Pierre Perifel
Pierre Perifel (born March 19, 1980) in Lyon, France, is a French animator and director renowned for his contributions to DreamWorks Animation, where he has helmed the feature films The Bad Guys (2022) and its sequel The Bad Guys 2 (2025), alongside the short film Bilby (2018).[1][2][3] Born in France, Perifel studied animation at Gobelins, l'école de l'image in Paris before embarking on a career that spans both 2D and 3D animation.[4] He began as a professional animator in France and later relocated to California, joining DreamWorks Animation where he accumulated over 15 years of experience in various roles, including character designer, storyboard artist, and supervising animator.[5] Early in his tenure at the studio, Perifel contributed to acclaimed projects such as Kung Fu Panda 2 (2011) as a character animator, Rise of the Guardians (2012) as lead character animator for North and supervising animator, and Shrek Forever After (2010) in the animation department.[1][3] Perifel's directorial debut came through DreamWorks' shorts program with Bilby, a 2018 CGI-animated short co-directed with Liron Topaz and JP Sans, which originated from elements of the canceled feature Larrikins where he served as head of animation.[6] The film, set in the Australian outback and focusing on a bilby's unlikely journey into parenthood, showcased his ability to blend humor, emotion, and innovative storytelling in a compact format and won the Jury's Choice Award at SIGGRAPH 2018 and the Audience Award at the Palm Springs International Festival of Short Films.[7]) Building on this, Perifel transitioned to feature directing with The Bad Guys, an adaptation of Aaron Blabey's book series that features a heist-inspired visual style and irreverent tone, earning praise for its fresh approach to animated comedy.[8][5] His work on the sequel continued this momentum, incorporating blended 2D and 3D techniques influenced by anime while expanding the franchise's themes of redemption and unlikely heroism.[3] Throughout his career, Perifel has emphasized the evolution from hands-on animation to oversight of entire productions, drawing on a decade of feature film experience to inform his directing style.[6] Based in Burbank, California, he remains a key figure at DreamWorks, contributing to its tradition of innovative family entertainment.[4]Early life and education
Upbringing in France
Pierre Perifel was born in Lyon, Rhône, France.[9] Public information about his family background remains limited. France is renowned for its animation heritage and as a crossroads of global artistic influences.[10] This setting fostered his early fascination with visual storytelling, drawing him toward creative expression from a young age.[10] Perifel's initial exposure to animation came through French media, including domestic animated films and European productions, as well as the influx of Japanese anime that reached France decades earlier than in many other countries.[11] He was particularly influenced by French graphic novels and comic books, known as bandes dessinées, which shaped his appreciation for dynamic character design and narrative flair.[11] These elements sparked his interest in drawing during childhood and adolescence, leading to personal sketches that explored storytelling ideas.[12] By high school, Perifel's passion for animation had solidified, ignited by a pencil test from Disney's Tarzan created by animator Glen Keane and a documentary about the prestigious Gobelins animation school.[11] His early pursuits laid the groundwork for transitioning to structured training at local art schools in France.[10]Formal training in animation
Pierre Perifel began his formal training in animation at École Émile Cohl in Lyon around 2000, where he developed foundational skills in drawing, illustration, and 2D animation techniques.[13] In 2003, he transferred to Gobelins, l'École de l'Image in Paris, a prestigious institution renowned for its animation programs, and graduated in 2005 at the top of his class, with a focus on advanced character animation and narrative filmmaking.[14][13][15] During his time at Gobelins, Perifel created the collaborative student short A Swell Plan in 2004, which examined comedic timing and character dynamics through the naive antics of a young boy who, infatuated with a girl after seeing her kiss her pregnant mother's belly, overeats to swell his own stomach in hopes of receiving a similar kiss.[16][17] As a capstone to his studies, Perifel co-directed the short Le Building in 2005 alongside Marco Nguyen, Xavier Ramonède, Rémi Zaarour, and Olivier Staphylas, a team effort produced over four-and-a-half months from December 2004 to April 2005 that integrated traditional 2D animation, Flash elements, and 3D modeling with tools including Maya, Photoshop, After Effects, and Flash MX2004. The film explores themes of neighborly annoyance, following an elderly woman irritated by her upstairs neighbor's off-key shower singing, which sparks an absurd chain of escalating mishaps across the apartment building. It earned immediate festival acclaim, screening as the opening short at the 2005 Annecy International Animated Film Festival and competing successfully at events like the Ottawa International Animation Festival.[18][19][20][21]Professional career
