and set for delivery in 2022. The series has so far sold to more than 170 countries.

Executive producers for The Hero of Centopia are Martin Krieger, Thorsten Wegener, Barbara Stephen and Sriram Chandrasekaran. Studio 100 Film acts as the international sales agent.


Locandina:



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Da ImperoLand:

Mia and me, in arrivo il film animato e la quarta stagione
written by Irene Rosignoli 3 Giugno 2021

Continua la saga di Mia and me, la serie animata co-prodotta anche dalle italiane Rainbow e Rai Fiction. Studio 100 Film ha infatti presentato il primo poster di Mia and me: The Hero of Centopia, il lungometraggio animato attualmente in produzione e in uscita a fine 2021.

La pellicola è co-prodotta da Studio 100 Media GmbH, Studio B Animation Pty Ltd. e Broadvision Services Private Ltd. e per il momento si parla di un’uscita in Germania, Spagna, Polonia, Bulgaria, Israele, Taiwan e Vietnam. Lo studio presenterà ufficialmente il film a Cannes, dove spera di concludere altri accordi per la distribuzione internazionale.

La serie originale, che ha debuttato nel 2011, vede Rosabell Laurenti Sellers (Game of Thrones) nei panni di Mia, una ragazzina che dopo la morte dei genitori trova un vecchio libro sugli unicorni e un braccialetto. Mia scopre che quest’ultimo le permette di trasformarsi in un elfo e di accedere al mondo parallelo di Centopia, dove può parlare con gli unicorni. A partire dalla terza stagione, Margot Nuccetelli sostituisce Laurenti Sellers nel ruolo della protagonista.

Nel film Mia and me: The Hero of Centopia, ritroveremo la protagonista nella sua prima avventura cinematografica. Mia scoprirà che sulla pietra del suo braccialetto è impressa un’antica profezia che la porterà in viaggio verso le isole più remote di Centopia. Insieme a lei ci sarà un nuovo personaggio di nome Iko, che la aiuterà nella sua battaglia contro Toxor, un rospo mostruoso che vuole rendere Centopia una palude tossica. Mia dovrà di nuovo prendere il destino di Centopia nelle sue mani, e nel farlo scoprirà il segreto della scomparsa dei suoi genitori.

La fonte conferma anche la lavorazione di una quarta stagione di Mia and me, che dovrebbe arrivare in Tv nel 2022.
view post Posted: 15/6/2021, 17:48 Fate: The Winx Saga - Season 2 - Fate: The Winx Saga
Novità:

* Gli attori sono partiti tutti per Dublino, alcuni sono già arrivati, gli altri stanno per arrivare, altri sono già a Dublino da qualche giorno.

* Le riprese iniziano a luglio.

* In questi giorni inizia la preproduzione con lettura della sceneggiatura, prove costumi, look ecc.
view post Posted: 15/6/2021, 17:44 Intervista a Iginio Straffi sulla Rainbow in Spagna e i progetti a breve, medio e lungo termine - Nuovi progetti Rainbow S.p.A
Da Interempresas:

“Las licencias clásicas y ya establecidas funcionaron mucho mejor este último año”
Entrevista a Iginio Straffi, fundador y CEO de Rainbow Group
Oriol Cortés - LICENCIAS Actualidad26/05/2021

De la mano del fundador y CEO de Rainbow Group, conocemos de primera mano la trayectoria de la compañía, y analizamos cómo se están adaptando a los nuevos hábitos de hoy en día. Asimismo, Iginio Straffi nos habla también de sus estrategias para el mercado español y comparte con nosotros su visión respecto la situación del sector de las licencias y las principales tendencias que detectan desde Rainbow Group.

Los inicios de Rainbow Group se remontan a la infancia de Iginio Straffi: “empecé a imaginar, escribir y dibujar mis primeros personajes y cómics cuando todavía iba a la escuela primaria, y mi deseo de crear historias de entretenimiento para el público fue creciendo año tras año, a medida que fui estudiando y empecé mi carrera profesional en el sector tanto en Italia como en el extranjero”, explica el fundador y CEO de Rainbow Group. Ahora, tras más de 25 años en el sector, Iginio Straffi recuerda que “establecer la compañía Rainbow era el resultado natural del duro trabajo que me llevó a cumplir mis sueños. Decidí hacerlo en mi región nativa, en Le Marche (Italia), donde quería crear un espacio rodeado de naturaleza y alejado del caos, para que la imaginación corriera libremente”. Así es como nació Rainbow.

¿Cómo ha evolucionado la compañía a lo largo de los años?

Llevamos 26 años trabajando incansablemente, creando y distribuyendo innumerables IPs. Siendo un pequeño estudio de animación al principio, nos hemos convertido en un grupo con más de 1.000 trabajadores alrededor del mundo y en una compañía de contenidos global que produce contenidos de animación y acción en vivo para toda la familia y para todas las plataformas, desde la televisión, hasta los canales digitales o el cine. Nuestro primer lanzamiento fue la producción de edutainment ‘Tommy & Oscar’, que nos permitió proyectarnos internacionalmente, y en 2004 lanzamos la saga ‘Winx Club’, con la que llegamos a 130 países y dimos vida a esta franquicia evergreen. 17 años después, estas hadas siguen sorprendiendo a las audiencias e incluso han tomado la forma de personas reales gracias a la serie producida por Netflix. Hemos crecido junto a muchas otras propiedades gracias a colaboraciones, estableciendo el estudio Rainbow CGI en Roma, abriendo la Rainbow Academy para educar nuevos talentos y adquiriendo grandes compañías para ofrecer excelencia creativa. Nuestra primera adquisición fue la canadiense Bardel Entertainment Inc. en 2015, y en el año 2017 también adquirimos Iven Group. Contamos con un equipo lleno de ideas y actualmente trabajamos con más de 500 licencias en todo el mundo, con las que cubrimos casi todas las categorías de producto.

