Baobab Studios Nabs 9th Emmy Award Thanks To Baba Yaga

Baba Yaga won an Emmy for Outstanding Interactive Media for a Daytime Program at the 48th Annual Emmy Awards, bringing Baobab Studios’ total Emmy awards wins to nine.

Baba Yaga also previously won two other Emmy awards — Outstanding Directing Team for Animated Program (Eric Darnell, director, and Mathias Chelebourg, co-director) and Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation for Character Design (Karl Athannossov).

It was already such an honor and thrill for Baba Yaga to be awarded Emmys for both character design and direction,” said Baba Yaga director and writer Eric Darnell. “And now, to be honored with the award for best interactive is truly spectacular and a reflection of the team’s monumental efforts to give the audience the opportunity to be the hero of their own story.”

The immersive VR movie released in January exclusively for Oculus Quest after premiering at various film festivals in 2020, including the Venice Film Festival almost exactly a year ago. In our review at the time, we found it to be entertaining but slightly safe. It certainly wasn’t the ambitious step-up we were hoping to see from Baobab’s next offering:

This is a likable, sweet but ultimately safe adventure, highlighted by some great VR novelties but also equally limited by them. I want to see something from this studio that feels truly dynamic — like my presence has genuine impact in the stories it creates. Baobab remains one of VR’s most promising storytellers but, four years on from its debut, I feel like I’m still waiting for it to really hit its stride.

You can read our full review from last year here.

Baba Yaga is available now on Oculus Quest for $5.99.

Step Into Oculus Quest Exclusive Baba Yaga This Week

Baba Yaga

Oculus Quest owners who love virtual reality (VR) animation are in for a double bill this week, Thursday in fact. Joining punk-inspired Battlescar will be Baobab Studios’ highly anticipated Baba Yaga, an Oculus Quest exclusive featuring an all-star voice cast.

Baba Yaga

Baba Yaga is based on the European fairytale where enigmatic witch Baba Yaga protects the enchanted forest in which she dwells, sometimes with good or bad intentions. In this 30-minute interactive animation, you play Sacha who alongside her younger sister Magda enter the forbidden rainforest to find a cure for your mother, the Village Chief, that Baba Yaga possesses.

Being interactive, Baba Yaga offers you choices along the way thus providing multiple endings to keep you coming back for more. As an Oculus Quest title Baobab Studios gives you the option to either use the Oculus Touch controllers or utilize the headsets hand tracking functionality.

As mentioned, the studio has managed to enlist a stellar cast of actors to voice the characters, with Oscar winner Kate Winslet (The Reader, Titanic) as Baba Yaga, Daisy Ridley (Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Ophelia) as Magda, three-time Golden Globe winner Glenn Close (The Wife, Albert Nobbs) as the mother and Oscar and three-time Grammy winner Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls, Respect) as the enchanted forest.

Baba Yaga

As part of the project Baobab Studios partnered with the United Nations on its climate change and sustainability initiative. They’ve created a campaign for the UN ActNow app to help educate users on ways to safeguard Earth’s natural resources.

This isn’t the only project the studio has been busy with. In December part one of Paper Birds was released with the second arriving this year. Then there’s Namoo which is slated for 2021, written and directed by Erick Oh (HeartHow to Eat Your Apple).

Baobab Studios will launch Baba Yaga on 14th January 2021, for Oculus Quest, retailing for $5.99 USD. Check out the new trailer below and for further updates from the animation studio, keep reading VRFocus.

Baobab Studios’ Baba Yaga Releases January 14, Exclusively For Oculus Quest

Baobab Studios announced that its next animated VR film Baba Yaga will release on January 14 exclusively for Oculus Quest and Oculus Quest 2.

The VR film is about two sisters who journey into a haunted forest to seek a cure for their sickly mother, where they will have to confront the mysterious witch, Baba Yaga. The film is a first-person experience, where you embody one of the two sisters and participate in some minor interactive moments. A new trailer was released ahead of launch, which you can watch below:

Baba Yaga has a star-studded cast with Daisy Ridley playing your sister, Magda, with Glenn Close as the mother, Jennifer Hudson as the forest and Kate Winslet as Baba Yaga herself. The film premiered at several film festivals last year and Jamie Feltham and I both got a chance to watch the film ahead of release. We came to the same conclusion — it’s a charming, if safe, experience from the Baobab team that left us craving just a little bit more. Here are the closing remarks from Jamie’s review:

I want to see something from this studio that feels truly dynamic — like my presence has genuine impact in the stories it creates. Baobab remains one of VR’s most promising storytellers but, four years on from its debut, I feel like I’m still waiting for it to really hit its stride.

