Blue Sky Studios Film ‘Spies in Disguise’: Behind the Scenes with Directors Nick Bruno and Troy Quane

Nick Bruno and Troy Quane walked into the room one after another with bright eyes and high energy.

Blue Sky Studios’ new film Spies in Disguise is a kid-friendly film that is entertaining for the entire family. While on the studio visit, families were allowed and encouraged to bring their kids. When the directors sat down, they had the opportunity to speak about specifics that really stood out to the kids. Both of these talented men were ready for a barrage of questions from kids and their parents from a round table interview. BGN had a few questions of our own.

Nick Bruno and Troy Quane
How big of a part would you say music played
in the film?

Troy: Music was a huge
part of this movie for us, all the way back to before there was even a movie.
Nick and I both read the script and separated from one another. Then we started
to put together songs that popped into our heads. So, we made a playlist. We
just found songs that we liked, songs that had the right energy, the right
sound, or the right rhythm that would help inspire certain sequences or just
moods that we liked. And then we’d share and put that together.

Nick: Music is so inspiring. I’m sure when you listen to music, sometimes you can picture yourself going on cool adventures and saving the day. Even our animators when they’re animating Lance Stirling or Walter Beckett, they would animate to music. They sometimes put music in the background and you never hear that music in the movie. Lance would move with more swagger. He’d have a rhythm to the way he walks where Walter would have got great music. So, everything about him was a little bit more awkward and silly.

Troy:  So, music is a huge part of filmmaking.

What is the biggest challenge in
developing the narrative for this story?

Nick: That’s a great question because there are so many challenges with it. The biggest thing for us is we always have that teamwork message and the nonviolent philosophy. So, you hold those up as your North Star, like that’s your theme and everything has to be based around it. But it’s really hard because you have to service so many things. You have to service entertainment, story, making sure that everything that you’re doing is revolving around that theme, making sure it’s funny, making sure it’s sad and scary. If you’ve ever put together a paper for school, [sometimes] you put it together and you read it, you’re like, “This is not good.” Right? It’s hard. So, the great thing with our story team is we get to put stuff together. Often when we get to writing our pages, we’d sit in a room with our writers and come up with ideas, jokes, and feelings.

What did you look for when hiring your
main protagonists?

Troy: With this movie,
we started with Lance because we knew he was going to be a pivotal character
for everything else in the story. He needed to be cool and smooth, and a little
bit overconfident at times, which can be unlikable. So, he needed to be funny
to offset that aspect of his personality. We looked at who was big when we were
growing up, like who were those actors who embodied all that. Both of us kept
coming back to Will Smith in Fresh Prince [of Bel-Air]. He was
cool. He had musicality. He had a lot of swagger. But he was kind of dorky and
at the times he had that, he was approachable. He had charisma.

Walter had to be somebody who was vastly different from Lance. So he had to be a little bit geeky, but sweet, naive but optimistic. So we had all these aspects. And we just found that Tom Holland had all those things; he was a genuinely nice guy. For this part, he had used his American accent.

How much input do big actors have when the
film is being developed?  

Nick: It’s less about
official input and more about casting people for their talents, in every aspect
of the movie, but especially with that, and you want them to have input in some
of that.

One final question, when will the DVD be
out?

Troy: Great question, it comes out March 10th.

There is something mesmerizing when two powerhouses decide
to present on their work. Both Nick and Troy speak with such grace and eloquence
that it feels as if they are directly talking to you. With their soft tones and
funny jokes, the brief time that was allotted felt like anything is possible. I
guess that is just the magic of Blue Sky Studios.

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