¿Cómo se está adaptando Rainbow Group a los nuevos hábitos de consumo de contenidos?

El consumo de medios y contenidos está cambiando rápidamente, y con ello también los retos que debe afrontar nuestra industria. Nuestro grupo tiene la capacidad de gestionar proyectos tanto con sinergias como de manera interna, lo que representa un plus que nos ha permitido siempre hacer frente a cualquier reto que se nos ha presentado. Ahora mismo estamos centrados en desarrollar nuevas IPs y nuevos contenidos en todas las plataformas, hemos incrementado y reforzado nuestras estrategias y recursos digitales, aprovechando su crecimiento debido a los parones en los colegios, y estamos apoyando las estrategias en comercio electrónico de nuestros socios y les estamos proporcionando más activos digitales que pueden utilizar. Invertir en el consumo a través de medios digitales es realmente importante para promover y sostener cualquier propiedad o nuevo producto. Los medios digitales han sido decisivos desde sus inicios, pero tras la pandemia se han convertido en un factor clave para tener éxito en el mercado. En verdad, cada periodo tiene sus propias tendencias, pero sin importar la tendencia, en Rainbow creemos en el valor del storytelling. Si la historia creada es buena, la IP derivada de ella será siempre bien recibida por la audiencia. Calidad y storytelling son factores clave para tener éxito, junto con el despliegue de una buena estrategia 360º basada en un fuerte apoyo de los medios digitales, para asegurarse que se llega a todos los puntos de contacto con el público potencial.

Están presentes en el mercado español, ¿cuál es su estrategia en este mercado?

Mantener una buena relación con las cadenas es esencial para construir estrategias duraderas, y estamos muy satisfechos con nuestros acuerdos en el mercado español. Nuestro programa ‘44 Gatos’ es uno de los principales programas preescolares de Clan TV, y ahora tenemos el placer de coproducir con ellos y junto a Motion Pictures (dirigida por la familia Enrique Uviedo) nuestra nueva serie preescolar ‘Summer & Todd: la granja feliz’. Se trata de unos buenos socios, que además son amigos, y creo que esto es clave para poder desarrollar una buena estrategia de licensing, que pusimos ya en marcha el año pasado con grandes socios como Simba y Panini, y que esperamos seguir ampliando este año, esperando que la pandemia acabe pronto.

¿Qué diferencia el mercado español del italiano? ¿Y del resto de mercados internacionales?

Los mercados español e italiano comparten una identidad cultural del sur de Europa similar, y habitualmente las franquicias que funcionan bien en España también funcionan bien en Italia, y viceversa. Este hecho se ha demostrado con el éxito de’44 Gatos’, que se ha convertido en uno de los programas más importantes tanto en Clan TV como en la italiana RAI. El retail también tiene una estructura similar en ambos países, con el mercado de gran consumo, grandes almacenes y una fuerte red de comercios independientes, algo que no existe en todos los mercados. Los consumidores, además, están reaccionando rápidamente a las nuevas tendencias, por lo que una marca se puede asentar más rápido, al contrario de lo que pasa en otros mercados europeos, donde las IPs necesitan más tiempo para establecerse.

¿Cómo valora la situación actual del mercado español de licencias?

El mercado está notando mucho los efectos de la pandemia, así que las marcas necesitan más tiempo para asentarse, conseguir un buen nivel de conocimiento y convertirlo después en ventas de productos de consumo. El digital juega un papel muy importante en este proceso, tal y como pasa en otros grandes mercados. También están creciendo las plataformas bajo demanda y el comercio electrónico.

¿Qué tendencias predominan en el mercado?

En general, debido a la pandemia, las licencias clásicas y ya establecidas funcionaron mucho mejor este último año, en comparación con las nuevas propiedades. Con el cierre temporal de los colegios se perdió el boca-oreja, algo que es clave en el éxito de las propiedades infantiles, y la reducción de las compras en tiendas físicas en favor del e-commerce hizo el resto.

¿Cuáles son los objetivos de Rainbow Group a corto, medio y largo plazo?