You can read the full review here.

Baba Yaga runs for approximately half an hour and will be available on the Oculus Store for Quest and Quest 2 from January 14 for $5.99.

VR Animation Baba Yaga Exclusive to Oculus Quest in 2021

Baba Yaga

Baobab Studios, the team behind titles including Asteroids!Invasion! and  Crow: The Legend announced its fairytale animation Baba Yaga earlier this year, initially with a multiplatform release slated for 2020. With the launch of a debut teaser trailer, Baba Yaga has now been confirmed for next year on Oculus Quest.

Baba Yaga

Baba Yaga is a contemporary portrayal of the Eastern European legend, offering up a mixture of 2D pop-up animation, as well as hand-drawn and stop-motion styles for a visually unique short.

Viewers become the main character in this reimagined tale, who alongside their sister, decide to venture into the enchanted rainforest to help save their mother who becomes deathly ill. However, the forest is the domain of Baba Yaga, a witch who is sometimes a force for evil, sometimes a force for good, using her powers to halt the villager’s encroachment into her domain.

Offering up interactive elements, Baba Yaga allows you to make decisions in this short film which explores themes including empowerment and environmentalism.

Baba Yaga Madga Daisy Ridley

It’s also got a star-studded cast with Oscar winner Kate Winslet (The Reader, Titanic) starring as Baba Yaga, Daisy Ridley (Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Ophelia) as Magda, Oscar and three-time Grammy winner Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls, Respect) as the enchanted forest, and three-time Golden Globe winner and Oscar nominee Glenn Close (The Wife, Albert Nobbs) as the mother. Whilst Baobab Studios co-founder Eric Darnell (MadagascarAntz) writes and directs.

Baba Yaga is part of the Raindance Immersive 2020 festival which began this week and runs until 15th November 2020. The title will now be available exclusively on Oculus Quest early 2021. For further updates on Baobab Studios’ projects keep reading VRFocus.

VR Animation Baba Yaga Exclusive to Oculus Quest in 2021

Baba Yaga

Baobab Studios, the team behind titles including Asteroids!Invasion! and  Crow: The Legend announced its fairytale animation Baba Yaga earlier this year, initially with a multiplatform release slated for 2020. With the launch of a debut teaser trailer, Baba Yaga has now been confirmed for next year on Oculus Quest.

Baba Yaga

Baba Yaga is a contemporary portrayal of the Eastern European legend, offering up a mixture of 2D pop-up animation, as well as hand-drawn and stop-motion styles for a visually unique short.

Viewers become the main character in this reimagined tale, who alongside their sister, decide to venture into the enchanted rainforest to help save their mother who becomes deathly ill. However, the forest is the domain of Baba Yaga, a witch who is sometimes a force for evil, sometimes a force for good, using her powers to halt the villager’s encroachment into her domain.

Offering up interactive elements, Baba Yaga allows you to make decisions in this short film which explores themes including empowerment and environmentalism.

Baba Yaga Madga Daisy Ridley

It’s also got a star-studded cast with Oscar winner Kate Winslet (The Reader, Titanic) starring as Baba Yaga, Daisy Ridley (Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Ophelia) as Magda, Oscar and three-time Grammy winner Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls, Respect) as the enchanted forest, and three-time Golden Globe winner and Oscar nominee Glenn Close (The Wife, Albert Nobbs) as the mother. Whilst Baobab Studios co-founder Eric Darnell (MadagascarAntz) writes and directs.

Baba Yaga is part of the Raindance Immersive 2020 festival which began this week and runs until 15th November 2020. The title will now be available exclusively on Oculus Quest early 2021. For further updates on Baobab Studios’ projects keep reading VRFocus.

Best Of Venice VR 2020: Oculus Quest Impressions

The 77th Venice International Film Festival is currently in full swing, with a big offering of virtual experiences this year as part of Venice VR Expanded.

There’s a wealth of VR content available across multiple platforms, but of particular interest are some of the 6DoF Oculus Quest experiences available to those with festival accreditation. Some of these are premiering at Venice while others were already available at festivals earlier in the year.

