Pikmin Short Movies

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The logo for the Pikmin Short Movies.

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The content here is yet to be confirmed to be canon, but features non-canonical aspects.

The Pikmin Short Movies are a trio of animated films, showing Pikmin interacting with the environment of PNF-404 alongside Captain Olimar. These films are drawn using computer generated 3D graphics. They were produced by TK3 Inc. and Nintendo Co., Ltd, and were animated by Dwango Pictures, Inc., with Shigeru Miyamoto as executive producer. The three shorts are called The Night Juicer, Treasure in a Bottle, and Occupational Hazards.

In addition to the shorts, four bonus clips exist. The bundle consisting of shorts and bonuses is available on the Wii U and the Nintendo 3DS, on each of the respective platform's eShop. The 3DS version is in stereoscopic 3D, and is referred to as "Pikmin Short Movies 3D", while the clips on the Wii U are referred to as "Pikmin Short Movies HD", and are rendered in high definition. Each version of the bundle costs $4.99/£4.49/€4.99.

The shorts are all based on the first two Pikmin games. They focus more on the Pikmin's interactions with the environment, as well as each individual Pikmin's behaviors and actions. These aspects cannot be elaborated on inside the games, due to technical and visual limitations, as well as deviating from the gameplay purposes of the games. Some of the actions the Pikmin perform in the shorts contradict what is known to happen in the game's canon, meaning that it is not clear if the shorts take place in the same canon as the games'. These include the Pikmin being able to open up their leafs or buds into flowers seemingly at will, and White Pikmin being able to spit acid.

Shorts

The Night Juicer

The first scene of The Night Juicer, showing Captain Olimar blending Pikpik Carrots.
Olimar blending his drink in The Night Juicer.
Main article: The Night Juicer.

This short features Captain Olimar and some Pikmin inside an unknown room, with Captain Olimar using a small blender to make a juice-like drink. The three Pikmin become horrified with what appears to be a vivisected Red Pikmin on a cutting board. Olimar slowly chases after the Pikmin until they eventually bump into a box of Pikpik carrots, the foodstuff that Olimar was really blending.

Treasure in a Bottle

The 3 Pikmin get an idea to rescue their friend.
Main article: Treasure in a Bottle.

This short beings off with a red Pikmin chasing after a large white butterfly, eventually coming across a Ramune bottle with a blue marble inside. While trying to retrieve the marble, the Pikmin manages to trap itself inside the bottle. It calls for help from a passing group of Blue, Yellow and Red Pikmin, which laugh at the Red's plight.

The Pikmin get ideas to fill the bottle with water or blow it up, which are never executed and fail, respectively. After spotting the butterfly again and a Purple using its weight, they come up with the idea to create a rescue chain of Pikmin held by the Purple. The Red Pikmin is rescued, but before it returns to the ground, it looks back at the marble. Eventually, the Pikmin decide to carry the whole bottle back.

Occupational Hazards

The first scene of Occupational Hazards, showing several Pikmin carrying various parts.
Pikmin hard at work, scavenging an abandoned construction site.
Main article: Occupational Hazards.

This short begins with various types of Pikmin working about to dismantle an abandoned backhoe for the Hocotate ship. While most of the Pikmin are hard at work, some of them are slacking off, such as a group of several yellow Pikmin playing with an electrical current of the engine's battery and white Pikmin spitting poison fluids at various parts of the machine, which results in portions of it getting damaged. Olimar is on the top of the machine, and has a miniature seesaw device so that the Pikmin can reach the ship's pod.

Meanwhile, a group of Pikmin run off to rummage through some metal pipes and accidentally wake up a sleeping Fiery Blowhog, who then stampedes after them. A few Red Pikmin subdue it in a pile of mud, and the Pikmin nearby start frolicking. While playing, a Yellow Pikmin wanders off into a nearby sewer entry after noticing a shiny bolt on the floor. It eventually finds and awakens an angered Red Bulborb.

The Bulborb chases the Pikmin, stopping a few times because of a hypnotizing glove, and later, a tire rim serving as shelter for the Pikmin. Meanwhile, the Yellow Pikmin who were playing with the battery, manage to activate the backhoe, and an accidental lever activation causes the bucket to lift, where the Pikmin and Bulborb were. The Bulborb lands and becomes unconscious, and the Pikmin float safely to the ground. After some Pikmin swarm it, the arm and bucket of the machine fall apart and land on the Bulborb; the Pikmin escape in time. The whole backhoe collapses, and the Research Pod, that just returned, discovers that the whole pile is worth 10 quadrillion and seven Pokos.

Bonuses

Storyboard for Treasure in a Bottle.
A portion of the storyboard from Treasure in a Bottle.

A bonus section exists bundled with the shorts, featuring four clips on the 3DS and Wii U, plus two more bonus clips exclusive to the 3DS version.

This starts off with a red Pikmin atop a red ball. It spins the ball around, revealing an opening in the ball. Pikmin come running out of the opening, carrying various letters. They set the letters down, which eventually spell out "TOHO CINEMAS". The red Pikmin jumps off the ball. Afterward, the ball begins to bounce towards the red Pikmin until it remains fixed atop the words. The red Pikmin then runs off. Length: 00:31

This is just like the first logo, except now, the ball is carried above the letters by a few winged Pikmin. The red Pikmin also stays on top of the ball. Length: 00:37

Treasure in a Bottle: Storyboard by Shigeru Miyamoto

Like the name implies, this is a storyboard Miyamoto used to develop Treasure in a Bottle. It was created using Flipnote Studio 3D, a 3DS application that was never released outside of Japan. Length: 01:23

Occupational Hazards: Storyboard by Shigeru Miyamoto

Similarly, this is a storyboard created by Miyamoto for Occupational Hazards. Once again, it was created using Flipnote Studio 3D. Length: 02:05

Controls

Wii U

When the Pikmin Short Movies app is booted, a menu with 4 options is presented on the GamePad, three for the shorts, and one that opens the bonus menu. A short or bonus can be picked with either the L Stick on the Wii U GamePad and the A Button on the Wii U GamePad or by touching it on the touchscreen. During this menu, the TV screen shows a static image of the Pikmin Short Movies HD logo, and if the viewer is on the bonus menu, the word "Bonus" appears below it.