Actualmente estamos trabajando en reforzar nuestra posición como estudio de producción de contenidos en la industria de la animación y la acción real. A medio plazo, nuestro objetivo es desarrollar nuestras producciones infantiles y familiares, así como las dirigidas a los jóvenes adultos. Y más a largo plazo, mi visión del futuro pasa por la adquisición de otras compañías estratégicas que nos permitan construir un grupo de entretenimiento más fuerte y establecernos como un gran estudio de Europa.
view post Posted: 12/6/2021, 09:41 Fate: The Winx Saga - Season 2 - Fate: The Winx Saga
Novità:

**Bloom avrà nuovi poteri.

** Confermati i nuovi personaggi di Flora, Grey e Sebastian.

** Ecco la descrizione dei personaggi:

* Flora:
Un ruolo fisso nella serie. Una ragazza per un ruolo dai 18 ai 25 anni.
Ragazza spagnola/latina. (17-18 anni Flora nella serie) Una fata della natura, con un'energia molto amichevole e uno spirito libero, che la rende una delle preferite. Ma c'è un oscuro segreto dietro il suo bell'aspetto. Un trauma del passato la riporta ad Alfea, dove affronta un vecchio nemico. Con la conoscenza del potere della natura che è la fonte dei suoi poteri, può affrontare una delle più grandi minacce di questa stagione. Il suo ruolo include la nudità parziale.


* Gray:
Un uomo di 17-25 anni per il ruolo. Ruolo regolare nella serie. Uomo transgender. (personaggio di 17 anni)

Uno specialista con un segreto che studia al secondo anno. Sta per diventare la specialista migliore e più brillante di Alfea. Ottima figura. Intatto nello spirito. Molto carismatico. Pertanto, è abbastanza facile capire perché Aisha si sia innamorata di lui così rapidamente. Ma quando il cattivo principale della stagione emerge da SHADOWS, l'amore e la dedizione di Gray vengono messi alla prova. Inoltre, il suo ruolo include la nudità parziale.


*Sebastian:
Uno di quegli studenti che va d'accordo abbastanza facilmente con tutti, ma il più delle volte è un topo grigio, che di solito è sullo sfondo di tutte le fotografie. Ma non dovresti trarre conclusioni così rapidamente, perché, dietro le battute e l'ironia, si nascondono una mente meravigliosa e principi morali. Disposto a fare qualsiasi cosa per proteggere coloro che ama.


** Anche le altre Winx (Aisha, Musa, Terra e Stella) dovrebbero avere le ali.

** La seconda stagione pare sia stata allungata di ben 7 puntate (ma bisogna aspettare una conferma).


Da WhatsonNetflix:

‘Fate: The Winx Saga’ Season 2: Netflix Production Update & What We Know So Far
by Jacob Robinson @JRobinsonWoN on June 9, 2021, 11:25 am EST

Fate: The Winx Saga is returning for season 2 at Netflix. While opinions were divided on the first season, it clearly made enough of an impact to warrant future iterations. Here’s everything we know so far about Fate: A Winx Saga season 2.

Fate: The Winx Saga is a Netflix Original teen-fantasy drama series based on the extremely popular cartoon series Winx Club. Created by Brian Young, the directing duties were split between three directors, Lisa James Larsson, Hannah Quinn, and Stephen Woolfenden. The series is a collaboration between Archery Pictures, Rainbow S.p.A., and Young Blood Productions.

Many fans that would have grown up watching the cartoon series tuned in to watch the live-action adaptation.

Has Fate: The Winx Saga been renewed for a second season?
Official Netflix Renewal Status: Renewed (Last Updated: 18/02/2021)

Netflix has revealed through its Twitter accounts that Fate: The Winx Saga will be returning for a second season!

A season 2 announcement video was also dropped on YouTube to confirm the news further.

Since its release on Christmas Day, Bridgerton has been firmly sat in the TV top spot in multiple regions around the world, most notably in the US. The series to finally unseat the period drama was Fate: The Winx Saga on the 23rd of January. It must be noted that the Original’s reign at the top only lasted eight days, before being unseated by Bridgerton.

In June 2020 we reported that Fate: The Winx Saga had been renewed alongside Ozark and Warrior Nun.

What about the series controversy?
With a franchise as popular as the Winx Club, naturally, any live-action adaptation will come under some level of scrutiny.

Quality of the series aside, the largest controversy the show has faced was down to the casting decisions. In particular, the character of Musa, whose character design was inspired by Chinese-American actress Lucy Lui, was not given to an actress of Asian descent, and instead, Emily Applebaum was cast.

Fans had further issues with the character of Flora being dropped in favor of Eliot Salt’s character of Terra Harvey. Although Flora’s potential debut in the second season has been teased by Salt (and we can confirm this to be the case shortly).

Arguably these ‘controversies’ were nowhere near enough a reason to cancel the series.

New Characters for Fate: The Winx Saga season 2

We’re happy to confirm that there are at least three new characters being introduced in season 2 including:

Flora – Described as an Earth fairy like her cousin Terra, having an easy-going nature but hiding a dark secret. They are casting a Hispanic female for this role.
Sebastian – Featuring in season 2 of World of Winx, Sebastian will be making his way over to the Netflix series seemingly. Described as a student with a brilliant mind but with questionable morals.
Grey – We weren’t able to find a reference to Grey (correct us if we’re wrong) from the original animated series. This character is set to be a transgender male described as a specialist with a secret (everyone is hiding secrets in season 2!). Furthermore, he’s set to have a relationship with Aisha in season 2 which he obtains with his “charismatic charms”.

Where is Fate: The Winx Saga season 2 in Production?
Current production status: Pre-production (Last updated: 06/09/2021)

We’ve known that production was due to get underway this year however, we’ve been informed that the current schedule (which is always subject to change) is currently planned to take place between Mid-July 2021 and November 2021 with filming once again taking place in Dublin, Ireland.