Sadly, none of these experiences are available to the public just yet. Some of them may receive a full release on VR platforms at a later date, but for now Jamie and I have tried them all and summed up our impressions.

Here’s what we thought of this year’s Oculus Quest content at Venice VR Expanded.

Ajax All Powerful

ajax all powerful venice vr oculus quest

Ajax All Powerful is a short animated VR comedy that follows a crude genie (or djinn, as he prefers) named Ajax. He’s addicted to human souls, which he snorts like cocaine and acquires by fulfilling wishes to his various masters. The short sees him negotiate his contract with his newest master, a young girl called Izzie. There’s more to her than meets the eye though — she’s hired a detail-orientated lawyer to fix up the wish contract.

It’s a crude yet charming short that packs a lot of laughs in a small amount of time, playing with genie tropes in clever ways. The camera and animation work experiments with scale a little, but if there’s one thing that lets Ajax down, it’s that it never really takes full advantage of VR as a medium. That aside, it’s an entertaining ride and definitely worth checking out if it ever releases to the public.

Paper Birds

paper birds vr

This VR animation brings together two of the best studios for VR immersive content — Baobab Studios and 3DAR — to work on a beautiful new experience. While Baobab’s latest solo project, Baba Yaga, is available at Venice VR this year as well, Paper Birds sees them team up with 3DAR, the studio behind the fantastic Gloomy Eyes. 3DAR’s influence here is immediately evident — Paper Birds shares a lot of its visual style with Gloomy, providing some amazingly detailed dioramas and animated characters.

The similarity is definitely not a bad thing — it doesn’t feel so close to Gloomy Eyes as to be repetitive, but it’s also a style of animation that won’t feel worn out for a while yet. Unlike Gloomy , the experience does feature a few interactive moments (perhaps an addition that Baobab brought to the table) which require you to use hand tracking to manipulate the environment. It’s an interesting experience overall, but the narrative does fall a bit flat. It ends in a manner that suggests it’s the first part in an episodic release (again, much like Gloomy) — future installments might flesh things out a bit more.

We Live Here

we live here vr venice oculus quest

We Live Here is a thought-provoking experience that aims to provide some insight into the life of the homeless, and de-stigmatize preconceptions you might hold towards those who find themselves living on the streets. The experience follows Rockey, a 59-year old woman who has been homeless for 3 years, living in a tent in a Los Angeles park. Through a mixture of 360 footage, interactive environments and 6DoF immersive animations, you’ll learn more about Rockey and the experience of being homeless.

The narrative provides some interesting new perspectives on an important issue, but it’s integrated into a very basic VR experience that looks visually messy and features very low quality interactions with the environment. While the message and perspective are welcome (and somewhat enlightening), they comes in a VR package that feels messy and poorly integrated. The concept is solid, but the execution is not.

Baba Yaga Baba Yaga VR Review

The latest from Baobab Studios, Baba Yaga is an interactive movie featuring the voices of Daisy Ridley, Kate Winslett, and Glenn Close. It’s a sweet little piece, casting viewers as one of two daughters of the leader of a tribe that falls ill. Together, you set out with your sister to find a cure in a cursed forest, risking a face-off with the dreaded Baba Yaga.

The film gives viewers a handful of moments to interact with the world and make your own decisions, but it doesn’t go quite as deep as you might hope after the experiments first seen in Baobab’s Bonfire. A charming adventure for sure, but familiar territory for this studio.

Read our full review here.

Goodbye Mr. Octopus

goodbye-mr-octopus

A wistful short that recalls Dear Angelica, Goodbye Mr. Octopus sees a teenage girl reckoning with her overprotective father whilst daydreaming of her adventurous mother, currently out on travels. She reads a letter from her mother, suddenly taken on a journey through her brief past with visions of her mother venturing through the wilderness.

Though short, Mr. Octopus makes a warm impact with its welcoming visuals and look at how two divergent personalities can still find peaceful cohabitation. Director Amaury Campion makes great use of VR as both a teleportation device and a time-traveling machine, melding strands of history and space and funneling them into a specific moment in time. Quite a pleasant time, all-in-all.

