The company was founded in May 2015 in
Bushwick, Brooklyn by James Belfer and Adam Belfer, viewing a perceived gap in the market for adult animation for digital and mobile audiences that they could fill.[3] The Studio would produce the animation for the documentary film Nuts! in 2016, which won a Special Jury prize at the
Sundance Film Festival.[4] Later, the company would expand into making animated series releasing the web series like Dogs in A Park.[5] In 2018, the company would increase production making the shows Human Kind Of and Liverspots and Astronots for
Facebook Watch and Alan & Elle for
IFC.[6][7][8] In 2019, the company would release its first feature, titled Film Tux and Fanny.[9] More recently, Cartuna partnered with
Syfy to produce shows for its
TZGZ block, specifically Science! in 2019 and Magical Girl Friendship Squad in 2020,[10] along with the associated pilot series released the same year, Magical Girl Friendship Squad: Origins.[11] Cartuna would also be responsible for work on Loafy, a series of animated shorts which aired on
Comedy Central.[2][12]
In September 2020, in an interview, Kelsey Stephanides, creator of Magical Girl Friendship Squad, argued that her show would have been "totally different" if another studio produced it.[1] Cartuna worked with over 100 artists on the series.[13] The animation was done on
Adobe Animate, the backgrounds done in
Adobe Photoshop, and character design done in both.[14] Five years earlier, while in school at
New York University, studying
Media,
Culture and
Communications, Stephanides, a fan of the
magical girl genre, came up with the idea for the show and was convinced by Belfer, a professor at the same school,[a] to pitch it to Cartuna.[15] After that, production on the series began, meant to be a "short-form pitch to networks," and it was pitched around for years until 2019, when
SYFY picked it up, wanting to reboot it, polish it more, and have longer episodes, leading to the creation of the main show, Magical Girl Friendship Squad, itself.
Also in September 2020, Cartuna picked a new Senior-Vice President named Mike Flavin, who formerly worked at
Gunpowder & Sky, an independent studio owned by
WarnerMedia. Belfer was quoted as saying that they were "doubling down" on development, adding that animation is a medium, rather than a genre, and noted Flavin's experience "from live-action development," allowing them to expand
adult animation in the future.[16]
In November 2020 it was announced that Cartuna would be collaborating with
Doing Things Media on a
IGTV series titled Office Fire.[2]
^Shepard, Keith.
"Dogs in a Park". Official website of Keith Shepard.
Archived from the original on April 26, 2019. Retrieved October 23, 2020. This is the website of the co-creator of the series.
^Havens, Lyndsey (August 19, 2016).
"DJ Mustard Shares Animated 'Don't Hurt Me' Video". Billboard.
Archived from the original on September 22, 2020. Retrieved November 12, 2020. Brooklyn based animation company Cartuna produced the video, which was animated and directed by Tasmanian native Felix Colgrave.