We’re also told this season has been expanded to 7 episodes but we’re waiting for confirmation on this.

When could we expect to see Fate: The Winx Saga season 2 on Netflix?
It could take a significant amount of time before the series makes a return to Netflix. Filming for the series took place in September 2019, before ending after a few months on December 13th, 2019. It then took thirteen months before the series made its debut.

Given the production schedule outlined above, our best guess is that it’ll be out in mid-to-late 2022.

What to expect from the second season of Fate: The Winx Saga?
Bloom’s powers grow stronger
In her dramatic fight with the Burned Ones, Bloom was able to sprout her own wings, becoming the first fairy to do so in many years. The use of her wings allows Bloom to tap into even more powerful magic, in particular, old magic that not even the staff of Alfea College can tap into.

With her new powers unlocked, Bloom will only grow stronger. The source of Bloom’s power is the Dragon Flame, and if she can control it she may be able to remove the Burned Ones for good.

It may take some time for Bloom to learn how to control her powers, as the first time she activated her wings she soon collapsed from the exhaustion of using them.

Will more fairies sprout wings?
With Bloom the first to sprout wings, it can’t be long before we see the other fairies learn how to do the same. Other than being an extremely powerful fairy, we still don’t know why her wings activated, but if she can figure out the key to the ability, other fairies may be able to learn the ancient magic.

Rosalind takes over Alfea College
With the help of the Queen of Solaria, Rosalind killed Farah Dowling. With her return as headmistress, it’s clear she will use her authority to further push Bloom to unlock more of her powers. With a looming war hanging over Alfea, Rosalind is likely to use this opportunity to push the students to become even stronger, and possibly turn them into soldiers that will fight in the war to come.
view post Posted: 7/6/2021, 16:45 Nuovi progetti Winx Club: nuova serie, film per il cinema e spin-off sulle Trix - News Winx Club
Novità sui progetti futuri di Winx Club che ha in mente Iginio Straffi:

* Nuova serie destinata sia all'America sia all'Europa (a cartoni animati o live-action).

* Film live-action per il cinema.

* Spin-off sulle origini delle Trix e la loro rivalità contro le Fate.


Lo riferisce Iginio Straffi stesso da Polyglon:

Animation

No one believed in Winx Club, except for its creator

Iginio Straffi on putting up a fight for his magical girl show
By Petrana Radulovic@Pet_rana Jun 7, 2021, 9:20am EDT

Iginio Straffi, creator of the 2004 animated series Winx Club and founder of Italian studio Rainbow S.p.A, has a lot of opinions about the way cartoons were back in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

“There was really nothing for girls,” he tells Polygon. “And that was not fair. It was not nice.”

Back then, Straffi says, most Western animation was tailored toward boys, featuring male characters going on adventures. He wanted to create a cartoon starring girls, for girls. Most people didn’t believe in that vision.

“The market was not in favor, to be honest, at the time, because the buyers were telling me that many girls were now watching the live action for kids. Disney stuff like Lizzie McGuire and some other Nickelodeon sitcoms were popular,” he says. “I thought that was really not the case. I thought we needed to have heroes, not only in sitcoms, but with powers in a fantasy world that girls could identify with and want to be one of them. And so I really fought for this idea.”

Winx Club debuted in Italy, but it eventually found a stateside distributor in 4Kids, which regularly dealt with imported cartoons. The show follows a teenage girl named Bloom, who discovers she has fire powers and gets whisked away to a college for fairies in a magical realm. At Alfea College, she meets a host of other girls with various cool abilities, learns about the fantastical world, and uncovers the secrets of her past. Full of bright, jewel-toned visuals and fashionable outfits, Winx Club emphasizes friendship between its female characters as they navigate fearsome villains and magical happenings.

At the time, 4Kids broadcast series like Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh!, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, which meant a magical girl show like Winx Club stood out in the lineup. As it turns out, Straffi’s hunch was right: Girls loved Winx Club, and the show lasted far beyond its originally planned four seasons. It eventually started airing on Nickelodeon, with ViacomCBS purchasing Rainbow in 2011 and co-producing Winx Club. In 2012, a rebooted show, tailored toward a younger audience, premiered on Nick Jr. And in 2021, Fate: The Winx Saga, a live-action young-adult show designed for those who grew up with the series, premiered on Netflix. Though the Winx world has evolved in these two branching directions, the original show’s legacy remains. Winx Club shattered expectations by proving that girls watched action-oriented cartoons too.

Winx Club wasn’t the first girl-tailored cartoon out there, but there were so few long-lasting ones that getting it made was an uphill challenge. Shows like She-Ra: Princess of Power and The Powerpuff Girls were exceptions to the norm in a sea of cartoons featuring large casts of boys and only one or two girls. Nowadays, with shows like The Owl House, Star vs. the Forces of Evil, and Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts featuring dynamic female characters at their centers, it’s hard to imagine a world where characters like that were rare.

“You can think that this is something very common now because we have plenty of female heroes, and they are stronger than the boys and men,” Straffi says. “But believe me, 20 years ago, when we were pitching Winx for the first time … it was not so obvious to have female characters who were in control of their destiny, of their life, independent with their own personalities, and all the things that Winx Club is.”