A Taste of Hunger

a taste of hunger vr

An experimental narrative that shifts away from linear storytelling, A Taste of Hunger is one of the more mature and confronting experiences on this list. As you walk around a black void marked with only a large circular shape on the floor, various scenes will fly in and out of existence around you. Your surroundings are constantly changing as you move, showing you fragments of a story depending on your location.

All of the presented scenes are visually-distorted, blending polygonal shapes with recorded footage that has been converted into messy, incomplete 3D renders. There’s no strict start or end to the experience — you’re told to simply exit when you’re ready to — and you’ll come away with your own interpretation of what these vignettes mean and how each of them might be linked. It’s a confronting and at times creepy experience that pushes the VR medium to create a unique and unsettling look into the story of a woman’s life.


Which of these experiences would you like to try? Let us know which experience you’re looking forward to most in the comments below.

Baba Yaga VR Review: A Star-Studded, Sweet But Safe VR Movie From Baobab (Venice VR)

Baobab Studio’s latest is coming soon. What did we think? Read our Baba Yaga VR review to find out.

Few VR filmmakers have been as consistent over the years as Baobab Studios and its collection of sweet Pixar-like shorts. But with its latest project, Baba Yaga, consistency might be the problem.

Premiering as part of this month’s Venice Film Festival, Baba Yaga ticks a lot of Baobabs’s usual boxes. It’s a star-studded fantasy adventure with lush artistic vision in which you accompany a young girl, Magda, on a perilous journey into the forests of the titular witch. It’s got a little humor and enough heart to please young audiences and fresh VR viewers alike but, for Baobab, it’s unmistakably familiar territory.

This wouldn’t be such a concern had it not been for the studio’s past effort, Bonfire, which offered a genuine evolution to its established formula with a deep emphasis on viewer interactivity. You can trace that DNA into the roots of Baba Yaga, which does make attempts to integrate those elements into a bigger, more linear narrative. But it struggles with the balance.

Fleeting glimpses of that immersive magic can be found here, including a tense standoff with man-eating vegetation, while a bedside meeting with Glenn Close’s sickly tribe chief has unnerving intimacy. But it’s implementation is sparse and often automated, with only a single outcome possible up until an ending choice.

Though the differences in that closing segment can be dramatic, you don’t feel informed – or emotionally connected – enough to make a decision with much sense of confliction. Magda, voiced with a curious (and almost unrecognizable) wisdom by Daisy Ridley, never really gets a moment to properly shine, and it’s the same for Kate Winslett in the titular role. Baga Yaga’s focus on personal storytelling is welcome, but it’s too short on viewer-directed moments to carry much heft. It wasn’t until a second viewing that I felt I had a real handle on the characters and the best outcomes for them.

Baba Yaga isn’t quite the ambitious step up I’d hoped to see from Baobab’s next project, then. This is a likable, sweet but ultimately safe adventure, highlighted by the some great VR novelties but also equally limited by them. I want to see something from this studio that feels truly dynamic — like my presence has genuine impact in the stories it creates. Baobab remains one of VR’s most promising storytellers but, four years on from its debut, I feel like I’m still waiting for it to really hit its stride.

3 STARS

Baba Yaga is a part of this week’s Venice VR line-up and is aiming to come to headsets later this year. For more on how we arrived at this score, read our review guidelines

Kate Winslet, Jennifer Hudson, Glenn Close Join All-Female Cast Of Baobab Studios’ Baba Yaga

Baobab Studios announced some massive additions to a now star-studded, all-female cast for their next VR project, Baba Yaga.

Kate Winslet, Jennifer Hudson, and Glenn Close will join Daisy Ridley in the upcoming immersive VR movie set to premiere next month at the 2020 Venice International Film Festival. Hudson is also an executive producer on the film.

These three new additions make Baba Yaga one of Baobab’s most high-profile projects yet. Other Hollywood celebrities have appeared in the studio’s work in the past, such as Ali Wong in Bonfire, but to see four major actresses all appear in an immersive VR film together is pretty unprecedented, especially with Hudson in the producer role as well.

Daisy Ridley will play the viewer’s sister, Magda. When their mother, the Chief (played by Close) falls deathly ill, the two of them will have to work together and enter the forbidden forest (played by Hudson) to seek a cure from Baba Yaga (played by Winslet).

