Guardians of the Lost Code
Film poster
SpanishBrijes 3D
Directed byBenito Fernández
Written byLuis Antonio Ávalos
Produced byCharbel Harp Calderoní
Ricardo González Duprat
Alfredo Harp Calderoní
Ray Zone
StarringJosé A. Toledano
Alondra Hidalgo
Miguel Calderón
CinematographyBenito Fernández
Edited byDiego Fernández
Edith Sanchez
Music byJuan Manuel Langarica
Production
companies
Fidecine
Santo Domingo Animation
Distributed byVideocine (Mexico)
Synkronized (United States)
Release date
  • September 16, 2010 (2010-09-16) (Mexico)[1][2]
Running time
89 minutes
CountriesMexico
United States
LanguagesSpanish
English

Guardians of the Lost Code (Spanish: Brijes 3D) is a 2010 animated adventure film, created by Ricardo González Duprat, distributed by Videocine.

Plot

During a field trip to the history museum, the students Freddy, Atzi, and Kimo discover a giant stone disk called the Codex in the storage room they are exploring. Three of the brije within it, the deities Quetzalcoatl, Ra and Chu Jung, emerge and reveal to them that they are the three people chosen to restore the ancestral alliance between humans and brijes, an alliance that was fractured with the emergence of science and technology.

The brijes are magical animal spirits that have been in contact with human beings since the beginning of time. Every human had a brije; the human cared for his brije and vice versa. When the human turned 13, a human shaman taught both partners a bonding technique that allowed them to synchronize and transform into a warrior form, gaining extraordinary power allowing them to perform various acts of heroism. Unfortunately, with the birth of modern science and technology, this union was slowly severed as humans stopped believing in magic, leading to tragic results. The brije in the Codex created and sealed themselves within it to protect the knowledge of the warrior form bonding technique from the forces of darkness that seek it.

To fulfill their mission, the Codex presents the chosen ones with their respective brijes (Hopper, Cloko and Bri) and shows them clues that will lead them to find the missing piece of the same to activate it. With their brijes and the help of Quetzalcoatl, Ra and Chu Jung, the chosen ones begin their journey through space and time to find the missing piece of the Codex, all while fighting against the forces of darkness.

Voice cast

Character Voice actor
Freddy José A. Toledano
Atzi Alondra Hidalgo
Kimo Miguel Calderón
Hopper and Freddy's Warrior Form Héctor Emmanuel Gómez
Cloko and Kimo's Warrior Form Óscar Flores
Bri and Atzi's Warrior Form Karla Falcón
Elmer José Luis Orozco
Zom Pol Balam Emilio Treviño
Zom Pol Balam (Warrior form) Édgar Vivar
Púas Carlos Espejel
Fangs and Púas Warrior Form Jesse Conde

Production

This Mexican-American animated adventure film uses both traditional animation and computer animation, produced by Santo Domingo Animation and directed by Benito Fernández, his directorial debut. The pre-production work was done in Toon Boom Storyboard Pro (animatics and storyboards). The post-production was done in Adobe After Effects (compositing and visual effects), Adobe Photoshop (background art), Autodesk Maya (computer animation), DigiCel FlipBook (clean-up animation), Pencil and Paper (hand drawn rough animation) and Toon Boom Harmony (digital ink-and-paint) to uses of hybrid of 2D animation and 3D animation.

Music

The film's original score was composed by Juan Manuel Langarica. Notable songs also uses several scenery tracks such as Sweet Dreams Are Made Of This 91' Remix by Eurythmics, Puttin On The Ritz by Taco Ockerse, Oh Yeah by Yello, Blitzkrieg Bop by Ramones, Godzilla by Blue Öyster Cult and AbraCadabra by Steve Miller Band credits only.

Release

This film was released in Mexico on September 16, 2010.

Critical reception

Not many critics reviewed this film, but the ones who did, gave generally negative reviews. A negative review came from Common Sense Media, who gave it two stars out of five.[3]

References

  1. "Brijes 3D, ver en línea en FilminLatino". Retrieved 30 June 2020 via www.filminlatino.mx.
  2. ""Brijes 3D" primer filme mexicano en 3D". MVS Noticias. 9 September 2010. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  3. Costello, Brian (13 August 2013). "Guardians of the Lost Code". Common Sense Media. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
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