From the get-go, Straffi wanted to make the show unique. He decided the show should center on fairies, because he wanted to reinvent them as more contemporary creatures: “Fairies don’t mean fairy godmother or a woman with a wand. It could be something very fresh, very dynamic.” The team at Rainbow worked tirelessly to get these fairies right, even completely scrapping the first nearly complete pilot when Straffi decided to change the look and story. “I threw it away because I wanted so much to do something original and different, and it was not good enough,” explains Straffi. Eventually, he decided to tap into one of the things Italy is best known for: fashion.

“We are not famous and established in entertainment,” he laughs. “I had to try to leverage on what [Italy is] good at.”

Even among other girl-tailored cartoons, Winx Club is notable for having characters who regularly change outfits. They wear fashionable, trendy clothes and change them depending on the episode and location. Straffi explains that the process of animating different outfits is incredibly costly, which is why most shows don’t bother. “You end up having [shows like] Scooby-Doo where the characters wear the same outfits throughout many, many episodes, and even sometimes in different weather conditions, just simply because it’s too expensive and too complicated to change,” he explains. “I wanted it to be another element of originality.”

“They are teenagers — in school, they’re dressed differently than when they are doing sports or when they are going out for a drink, or when they go to the beach, or for skiing, or any other situation. I thought that we could be very fashionable in the cartoon, and that’s why I hired real fashion designers to draw their wardrobe.”

The show’s visual aesthetic is certainly iconic, with fashion publications praising the series’ look. In fact, the Regional Council of Marche, Italy chose the Winx fairies to represent the region in the 2010 World Expo because of their distinctive visuals. But while the show’s bright, colorful, unapologetically feminine aesthetic makes it stand out, Straffi also points out that Winx Club did a pretty rare thing for Western cartoons at the time: It has a serialized story arc, full of plot twists and revelations, where the characters grew and the story has a concrete ending.

“This was an idea, which again, was not appreciated by the broadcasters, because they loved cartoons where you can switch the schedule,” he says. He points out that the long-arc concept was already solidly established in Japan, and he hoped it would bring something new and exciting to European and American audiences. “I wanted to experiment with something complicated, where the character has an evolution, has a kind of path — a coming-of-age story, where they find out who they are, their power, where they come from. I thought it was a strong element to get the viewers very hooked. They want to know what will happen next.”

A larger overarching plot wasn’t the only inspiration Straffi got from anime. In fact, without the success anime was having with female viewers, Winx Club wouldn’t even exist.

“Japanese animation is what made me think girls were watching cartoons,” he says, pointing to Sailor Moon as one of the examples. “To believe that girls were only watching live-action sitcoms, it didn’t make sense to me.” The idea of the characters transforming also came from anime, with the long tradition of the magical-girl genre.

Winx Club wasn’t the only long-story-arc European animated show starring five girls with magical transformation powers to debut in the United States in 2004. Disney’s W.I.T.C.H. shares many plot elements with Winx Club, and sits in the same headspace in the minds of those who grew up watching both. Though the show premiered the same year as Winx, the comic it was based on started running a little earlier. Disney Italy noticed similarities between the two properties, and ended up suing Rainbow.

“They tried to start a litigation with really no ground,” says Straffi. “That’s why they lost immediately, with a lot of compensation from the judge. We proved we had a contract from our producer from two to three years before the first [W.I.T.C.H.] comic appeared on the Italian kiosk. There was really no chance.”

The similarities between the shows are superficial. Both shows star redheaded protagonists, but so do Kim Possible and The Powerpuff Girls. Both have magical-girl transformations, but that idea has a long, storied history in anime. But unlike Winx Club, which is still airing in some capacity and readily available, W.I.T.C.H. stopped after a second season. In 2021, it isn’t available to stream anywhere, and physical copies of the DVDs go for more than $60. Straffi believes the show failed because Disney targeted a gender-neutral audience. “That is something I decided not to do from the beginning.”

Winx’s worldwide popularity continues to overwhelm Straffi, but he still believes he didn’t fully crack the United States market. The show is unexpectedly huge in Russia and Turkey, which amazes him, considering that Rainbow never marketed the show as strongly in those regions as it did in the rest of Europe. But even a partnership with Nickelodeon didn’t boost the show to the same levels in America.

“To be honest, until now, I am not happy with what we reached in the U.S.,” he says. “We’ve been successful and famous, but not as much as Europe, so there must be something we have not done, something we should’ve done better.”

He believes it has a lot to do with the way American networks broke up the serialized episodes to air week by week. “Maybe for a kid audience, they can’t really remember what happened for a week, and really appreciate the continued story,” he says. That’s why Straffi thinks Netflix and the age of binge-watching — “watching whenever you want, even one after another” — is beneficial to shows structured like the original Winx Club.

In recent years, Rainbow has worked closely with Netflix, which not only hosts the new rebooted World of Winx (which is designed for a younger audience than the original show), but also another animated show called 44 Cats. This close working partnership allowed Straffi to embark on one of his long-held dreams: a live-action Winx Club series intended for an older audience.

