Directed by Dom & Nic, this humorous new holiday ad reunites The Mill’s team with Fairy, (voiced by iconic British actress/comedienne Dawn French), this year joined by two lovable and mischievous mittens (voiced by Hollywood heavyweights Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney) enjoying their first taste of Christmas.
In our hero film, Fairy discovers Left and Right, two conjoined mittens accidentally dropped in the snow by their owner, a little girl named Lilly. Once inside, Fairy treats the reindeer-shaped mittens to some Christmas fun and games before leading them to a magnificent feast set on a dining room table. “This is not just food… This is M&S Christmas food,” says Fairy, closing the spot, abundant with dry humor and a love of tradition.
Hear more from our incredible team on how they created these timeless characters, and watch the second, third, and fourth films in this giggle worthy, six-part blockbuster ad series .
“The mittens were two of the most complex characters I have ever been involved in creating!” says Creative Director Andy Steele. The team remade the underlying animated structural rigs several times in order to capture a range of motion and emotion. Having all this functionality in one rig – being able to see every knitted thread in the mittens, for example – offered creative freedom to shoot without cutting corners.” The filmmakers even hired a professional knitter to fabricate real-life mittens as an essential camera and lighting reference on set.
A materialistic approach played a key role in creating the real look and feel of a small child’s mittens. “We found inspiration for their movement style in Forky from Toy Story 4,” explains David Bryan, animation director of The Mill, while inspiration also came from Sesame Street and The Muppets in the way characters can speak convincingly with limited tools, focusing on “syncing the head and body of the mittens, paired with a simple yet charming mouth action, to match the energy in Rob and Ryan’s voice overs.” Using features like the antlers on the mittens to express emotion, their body mechanics were informed by using a real mitten “to puppeteer animation references for some of the more technical actions, aiming to avoid distorting the body and legs too much or over-humanizing their limbs.”
Of his all-star British and American cast, Creative Director Andy Steele adds, “With such amazing voice talent for the performances, the animation team really invested themselves in the project. It’s not every day you get the chance to work with the likes of Dawn French, Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. Everyone involved was really pumped about it, and you can see it in the creativity of the spot.”