본문으로 건너뛰기

Getting down to (data) business with ‘The Boss Baby: Family Business’

Boss Baby screenshot
James-Whitemore
James Whitemore
70 조회수

“Cookies are for closers!”

One my favorite lines from the 2017 DreamWorks Animation blockbuster comedy, The Boss Baby, voiced by none other than Alec Baldwin, is, of course, a play on his now-famous line from 1992’s Glengarry Glen Ross, “Coffee is for closers!” Brilliant!

Before diving in to the formula-gulping sequel, The Boss Baby: Family Business, and how NetApp technology played a key role in DreamWorks delivering their longest animated film to date in the middle of a global pandemic, let’s run through a quick refresher on the Oscar®-nominated original from 2017.

Seven-year-old Tim Templeton is one happy kid. That is, until his new suit-wearing, briefcase-toting baby brother arrives on the scene to steal all his parents’ attention. One night, Tim hears a voice coming from inside his brother's bedroom and discovers... his baby brother can talk. Many a battle ensue before the dust finally settles and their brotherly love bubbles to the surface. Not a second too soon, of course, because they must work side by side to stop a dastardly plot hatched by Puppy Co.’s evil CEO (Steve Buscemi). Spoiler alert: they do.

Enter The Boss Baby: Family Business, arriving in U.S. theaters today, and streaming on Peacock for 60 days.

The Templeton brothers—Tim (James Marsden) and his Boss Baby little bro, Ted (once again, Alec Baldwin)—have become adults and drifted apart. Tim is a stay-at-home dad, while Ted is a hedge fund CEO. When uncle Ted stops by for a visit, Tim’s newborn daughter, Tina, reveals that she’s—ta-da!—a top secret agent for BabyCorp, whose new baby formula can turn adults back into babies for 48 hours. Once she convinces the brothers to drink up, they launch a mission to uncover the dark secrets behind her older sister’s school and its mysterious founder.

Boss Baby screenshot

What I adore most about this lovable franchise is how closely Tim and Ted’s teamwork and ability to pivot quickly as new challenges arise, mimics the partnership of NetApp and DreamWorks.

On every one of its CG films produced in the last 20 years, DreamWorks has made heavy use of NetApp technologies, including cloud data services, storage systems, data and virtualization software, and tools that simplify management of applications and data. Not unlike The Boss Baby brothers, together we’ve battled plot twists every step of the way. You know—latency, downtime, capacity limits, dreadful management tasks, unplanned events, security risks, etc., etc., etc.

With The Boss Baby: Family Business, an entirely new villain appeared in the form of a pandemic that forced everyone on the production to work from home. A monumental inconvenience for any animated film, this happened to be DreamWorks Animation’s longest to date, consisting of 140,712 frames compared to the before-times-produced The Boss Baby’s 125,474. Like with another DreamWorks Animation film released during this trying time, we were able to pivot quickly and deliver the solutions they needed to keep productivity high and moving positively toward completion.

Incredibly, 99% of the film’s lighting, 85% of the rendering, and 95% of the FX shots were completed in a work from home environment. And while we’re talking numbers, on average, 60,241 jobs were rendered daily, 300 million core render hours were required to complete the film, and The Boss Baby: Family Business is comprised of over 268 million digital files utilizing an estimated 955 terabytes of data. Astounding!

Boss Baby screenshot

In 2018, DreamWorks and NetApp entered into a multiyear strategic alliance to advance the studio’s hybrid cloud data management environment in support of their creative and business objectives.

As Kate Swanborg, DreamWorks Senior VP of Technology Communications and Strategic Alliances, puts it, “NetApp creates an infrastructure for us that is robust and stable. We trust NetApp’s people. They work side by side with our engineers to future-proof our strategies.”

We’re incredibly proud that our technology played such a key role in pulling off the impossible to bring The Boss Baby: Family Business across the finish line. We think the Boss Baby would agree that everyone involved has definitely earned their cookies.

Learn more about how NetApp supports DreamWorks.

James-Whitemore

James Whitemore

James Whitemore는 NetApp의 최고 마케팅 책임자입니다. 회사의 글로벌 마케팅 전략을 발전시키고 시장 인지도를 강화하여 빠른 성장을 주도하는 일을 담당합니다. 클라우드 컴퓨팅, 네트워킹 및 스토리지 업계의 베테랑으로서 글로벌 영업, 제품 관리 및 마케팅 전략을 성공적으로 이끌고 시행한 25년 이상의 경력을 보유하고 있습니다. 2016년 초에 SolidFire 인수를 통해 NetApp에 합류한 이후 팀의 핵심 일원으로서 NetApp의 마케팅 전략을 개발하고 운영하여 NetApp의 지위를 스토리지에서 데이터 및 클라우드로 조정하는 데 핵심적인 역할을 했습니다. 이전에는 NetApp의 현장 및 수요 마케팅 부사장으로 현대적인 수요 엔진과 관리형 현장 및 파트너 마케팅, 수요 센터, 글로벌 캠페인, 이벤트 마케팅, 디지털 마케팅, 소셜, 영향력 및 커뮤니티 마케팅을 이끌었습니다. SolidFire의 CMO로서 전 세계의 클라우드 사용을 발전시킨다는 미션을 이끌었으며 모든 기업, 제품 및 현장 마케팅 업무를 담당했습니다. SolidFire에 입사하기 전에는 클라우드 중심 스타트업 회사에서 영업 및 마케팅 업무를 담당하면서 유럽, 아시아 및 미국의 SAVVIS, Sun Microsystems, IBM, StorageTek, Standard Telephones and Cables에서 다양한 영업 및 마케팅 직책을 맡았습니다. 영국 노섬브리아대학교에서 경영학 학사 학위를 받았습니다.James Whitemore의 모든 게시물 보기
Getting down to (data) business with 'The Boss Baby: Family Business'