“Having witnessed this huge number of fans around the world for the Winx cartoon, across generations, after 10 years, I could see that there were new fans and old fans,” he explains. “And social media was showing us this kind of loyalty. I thought for the older fans, who were grown up, we should produce some live-action.”

He tossed the idea around with local Italian studios, without even considering American ones, but none of his proposals came to fruition. But Netflix posited the idea for a show tailored toward twentysomethings, which intrigued Straffi. After some deliberation, they put the show into production. Because it was filmed in Ireland, Rainbow was not as involved as Straffi would’ve liked. “I wish it was more,” he says. “Because these are our babies.”

They discussed casting and potential directors, but left a lot of the bigger decisions up to Netflix — with mixed results. Straffi had some doubts about Ireland, which he called “nice, but a bit too rainy,” but ultimately was very pleased with how Alfea College and the surrounding setting ended up looking in the show. But he did have one issue with the show.

“The costumes could be better,” he says. “They will be better in the second season.”

As for the show’s controversial casting — white actors played two characters whose animated designs had been based on Lucy Liu and Jennifer Lopez — Straffi says he can’t say much about it, but that he anticipated the fans’ negative reaction. Overall, though, he says seeing his creation come to life as a live-action drama was surreal. And he hopes the Netflix show is just the beginning.

He has big dreams for the future of Winx Club. He wants a theatrical movie. He wants to explore the origin of the Trix, the three witch sisters with a rivalry against the fairies. He wants the show to be as big in America as it is in Europe, whether it’s through the animated series or the live-action one.

All the conventional wisdom in the early 2000s was against Winx Club, but Straffi believed in the show — he believed in a cartoon for girls about girls, believed in bright and fashionable visuals, and he believed in a complex plot that didn’t pander to executives’ ideas of what kids wanted. He recounts a moment more than 20 years ago, when he was talking to some journalist friends about his then-current project, Tommy & Oscar, while he had just started writing early drafts of Winx Club.

“I was telling them ‘Okay, Tommy & Oscar is a nice cartoon, which is doing well in ratings, but believe me, the next one I am preparing, it will be 20 times more famous and popular,’” he laughs. “I felt very arrogant! But there is no dream without passion. I have been very overwhelmed by the success.”

Most episodes of the original Winx Club are available on the official Winx Club YouTube page. The animated spinoff show, World of Winx, is streaming on Netflix. The first season of the live-action series is also available on Netflix.
view post Posted: 7/6/2021, 16:37 Fate: The Winx Saga - Season 2 - Fate: The Winx Saga
Novità:

* In Fate: The Winx Saga 2 le Winx avranno dei vestiti più glamour simili alla controparte animata.

Lo riferisce Iginio Straffi stesso da Polyglon:


Animation

No one believed in Winx Club, except for its creator

Iginio Straffi on putting up a fight for his magical girl show
By Petrana Radulovic@Pet_rana Jun 7, 2021, 9:20am EDT

Iginio Straffi, creator of the 2004 animated series Winx Club and founder of Italian studio Rainbow S.p.A, has a lot of opinions about the way cartoons were back in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

“There was really nothing for girls,” he tells Polygon. “And that was not fair. It was not nice.”

Back then, Straffi says, most Western animation was tailored toward boys, featuring male characters going on adventures. He wanted to create a cartoon starring girls, for girls. Most people didn’t believe in that vision.

“The market was not in favor, to be honest, at the time, because the buyers were telling me that many girls were now watching the live action for kids. Disney stuff like Lizzie McGuire and some other Nickelodeon sitcoms were popular,” he says. “I thought that was really not the case. I thought we needed to have heroes, not only in sitcoms, but with powers in a fantasy world that girls could identify with and want to be one of them. And so I really fought for this idea.”

Winx Club debuted in Italy, but it eventually found a stateside distributor in 4Kids, which regularly dealt with imported cartoons. The show follows a teenage girl named Bloom, who discovers she has fire powers and gets whisked away to a college for fairies in a magical realm. At Alfea College, she meets a host of other girls with various cool abilities, learns about the fantastical world, and uncovers the secrets of her past. Full of bright, jewel-toned visuals and fashionable outfits, Winx Club emphasizes friendship between its female characters as they navigate fearsome villains and magical happenings.

At the time, 4Kids broadcast series like Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh!, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, which meant a magical girl show like Winx Club stood out in the lineup. As it turns out, Straffi’s hunch was right: Girls loved Winx Club, and the show lasted far beyond its originally planned four seasons. It eventually started airing on Nickelodeon, with ViacomCBS purchasing Rainbow in 2011 and co-producing Winx Club. In 2012, a rebooted show, tailored toward a younger audience, premiered on Nick Jr. And in 2021, Fate: The Winx Saga, a live-action young-adult show designed for those who grew up with the series, premiered on Netflix. Though the Winx world has evolved in these two branching directions, the original show’s legacy remains. Winx Club shattered expectations by proving that girls watched action-oriented cartoons too.

Winx Club wasn’t the first girl-tailored cartoon out there, but there were so few long-lasting ones that getting it made was an uphill challenge. Shows like She-Ra: Princess of Power and The Powerpuff Girls were exceptions to the norm in a sea of cartoons featuring large casts of boys and only one or two girls. Nowadays, with shows like The Owl House, Star vs. the Forces of Evil, and Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts featuring dynamic female characters at their centers, it’s hard to imagine a world where characters like that were rare.

