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Producing The Mummy takes bales of Hollywood resources -- and the lovely and talented Brendan Fraser. ADV is one of a dozen studios in the States producing English-language versions of mostly Japanese TV shows and movies. ADV's requirements are easily met in a slowly growing warren of offices in a warehouse building off Harwin, and with Houston voices instead of A-list movie stars. There are stars, but they don't get trailers.
ADV veteran voice actress Amanda Winn has the kind of power that draws invitations to science fiction and anime conventions, but in Houston she has a hand in scripting and direction, and also provides the human audio of ADV office voice-mail system. Actress Tiffany Grant has a similar workload of acting, writing and making personal appearances, but has escaped voice-mail. ADV folk stress that the work calls for on-the-job training, that everybody does a little bit of everything.
Sound engineers such as Christopher Bourque, working on a severely modified Power PC, take the sound clips and "cut 'em, paste 'em, stretch 'em, make 'em match the lip flips as best we can." Producer/director/co-founder Matt Greenfield has a rep among voice actors for wanting precision with the lip movements. The results are, both in dubbing sync and animation quality, well beyond the quality of the earliest anime most of America saw, Speed Racer.
Credit Speed, Chimchim and the cartoon crew of that series for helping Houston become a home for an entertainment business seemingly suited more for Hollywood or the Far East. ADV founder John Ledford was inspired by those characters and UHF reruns of Battle of the Planets and Robotech. He was also influenced by hours and hours spent playing video games at Goodtime Charlie's, as the Sharpstown Mall food court was known in the seventies.
Before ADV, Ledford says, he owned the second-largest U.S. mail-order company for imported Japanese video games. Ledford considered his hobbies -- electronic games, comics and animation -- all visually stimulating media, to be closely related in terms of market demographics. With enthusiasm that would shame any of TV's motivational speakers, Ledford reports, "When I discovered that there were animated films based on video games that were some of my personal favorites, I had to get involved." Rockwell and current ADV marketing director Rod Peters introduced him to post-Speed Racer anime. He brought in anime fanatic Greenfield and credits the business plan of fans selling to fans for their success. Being fans also helped them understand American anime tastes, which led to significant growth for ADV.
Most of the videos (and DVD) sold directly and for rental are the traditional anime that fans know and love: gobs of action, shrill, hyper-produced pop music and childlike characters with giant, almost insect-size eyes. But the array is richer than the uninitiated might imagine. ADV's catalog also offers the Those Who Hunt Elves series (with more nudity than one might expect), Tekken (based on the game and with Stabbing Westward on the soundtrack) and bastions of sci-fi such as Gamera (a fanged superturtle) and adult-oriented cartoons promising to "take the girls-in-armor theme to the limit." And all this has a growing audience.
A big, blond corn-fed type, Rockwell was lured from his Ohio job in video equipment sales early in ADV history. Despite the ten-hour and 12-hour work days, despite the commercial failure of some of his favorite films and despite group viewing sessions of films so bad there is no reason on earth to consider acquisition, he has no regrets. Even screening lame films has an upside: He says when the staff members gather to watch a film that stinks, they start imitating the quirky MST 3K -- the televised feature of a robot and friends ad-libbing to C-grade movies -- and turn the viewing room into an impromptu dubbing studio.
Even with his enthusiasm for Sonic's Billboard climb, action and comedy titles are not at the top of his personal list. "Something like Sonic, you're running through a room, you're shooting stuff, and then you leave. Nothing very deep or psychological. With something more complex, like Neon Genesis, we put special stuff on our Web site to ease the viewer into it."