One of the most original and sprawling trilogies in animation is one that many people are not aware of. With the same sense of adventure as How to Train Your Dragon and variety of themes as LEGO Ninjago, the Tale of Arcadia brings fans to world s of fantasy and science fiction and manages to make it work with flying colors!
With a story developed by visionary creator Guillermo Del Toro (Hellboy), and Executive Producer Marc Guggenheim (CW's Arrowverse), Tales of Arcadia is a CG animated trilogy that began with Trollhunters and continued to another show titled 3Below. The final part of the trilogy, which is gearing up for release this week, is titled, Wizards.
Wizards will be bringing characters together from the previous two shows and plan to have a huge climactic battle at the end of the show's 10-episode run. Recently, we were able to catch up with Executive Producer Marc Guggenheim and ask just how the trilogy operates as a complete trilogy.
Make sure to read the full interview below and, if interested, check out the full audio interview from Literaryjoe's Inner Child Podcast! Also, make sure to share your thoughts in the comments below!
Literary Joe: What do you think sets Wizards apart or makes it different than previous entries in the Tales of Arcadia series?
Marc Guggenheim: Good question! I think Trollhunters sort of established our world and our characters. I guess the answer to your question is probably best given in terms of how a trilogy is typically structured. With Trollhunters being the first chapter, it establishes everything.
With 3Below, I kind of like middle chapters that go in a completely different direction than the first chapter. So that you really feel like the story and the world is going to a completely different area, a different corner of the universe. In the case of 3Below, I think that's kind of literal. (Laughs) Maybe a pun.
But then with the third chapter, you want to have an element of it that is a bit of a return to chapter one. At least something that feels like a bookend to chapter one. At the same time, you want it to be a satisfying ending to all three series. You want it to give you some new characters and some new concepts so that you're not just feeling like you're recapitulating chapters one or two.
It's a tricky balance, and I think what Wizards sort of does, is it really squares that circle by taking us backward to go forwards. We end up returning to the distant past to a period even before Trollhunters. To show you events and characters that in some cases we've only heard about in Trollhunters, but we've never seen, and we've never dramatized. So I think that's what gives Wizards it's unique perspective is that time jump.
Literary Joe: That's a great answer. Now, was Wizards always planned to be the final chapter in the franchise?
Marc Guggenheim: Yeah, basically when Guillermo and the casting crew got together to discuss expanding Trollhunters, it was always pitched by Guillermo that the second series would be 3Below and the third series would be Wizards.
Literary Joe: Now, is there any talk of closing out or following up the franchise with a film?
Marc Guggenheim: I cannot say.
Literary Joe: Do you handle more of the day to day stuff, or what exactly are your contributions to the series?
Marc Guggenheim: I basically refer to myself as the executive producer. I come in to help chart out the big picture arcs of the season. To get involved with editing or reviewing animatics. When needed, I'll do a pass on a script or a given scene. Basically, my job is to sort of help keep our eye on the North Star of what the season needs to be and come in for whatever's needed.
Sometimes there's a tricky problem in the writer's room, and I'll come in and give my two cents. Sometimes it's a tricky problem in a script, and I'll either give suggestions or because I think through my fingertips, I'll write. I co-wrote the first two episodes.
And, similarly, in the editing room, if there's a problem with an episode, sometimes the problems will be budgetary for example. Episode four, I think, the animatics were finished, and we were left with an episode that we couldn't afford to produce. So it's like, how do you address our budgetary concerns without gutting an entire episode? And I'll be a part of the team that's trying to solve that problem. (Laughs)
*This interview has been edited for clarity.*
Check out the trailer for his upcoming project with Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth), Tales of Arcadia: Wizards, and be sure to share your thoughts in the usual spot!
Join our favorite supernatural heroes on a time-bending adventure to medieval Camelot. The magic continues the final chapter of the Tales of Arcadia saga, Wizards.
Tales of Arcadia: Wizards hits Netflix on August 7th.