“You can think that this is something very common now because we have plenty of female heroes, and they are stronger than the boys and men,” Straffi says. “But believe me, 20 years ago, when we were pitching Winx for the first time … it was not so obvious to have female characters who were in control of their destiny, of their life, independent with their own personalities, and all the things that Winx Club is.”

From the get-go, Straffi wanted to make the show unique. He decided the show should center on fairies, because he wanted to reinvent them as more contemporary creatures: “Fairies don’t mean fairy godmother or a woman with a wand. It could be something very fresh, very dynamic.” The team at Rainbow worked tirelessly to get these fairies right, even completely scrapping the first nearly complete pilot when Straffi decided to change the look and story. “I threw it away because I wanted so much to do something original and different, and it was not good enough,” explains Straffi. Eventually, he decided to tap into one of the things Italy is best known for: fashion.

“We are not famous and established in entertainment,” he laughs. “I had to try to leverage on what [Italy is] good at.”

Even among other girl-tailored cartoons, Winx Club is notable for having characters who regularly change outfits. They wear fashionable, trendy clothes and change them depending on the episode and location. Straffi explains that the process of animating different outfits is incredibly costly, which is why most shows don’t bother. “You end up having [shows like] Scooby-Doo where the characters wear the same outfits throughout many, many episodes, and even sometimes in different weather conditions, just simply because it’s too expensive and too complicated to change,” he explains. “I wanted it to be another element of originality.”

“They are teenagers — in school, they’re dressed differently than when they are doing sports or when they are going out for a drink, or when they go to the beach, or for skiing, or any other situation. I thought that we could be very fashionable in the cartoon, and that’s why I hired real fashion designers to draw their wardrobe.”

The show’s visual aesthetic is certainly iconic, with fashion publications praising the series’ look. In fact, the Regional Council of Marche, Italy chose the Winx fairies to represent the region in the 2010 World Expo because of their distinctive visuals. But while the show’s bright, colorful, unapologetically feminine aesthetic makes it stand out, Straffi also points out that Winx Club did a pretty rare thing for Western cartoons at the time: It has a serialized story arc, full of plot twists and revelations, where the characters grew and the story has a concrete ending.

“This was an idea, which again, was not appreciated by the broadcasters, because they loved cartoons where you can switch the schedule,” he says. He points out that the long-arc concept was already solidly established in Japan, and he hoped it would bring something new and exciting to European and American audiences. “I wanted to experiment with something complicated, where the character has an evolution, has a kind of path — a coming-of-age story, where they find out who they are, their power, where they come from. I thought it was a strong element to get the viewers very hooked. They want to know what will happen next.”

A larger overarching plot wasn’t the only inspiration Straffi got from anime. In fact, without the success anime was having with female viewers, Winx Club wouldn’t even exist.

“Japanese animation is what made me think girls were watching cartoons,” he says, pointing to Sailor Moon as one of the examples. “To believe that girls were only watching live-action sitcoms, it didn’t make sense to me.” The idea of the characters transforming also came from anime, with the long tradition of the magical-girl genre.

Winx Club wasn’t the only long-story-arc European animated show starring five girls with magical transformation powers to debut in the United States in 2004. Disney’s W.I.T.C.H. shares many plot elements with Winx Club, and sits in the same headspace in the minds of those who grew up watching both. Though the show premiered the same year as Winx, the comic it was based on started running a little earlier. Disney Italy noticed similarities between the two properties, and ended up suing Rainbow.

“They tried to start a litigation with really no ground,” says Straffi. “That’s why they lost immediately, with a lot of compensation from the judge. We proved we had a contract from our producer from two to three years before the first [W.I.T.C.H.] comic appeared on the Italian kiosk. There was really no chance.”

The similarities between the shows are superficial. Both shows star redheaded protagonists, but so do Kim Possible and The Powerpuff Girls. Both have magical-girl transformations, but that idea has a long, storied history in anime. But unlike Winx Club, which is still airing in some capacity and readily available, W.I.T.C.H. stopped after a second season. In 2021, it isn’t available to stream anywhere, and physical copies of the DVDs go for more than $60. Straffi believes the show failed because Disney targeted a gender-neutral audience. “That is something I decided not to do from the beginning.”

Winx’s worldwide popularity continues to overwhelm Straffi, but he still believes he didn’t fully crack the United States market. The show is unexpectedly huge in Russia and Turkey, which amazes him, considering that Rainbow never marketed the show as strongly in those regions as it did in the rest of Europe. But even a partnership with Nickelodeon didn’t boost the show to the same levels in America.

“To be honest, until now, I am not happy with what we reached in the U.S.,” he says. “We’ve been successful and famous, but not as much as Europe, so there must be something we have not done, something we should’ve done better.”

He believes it has a lot to do with the way American networks broke up the serialized episodes to air week by week. “Maybe for a kid audience, they can’t really remember what happened for a week, and really appreciate the continued story,” he says. That’s why Straffi thinks Netflix and the age of binge-watching — “watching whenever you want, even one after another” — is beneficial to shows structured like the original Winx Club.