Early professional roles in Europe
Following his graduation from Gobelins, l'école de l'image, in 2005, Pierre Perifel began his professional animation career in Europe with freelance and studio-based roles in 2D animation, honing technical skills in character movement and design. His early projects included work as an animator on the animated feature Curious George (2006), produced by Universal Pictures and Imagine Entertainment, at the French studio Neomis Animation.[22][13] In 2007, Perifel worked as an animator on the Spanish-French fantasy film Nocturna, directed by Adrià García and Víctor Maldonado.[13] That same year, he served as an animator on the French-Belgian Western comedy Go West: A Lucky Luke Adventure, directed by Olivier Jean-Marie.[13] Perifel's early European tenure culminated in his role as an animator and secondary character designer for Neomis on The Illusionist (2010), directed by Sylvain Chomet, with production beginning prior to 2008; here, he oversaw movements and designs for supporting characters in the film's poignant, hand-drawn tale of an aging magician, building on his prior experience in fluid 2D techniques.[23] These roles from 2005 to 2008 established Perifel's foundation in European 2D animation studios, emphasizing precise character animation before his transition to international opportunities.[13]Entry and progression at DreamWorks Animation
In 2008, Pierre Perifel relocated from France to the United States to join DreamWorks Animation as an animator, leveraging his prior European experience in 2D animation to facilitate a smooth transition to CGI workflows.[24][9] His initial role was as an animator on the short film Kung Fu Panda: Secrets of the Furious Five (2008), for which he won an Annie Award for his hand-drawn animation.[13] Perifel's responsibilities expanded shortly thereafter on Monsters vs. Aliens (2009), where he worked as an animator for approximately two months, focusing on the film's ensemble of quirky creature designs and its high-energy action sequences that blended humor with spectacle.[25] By 2011, he returned to the Kung Fu Panda franchise for Kung Fu Panda 2, contributing to the animation department with an emphasis on fluid martial arts choreography, including lead animation duties for the antagonist Lord Shen and select 2D hybrid sequences that enhanced the film's dynamic fight scenes.[25][26] His career progressed to more supervisory roles with Rise of the Guardians (2012), where Perifel was promoted to lead character animator for North (the Santa Claus-inspired figure) and overall supervising animator, guiding junior animators in developing expressive, holiday-themed performances that captured the character's boisterous personality and mythical warmth.[27][25] This promotion marked a shift toward leadership, as evidenced by his LinkedIn profile detailing his tenure as supervising animator from September 2011 to February 2014.[4] Perifel's seniority culminated in his role as head of character animation on the short film To: Gerard (2020), where he oversaw the emotional depth of performances in a heartfelt narrative about magic and kindness shared between an elderly man and a young girl, ensuring nuanced expressions that amplified the story's themes of inspiration and connection.[28][29][30]Shift to directing
Perifel's transition to directing was spurred by frustrations with several canceled DreamWorks projects during the mid-2010s, prompting him to develop independent shorts as a creative outlet around 2015-2017.[31] These experiences highlighted the instability of studio development, leading him to focus on personal storytelling to refine his directorial voice.[14] His directorial debut came with the 2018 short Bilby, a seven-minute film co-directed with Liron Topaz and JP Sans, centering on a bilby marsupial safeguarding a vulnerable egg in the Australian outback. Produced during a period of relative downtime at DreamWorks, the short emphasized raw emotional bonds amid harsh wilderness visuals, earning nominations for Best General Audience Animated Short Subject and Outstanding Achievement for Storyboarding in Animation at the 46th Annie Awards. Its success, including an Audience Award at the Palm Springs International ShortFest, validated Perifel's shift toward intimate, character-driven narratives.[32] Transitioning to features proved challenging, as Perifel faced repeated rejections while pitching original ideas internally at DreamWorks, often due to the studio's preference for established IPs.[31] He persisted by creating a detailed teaser animatic, which ultimately secured his selection to direct The Bad Guys (2022), an adaptation of Aaron Blabey's children's book series that blended heist comedy with themes of character redemption and moral ambiguity.