“Baba Yaga is a beautiful work of animation and I was honored to be an executive producer alongside my talented collaborators at Baobab Studios,” said Hudson in a prepared statement. “While the story is rooted in classic folklore, we were inspired to bring it into modern light by focusing on environmental themes and strong female characters, themes the world needs to explore now more than ever. It was my pleasure to be part of the strong female cast alongside Daisy, Kate, and Glenn.”

The immersive VR animation was created during the pandemic, a feat which the film’s director and Baobab co-founder Eric Darnell called “especially challenging”. While the film is set to debut at the Venice Film Festival in a matter of weeks, it will also be available exclusively on Oculus Quest later this year.

Daisy Ridley Cast In Baobab Studios’ Next VR Movie, Baba Yaga

Baobab Studios revealed that Daisy Ridley has been cast in the lead role for their upcoming VR project, Baba Yaga.

First revealed earlier this month, Baba Yaga is the next immersive VR movie from talented VR group Baobab Studios, the developers of Bonfire, Asteroids! and many other VR movie projects. In a ‘Work In Progress’ presentation at the Annecy International Animal Festival Online, the studio revealed that Daisy Ridley has been cast in the lead role of Magda. Ridley is best known for portraying Rey in the most recent trilogy of Star Wars films, the first of which was her breakthrough role.

baba yaga daisy ridley

We also got some meatier story details from Baobab, revealing a bit more about what to expect from its next project:

“In Baba Yaga, viewers will be invited as a main character into a haunting fairytale world completely reimagined, and their choices will determine the ending of this story of love, fortitude and magic. Sometimes a force for evil, sometimes a force for good, the enigmatic witch Baba Yaga uses her powers to stop the villagers whose settlement encroaches upon her enchanted forest. When the viewer’s mother, the village chief, falls deathly ill, it is up to them and their sister Magda to do the unthinkable—enter the forest, uncover its hidden mysteries and get the cure from Baba Yaga. Ultimately, every decision the viewer makes matters…even whether humanity and nature can live in balance.”

While the ‘Work In Progress’ presentation from the other day is only available to accredited Annecy festival viewers, the Baobab Studios team will also participate in a live Q&A on June 23rd at 9am PST as part of the festival, which will be available to the public.

Are you looking forward to Baba Yaga? Let us know what you think in the comments

The post Daisy Ridley Cast In Baobab Studios’ Next VR Movie, Baba Yaga appeared first on UploadVR.

Star Wars’ Daisy Ridley to Play Lead in Baobab Studios’ Baba Yaga

Baba Yaga Madga Daisy Ridley

At the beginning of the month celebrated virtual reality (VR) animation studio Baobab Studios announced its next project, bringing the legend of Baba Yaga to life. Today, the team has announced that Daisy Ridley (Star Wars, Murder on the Orient Express) has been cast in the lead role of Magda.

Baba Yaga

The news was revealed as part of Baobab Studios’ Work in Progress presentation at the Annecy International Animation Festival’s 2020 Online which began today.

Viewers play the main role in this reimagined tale, where their mother, the village chief, becomes deathly ill. So they’re tasked alongside their sister Magda to do what their village fears most – enter the forest where Baba Yaga dwells and get the cure. The only problem, the witch is sometimes a force for evil, sometimes a force for good, using her powers to halt the villager’s encroachment into her domain.

Viewers will have choices to make along the way, determining how the story will end and whether humanity and nature can find a balance.

Discussing the new project Ridley said in a statement.”Baobab is at the very forefront of VR and interactive animation, so it’s been exciting to work with Eric and the team to bring such a beautiful story to life. I love playing Magda, because she is brave, vulnerable and fiercely protective of her family all at the same time. The idea that the viewer will be able to genuinely interact with my character in this magical world and help steer the course of the narrative is so amazing,”

Baba Yaga

“We are so fortunate to have Daisy breathe life into the role of Magda, as her talent and energy for the project fuels us all. She has such a way of always finding the right tone and delivering the most meaningful performance for any scene. Her work is such a huge inspiration to our animators,” adds Eric Darnell, Baobab Studios’ Co-founder/CCO and director of Baba Yaga.

Currently, Baobab Studios has said Baba Yaga will launch later this year across multiple formats. Previous titles like Bonfire and Crow: The Legend have appeared on Oculus Rift and PlayStation VR headsets. VRFocus will continue its coverage of Baba Yaga, reporting back with further updates.