When playing a short, the TV always shows the short, and the GamePad screen can either show the video or detailed playback controls; a button on the bottom-right corner toggles this option. When in the detailed view, the top of the GamePad screen shows the name of the short, followed by the current time and the total duration. Below that is a seek bar, which the viewer can drag to seek through the movie. Below that are three control buttons. The buttons to skip forward and backward move the movie 5 seconds forward or backward, if it is paused, and if not, it fast-forwards forwards or backwards, 5 seconds at a time. The play/pause buttons starts or pauses the playback. Finally, a button on the bottom-left returns to the main menu.

In the GamePad view mode, only three controls exist: a button on the bottom-left plays and pauses, a seek bar is in the middle, and the button on the bottom-right toggles the mode. When the video is playing, after not touching anything for a few seconds, the controls disappear, but return if the touchscreen is touched. Bizarrely, even though no button or stick on the GamePad does anything, pressing the A Button on the Wii U GamePad, the B Button on the Wii U GamePad, the X Button on the Wii U GamePad, the Y Button on the Wii U GamePad, the L Button on the Wii U GamePad, the R Button on the Wii U GamePad, the ZL Button on the Wii U GamePad or the ZR Button on the Wii U GamePad will bring back the on-screen controls if they are hidden.

3DS

The leaf texture used in Pikmin 2's Challenge Mode menu. (Used on Pikipedia in the {{stub}} template.)

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History

Artwork of the Pikmin Short Movies.
Promotional artwork for the movies.

In an interview with Shigeru Miyamoto in March of 2013, the creator of the Pikmin series announced Nintendo was working on a cartoon based on the franchise. In the interview, Miyamoto revealed that these cartoons would be released at some point in 2013 but before the next game in the series, Pikmin 3, which was still in development. The idea was to distribute them as 3DS videos, and he considered the idea of selling them if they become something bigger.

The idea for these cartoons came around when Miyamoto was trying to "give more life to the Pikmin characters". When asked if this was an attempt to make the 3DS less of a gaming-centric console, Miyamoto declared he hadn't thought about it that way. Instead, it's just taking advantage of the Pikmin series, and expanding its potential. If the idea were to flourish, Nintendo would do cartoons on other franchises as well.

Miyamoto stated that they’d considered doing something like this for Nintendo’s characters many times in the past, but avoided it because of the difference between an interactive game and a film. A film also requires much more "setting in stone" about the characters and world that could be limiting for the company when it comes to future games. However, with Pikmin they’re very small inside the game and players can’t see them well without zooming in close. So he thought shorts might be a good fit for the Pikmin series as it’d allow there to be more focus on the actual Pikmin.

In September of 2014, Miyamoto announced that three short animated movies would be shown at the Tokyo International film festival, which would happen from October 25th to October 31st. These short movies will be titled The Night Juicer, Treasures in a Bottle, and Occupational Hazards.

On October 25th, 2014, the movies were premiered at the Tokyo Film Festival. According to IGN, Miyamoto has completed 20-30 short films, yet has only left the three movies listed above for public viewing.[1]

After the shorts were presented, Shigeru Miyamoto and Dwango chairman Nobuo Kawakami held a press conference, and revealed more info on the shorts[2]. The two stated things such as the shorts soon after coming to the eShop. They also announced that they made the storyboard using Flipnote Studio 3D. Each film was planned to be 10 minutes long, but they ended up scrapping the idea and made some slightly longer and shorter ones. Other minor details were announced as well.

Nintendo Direct

On November 5th, 2014, Nintendo released the Pikmin shorts, for both 3DS and Wii U. The 3DS version featured 3D elements to it, while the Wii U version is in HD. He explained that storyboard was created using Flipnote Studio, instead of Flipnote Studio 3D that he said in a Japanese interview some time ago, possibly a form to hide the Flipnote Studio 3D delay since July 2013 in North America, Europe and Australia. During the Direct, Miyamoto also mentioned that a Pikmin 3 demo would be released after the direct, as a way for people who enjoyed the movies to get a feel for what Pikmin was like. During the same direct, Miyamoto stated that they would be holding various Pikmin events via Miiverse, the first of these being an Art Academy: Sketchpad contest. After the direct, Miyamoto also stated that "continuing campaigns such as these may lay the groundwork for the next iteration in the Pikmin series", leading fans to believe that Miyamoto may have hinted at a fourth Pikmin title being worked on for the Wii U.[3]

Miiverse Miiting

Artwork for the Pikmin Short Movies "Miiverse Miiting".
Artwork for the Miiting.

On November 22nd, 2014, a Japanese Miiverse user by the name of Marichan interviewed Shigeru Miyamoto about the movies. During the interview, Miyamoto revealed professional screenshots of the official storyboard, concept art of the opening to The Night Juicer, and gave a better look at the bulletin board seen in the same movie. He also discussed the making of the movies and some more minor details. The full interview can be seen here. In the Japanese edition, Miyamoto talks about Flipnote Studio and its sequel never released outside of Japan, but in the English version, Nintendo censored all of these mentions.[4][5]

Gallery

See also

References