[31] The film's stylistic choices drew from influences like Quentin Tarantino's rhythmic pacing and ensemble dynamics, allowing Perifel to explore anti-heroes faking reform while grappling with genuine change.[33] Building on this momentum, Perifel co-directed The Bad Guys 2 (2025) with JP Sans, who had previously collaborated on Bilby.[34] The sequel expanded the core ensemble by introducing new villains, heightening stakes in a global heist while navigating pressures to sustain the original's visual flair and comedic timing after its predecessor's $250 million worldwide box office gross; the sequel itself grossed approximately $237 million worldwide as of November 2025.[35][36] These challenges included balancing escalated action with character growth, ensuring the film's irreverent humor resonated for family audiences without diluting its edge.[34] In interviews, Perifel has articulated a directing philosophy rooted in disrupting conventional CGI norms by blending 2D-inspired aesthetics—such as exaggerated poses, painterly textures, and hand-drawn effects—with 3D animation to inject personality and imperfection.[37] He emphasizes authorship and cultural influences from French bande dessinée and Japanese anime to create visually dynamic worlds that challenge viewers' expectations.[10] On thematic fronts, Perifel prioritizes exploring morality in animation, using flawed protagonists to discuss redemption and ethical gray areas in ways accessible yet profound for family viewers, fostering empathy through humor and heart.[37] This approach stems from his prior leadership as head of character animation on the 2020 short To: Gerard, where he honed techniques for expressive, emotionally layered performances.[38]Filmography
Directing credits for feature films
Pierre Perifel's feature film directing debut was The Bad Guys (2022), a DreamWorks Animation production based on the children's book series by Aaron Blabey.[39] The film features voice performances including Sam Rockwell as Mr. Wolf and Marc Maron as Mr. Snake.[40] It has a runtime of 100 minutes and grossed over $250 million worldwide.[35] Perifel co-directed the sequel The Bad Guys 2 (2025) with JP Sans, released on August 1, 2025, and also produced by DreamWorks Animation as a continuation based on Blabey's book series.[41][42] The film, with a runtime of 104 minutes, earned positive critical reception with an 87% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and grossed over $230 million worldwide in its theatrical run.[41][43]Directing credits for short films
Pierre Perifel's directing credits for short films encompass both his student work and a professional production at DreamWorks Animation. "Le Building" (2005) is a 1-minute-30-second animated comedy co-directed by Perifel with Marco Nguyen, Xavier Ramonède, Rémi Zaarour, and Olivier Staphylas as a thesis project at Gobelins, l'École de l'image.[18] The film humorously portrays a chain reaction of apartment building disturbances, beginning with a resident's singing disrupting an elderly woman's TV viewing and escalating through vengeful neighbor interactions.[19] It served as the opening short for the 2005 Annecy International Animation Film Festival.[20] "Le Building" received the Best Student Film award at the Ottawa International Animation Festival, among other student honors.[18] "Bilby" (2018) is an 8-minute CGI-animated short co-directed by Perifel with Liron Topaz and JP Sans for DreamWorks Animation.[7] Set in the Australian outback, it follows a reclusive bilby named Perry who reluctantly adopts and protects a vulnerable duckling from environmental perils and predators, exploring themes of unexpected parenthood.[44] The film premiered theatrically alongside the feature "Missing Link" and garnered festival recognition, including the Jury's Choice Award at the SIGGRAPH 2018 Computer Animation Festival and the Audience Award for Best Animation Short at the Palm Springs International ShortFest.[45][44]Animation and design credits
Perifel's animation and design contributions span a range of projects, primarily in supporting roles that honed his expertise in character animation before his transition to directing. These credits demonstrate his versatility across 2D and 3D formats, from inbetweening to supervising animation.[9]| Year | Project | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Curious George | Inbetween animator[46] |
| 2007 | Nocturna | Animator (Ricochets Productions)[47] |
| 2007 | Go West: A Lucky Luke Adventure | Animator[48] |
| 2008 | Kung Fu Panda | Animator (characters Zeng and Commander Vachir, uncredited)[1] |
| 2009 | Monsters vs. Aliens | Animator[1] |
| 2010 | Shrek Forever After | Animator[49] |
| 2010 | The Illusionist | Animator (Neomis)[1] |
| 2011 | Kung Fu Panda 2 | Animator[1] |
| 2012 | Rise of the Guardians | Lead character animator (North) and supervising animator[13] |
| 2020 | To: Gerard | Head of character animation[50] |