In recent years, Rainbow has worked closely with Netflix, which not only hosts the new rebooted World of Winx (which is designed for a younger audience than the original show), but also another animated show called 44 Cats. This close working partnership allowed Straffi to embark on one of his long-held dreams: a live-action Winx Club series intended for an older audience.

“Having witnessed this huge number of fans around the world for the Winx cartoon, across generations, after 10 years, I could see that there were new fans and old fans,” he explains. “And social media was showing us this kind of loyalty. I thought for the older fans, who were grown up, we should produce some live-action.”

He tossed the idea around with local Italian studios, without even considering American ones, but none of his proposals came to fruition. But Netflix posited the idea for a show tailored toward twentysomethings, which intrigued Straffi. After some deliberation, they put the show into production. Because it was filmed in Ireland, Rainbow was not as involved as Straffi would’ve liked. “I wish it was more,” he says. “Because these are our babies.”

They discussed casting and potential directors, but left a lot of the bigger decisions up to Netflix — with mixed results. Straffi had some doubts about Ireland, which he called “nice, but a bit too rainy,” but ultimately was very pleased with how Alfea College and the surrounding setting ended up looking in the show. But he did have one issue with the show.

“The costumes could be better,” he says. “They will be better in the second season.”

As for the show’s controversial casting — white actors played two characters whose animated designs had been based on Lucy Liu and Jennifer Lopez — Straffi says he can’t say much about it, but that he anticipated the fans’ negative reaction. Overall, though, he says seeing his creation come to life as a live-action drama was surreal. And he hopes the Netflix show is just the beginning.

He has big dreams for the future of Winx Club. He wants a theatrical movie. He wants to explore the origin of the Trix, the three witch sisters with a rivalry against the fairies. He wants the show to be as big in America as it is in Europe, whether it’s through the animated series or the live-action one.

All the conventional wisdom in the early 2000s was against Winx Club, but Straffi believed in the show — he believed in a cartoon for girls about girls, believed in bright and fashionable visuals, and he believed in a complex plot that didn’t pander to executives’ ideas of what kids wanted. He recounts a moment more than 20 years ago, when he was talking to some journalist friends about his then-current project, Tommy & Oscar, while he had just started writing early drafts of Winx Club.

“I was telling them ‘Okay, Tommy & Oscar is a nice cartoon, which is doing well in ratings, but believe me, the next one I am preparing, it will be 20 times more famous and popular,’” he laughs. “I felt very arrogant! But there is no dream without passion. I have been very overwhelmed by the success.”

Most episodes of the original Winx Club are available on the official Winx Club YouTube page. The animated spinoff show, World of Winx, is streaming on Netflix. The first season of the live-action series is also available on Netflix.
view post Posted: 7/6/2021, 13:44 Bambole e Giocattoli Winx 2021 - News Winx Club
Nuovi prototipi delle nuove bambole della Rocco Giocattoli:

* Winx Club Fashion Doll:




* Winx Club Bling The Wings:




* Winx Club Magic Reveal:

view post Posted: 28/5/2021, 17:29 Merchandise Fate The Winx Saga - Fate: The Winx Saga
Da LicensingItalia:

Rainbow e Franco Cosimo Panini annunciano un importante accordo per FATE: the Winx Saga
Pubblicato il 5 Maggio 2021

Franco Cosimo Panini svela le collezioni FATE: The Winx Saga, la serie live action Netflix ispirata al brand Winx Club

Rainbow e Franco Cosimo Panini Editore hanno chiuso un importante accordo per lo sviluppo di una collezione ricercata e alla moda dedicata alla serie live action FATE: the Winx saga, serie Netflix di grande successo tra le serie più viste sulla piattaforma.

Fra i prodotti che Panini lancerà sul mercato figurano il diario scolastico 12 mesi e una collezione gift, entrambi ispirati all’accattivante style guide della serie, a cui rendono omaggio.

Il diario sarà disponibile negli specialty stores, nelle cartolibrerie e online a partire da giugno 2021 mentre gli accessori in tessuto, i gadget e le idee regalo della collezione gift saranno in vendita da ottobre.

Fra i maggiori licensor mondiali e da oltre vent’anni nel campo delle licenze, Rainbow è global licensor esclusivo del la serie live action Netflix ispirato alla celebre saga animata Winx Club, brand evergreen creato proprio dal Presidente e CEO Rainbow Iginio Straffi.

Panini si unisce alla rosa di prestigiosi deal già chiusi da Rainbow ad accompagnare il lancio del successo Netflix, per il quale è già in produzione una seconda stagione che sarà rilasciata sulla piattaforma nel 2022: per l’edizione del romanzo ufficiale della serie scritto da Ava Corrigan, che sarà disponibile in 13 lingue, i partner publishing sono Mondadori per l’Italia, Scholastic Books per gli USA, Hachette per la Francia, RBA per Spagna e America Latina, Loewe Verlag per la Germania, Epsilon per la Turchia, AST per la Russia, Ciranda Cultural per il Brasile.

Già finalizzati anche diversi accordi per la categoria Fashion, tra cui i DTR con Don’t Call Me Jennifer, retailer francese con 300 punti vendita presente anche in Europa, e con RIACHIUELO, fra i più importanti fashion retailer in Brasile con 325 punti vendita, oltre all’accordo paneuropeo chiuso con l’olandese DIFUZED.


Foto:

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