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DreamWorks boss Jeffrey Katzenberg poses with two models in Berlin, Germany while promoting Trolls. Photos: EPA

Shrek creators plot world domination with new animated film Trolls

Singer Justin Timberlake and Anna Kendrick play the odd couple who have to save the miniature dolls from the troll-eating Bergens in a film that’s dominated by music

The world is about to be overrun by millions of grinning pink and blue plastic dolls whose hair stands on end.

That, at least, is what DreamWorks boss Jeffrey Katzenberg was hoping for this week as he gave the first sneak preview of Trolls at the Cannes film festival, which he is eyeing as his studio’s next animated children’s blockbuster.

After the screening, fans and even some grown journalists screamed with pleasure as pop star turned actor Justin Timberlake and co-star Anna Kendrick appeared on stage to sing True Colours from the soundtrack.

The pair voice the 3D film’s two main characters, the ever-smiling Princess Poppy and the lugubrious Branch, the odd couple who have to save the miniature dolls from the troll-eating Bergens.

Katzenberg said that thanks to Timberlake, who is also the film’s executive musical producer, “music plays a bigger role in this film than any DreamWorks film before”.

Justin Timberlake and Anna Kendrick at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, while on the promotion trail for Trolls.

The singer has also written and sung some tracks for the movie, which is to be released in November.

Its directors Mike Mitchell and Walt Dohrn are part of the team behind DreamWorks’ massively successful Shrek movies, and Katzenberg said they had brought much of its tongue-in-cheek humour to the film.

“You will notice little moments of irreverence and subversiveness,” he said as he introduced a clip in which one particularly frightened troll poos cupcakes.

Mitchell joked that their “familiarity with ogres led us to their not-so-distant cousins, trolls. We are fascinated by how the trolls, these scary ugly creatures have evolved into lovely happy creatures”.

The story opens in “Troll Village where everyone is perpetually happy”, Mitchell said. “Trolls spend most of their waking hours singing, dancing and hugging. Trolls even wear ‘Hug Time’ watches to remind them to hug every hour on the hour.”

But this idyll is shattered when the Bergens, “the most miserable creatures in the world”, attack, and some of Poppy’s best friends are troll-napped.

“There is only one thing that makes the Bergens happy, that is eating a troll,” Dohren added. So Poppy must persuade the only troll tough enough to take on the Bergens to help her – the “ever-prepared, overcautious Branch”, who is voiced by Timberlake.

“Branch happens to also be the only troll ever born who doesn’t sing or dance and most certainly doesn’t hug,” said Mitchell.

Justin Timberlake and Anna Kendrick at a photo call for Trolls at this month’s Cannes Film Festival.

In a nod to classic French cuisine, Dohrn said the Bergens’ favourite dish was “blanquette of trolls”, a hearty creamy stew made everywhere outside Bergen Town with veal.

The troll dolls were invented by a poverty-stricken Danish fisherman and woodcutter just before Christmas 1959. Thomas Dam had so little money he couldn’t afford to buy his daughter a present and carved her a troll doll instead.

He later opened a small factory making them in plastic with sticky-up hair. But because of an error in his copyrighting of the idea, Dam did not reap the benefits when they later became hugely popular worldwide.

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