Epsilon movies have appeared on the 3D CGI cartoon Dreamers - The Hunt for Shadowclaw, both a co-producer and a global sales agent. Epsilon will pre-sale for family adventure sales at the Cannes Film Market and showcase the original first landscape.
This movie is an unlikely trio. First was a young German shepherd Lenny who failed the K9 test, not because of his wheels, but because of his stubborn attitude and joined the circus. He joined with autism, Fred's Indian runner Duck, who created beats with his beak, while the brown bear was dancing with the Bearnice, Bearnice, who was nothing more than dancing among the big crowds of the circus. They must violate odds to save the mysterious circus leopard shadow in the heart of New York City. Together they have to turn the difference into an advantage, overcome their fears, and save the leopard, and then the official K9 team catches her and takes her away forever.
The German-Canadian co-production is made by Ulrich Schwarz ("Dragon Rider", "Nessie Junior", "Stowaway"), Andreas Schneider's Parworm Film Production ("Gold"), Thomas Baumgarten (Thomas Baumgarten ("Gold") ("Klaus") and Arno Hazebroek's Falcon falcon ("klaus"). Epsilon Films will serve as co-producer and handle international sales.
The animation is handled by Kickstart Entertainment (Kickstart Entertainment), a studio that has produced over 25 years of production and over 750 series, including "Barbie Mystery" (Netflix/Mattel) and "Boys" (Amazon).
Heiko Hentschel ("Amazing Maurice", "Oh!
With production about to begin, the "Dreamer-Hunting Shadow Crow" plans to release the 2028 Paralympic Games in Los Angeles in a timely manner.
Producer Ulrich Schwarz and creator/producer Andreas Schneider said: "'Dreamers' is about accepting and embracing people who are different from you - and embracing yourself completely. We want to plant a good and powerful animation, and we want to plant an acceptance seed to make the range of kids more ordinary, skillfully broader, and even more admired. They took us on an inspiring action adventure."
Julia Weber of Epsilon Movies added: “It’s a film that encourages audiences of all ages to embrace their unique strengths, overcome challenges and believe in the impossible.”
The development of the film was funded by the German regional films Fund Moin, National Film Fund FFA and Canadian Creative BC.