STEVE CONRAD Talks ULTRA CITY SMITHS

Published: Dec. 18, 2021, 6:55 p.m.

b'Here at HEAVY we like nothing more than a bit of off beat humor with explicit and gratuitous lashings of murder, mystery and mayhem thrown in.
Luckily for us, the people behind Australia\\u2019s latest streaming service AMC+ have given us all that and more with their new series Ultra City Smiths, a stop-motion animated comedy series brought to you by the creators of Patriot and Robot Chicken.
Centering around an investigation into the mysterious disappearance of fictional metropolis Ultra City\\u2019s most famous magnate, Carpenter K. Smith (Kurtwood Smith, That 70\\u2019s Show), Ultra City Smiths follows two intrepid detectives - David Mills (Jimmi Simpson, Westworld) and Gail Johnson (Da\\u2019Vine Joy Randolph, Dolemite Is My Name) \\u2013 who follow the case, rallying to fight against their city\\u2019s dangerous corruption at a high cost to themselves and their families and in pursuit of a gentler place to call home.
Sound complicated?
Well throw in the fact the characters are animated baby dolls repurposed as a cast of grown up characters and you might get some insight into the twisted world in which creator Steve Conrad has invited us.
The series also features all-star voice talent including Kristen Bell (The Good Place), Dax Shepard (Parenthood), John C. Reilly (Stepbrothers) and Debra Winger (Terms of Endearment) and is streaming now.
HEAVY nailed down Conrad to talk about Ultra City Smiths and get some insight into the inner mechanisms of a brain that can turn something like this into pure gold.
"Stop motion animation you\'ll remember from holiday specials when you were very young,\\u201d Conrad explained, \\u201clike Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer and Frosty The Snowman. It\'s a type of animation where you move the figurines fractions of inches at a time and then run the film and it looks like they\'re moving. It\'s an artform you\'ll remember from your childhood but we have made an adult drama using this artform. I have happened on calling it adult entertainment for former children. I\'m hoping to plug into the way we felt about that art when we were kids to use it to explore such mature things as violence and sex and revenge and power etc."
In the full interview, Steve runs us through the plotline of Ultra City Smiths, the main characters, the city he has created and why it is so bleak, working humor into the storyline, how far you can go with things in terms of censorship using animation, the actors and actresses who provide the voice overs, creating emotion and tension with animated characters, working with some of the industries heavyweights, future plans and more.'