HARI is a multi award winning, high quality animation studio founded by Josselin Charier and Antoine Rodelet and headquartered in Paris. Specialized in bringing feature-quality CGI animation to the small screen, HARI develops a unique editorial line of premium IPs focused on comedy and slapstick for family audiences. HARI brings families together through content that inspires laughter and optimism and the company’s original characters and universal stories entertain audiences of all ages, across TV, film and product. Its international hit series are broadcast in 200 territories globally. Grizzy and The Lemmings was the most aired French animated TV show worldwide in 2022 and the series entered the Netflix top ten TV shows in more than 60 territories in 2022, also generating 1 billion views per year on YouTube. Another recent highlight is the brand new Mystery Lane (currently in production); a new classic à la Scooby Doo meets Sherlock Holmes: lots of mysteries, action suspense and fun, packed in a feature-quality CGI animation.
Sophie ‘Kido’ Prigent
Head of sales
Hari
Please tell us about your main objectives at Annecy this year.
We are looking forward to updating our partners on Mystery Lane’s amazing performance and showing them visuals of the Mystery Lane Special Christmas that we are delivering in the fourth quarter of this year. Annecy is also a great opportunity for us to reveal more on our latest show in production, The Weasy Family. Here, Hari has innovated the genre by combining slapstick comedy with a heartwarming narrative that has emotional stakes at the core. Grizzy & the Lemmings season four launches this year and we will discuss the rights available with our different partners for all seasons.
What new shows are coming down the line that you’re particularly focused on?
Mystery Lane (26×22’) is a classic ‘Scooby Doo meets Sherlock Holmes’ packed in a feature-quality CGI animation with sophisticated storytelling. The show racked up a million views in just six weeks on Okoo in France and performs excellently on Disney in Germany and on Rai in Italy, alongside a host of other channels. The investigative comedy adventure series targets kids aged six-plus and their families
In The Weasy Family (78×7’), Hari combines slapstick comedy with a benevolent, heartwarming narrative. The cute and fun factor in this father-daughter relationship will resonate with a wide audience, including parents. France Télévisions, the BBC in the UK, Germany’s Super RTL, TeleQuebec in Francophone Canada and Sweden’s SVT are on board.
What have been your most successful shows of the past six months and why?
Last year we made a raft of deals for Mystery Lane and this has propelled the show to global success. The series has debuted in China via a strategic deal, crafted in partnership with Paris-based Midolala, with Alibaba Group subsidiary Youku Kids, who has picked up the exclusive VoD rights. It has also launched on public service broadcasters across Europe and beyond, including Rai in Italy, YLE in Finland, NRK in Norway, TV3 Catalonia in Spain and the ABC in Australia. The series received critical acclaim at Cartoons on the Bay Festival and won the Pulcinella award for best kids’ TV show. It also scooped the youth prize at the prestigious Lauriers de L’Audiovisuel ceremony in France.
Grizzy & the Lemmings has had an incredible year; it is consistently in the top three animated TV shows on Okoo in France and is a top 10 animated show on Netflix worldwide. The series also delivers outstanding ratings on local TV channels around the world and generates one billion views per year on YouTube, with eight million-plus subscribers.
What is the biggest issue facing the animation industry and what is your company doing in response to it?
Some broadcasters’ commissioning teams have had their budgets cut, affecting the acquisition and greenlighting of shows. We need more partners to finance high-quality shows and more flexibility on terms, such as shorter licence periods, non-exclusivity, no holdbacks or shorter ones etc. We also need to diversify. Grizzy & the Lemmings is a worldwide established IP getting a lot of attention at the moment. Recent licensing deals include a board game, a publishing deal and a loyalty programme in a fast food chain. We’re attending various licensing fairs this year and looking for a master toy partner with whom we can transform the existing success of Grizzy & the Lemmings into a global licensing programme.
How is the use of artificial intelligence in animation developing and how has your company been using it?
Our R&D department is looking closely at the ongoing development of AI in animation. It’s fascinating to see how fast this goes and how impactful this is – it’s like we discovered a whole new continent. It is still early to say, despite how fast it is progressing, but we will most likely implement some aspects of it soon, for the encoding of our pipeline for example. For now we think of it as an assisting tool that helps with some early tasks, not as a replacement for actual creative human task force.
How can animation companies survive and thrive during the economic crisis?
At Hari, we place a huge emphasis on developing high-quality CGI series, bringing together families and inspiring laughter and optimism. Our original characters entertain audiences of all ages, across TV, film and product. And this ensures our shows to stay in high demand.
We have many free, pay TV and VoD partners around the world, with audiences accessing our series through multiple platforms, windows and devices, which is critical for global success. We have ramped up our global YouTube presence, launching two dedicated YouTube channels for Mystery Lane in French and English, and a new dedicated geoblocked US-only YouTube channel for Grizzy & the Lemmings, supporting the series’ schedule on all broadcast platforms. We have appointed digital distributor Soupir to help develop and grow our global digital content strategy, for both Mystery Lane and Grizzy & the Lemmings.
We plan to develop more exclusive and shortform digital-first content for YouTube, including thematic clip compilations, some full episodes, live streams and thematic excerpts. We intend to build the platform as an even bigger communication tool for our fan community worldwide, which will also help grow our licensing and merchandising business. Hari’s characters are this year set to launch their own books, board games, glue sticks, commemorative coins and more. Our licensing and merchandising programme is ever-expanding and the series’ worldwide exposure creates brilliant opportunities for franchise partners.