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- Rolling Stone: How an 'Archer' Scene Gets Made
Over the last four years, FX's Archer has become one of the most popular cartoons made for adults each episode blends thrilling espionage plots with witty one-liners, make it one of the more smarter, under-the-radar shows around. This week, the show returns for its fifth season and one of the key characteristics of the show is the aesthetic. [It's] set in a vague, endless Cold-War era," says Neal Holman, a principle designer and art director for Archer. "The vague timeline allows us to cherry pick the stuff we like and ignore the elements that we don't. We can have muscle cars from the Seventies, computers from the Eighties and cellphones from the Nineties. An average episode takes about eleven weeks from the moment we get a script to the moment we turn it in. We generally have four episodes in production at a time in staggered phases, so we end up doing 13 episodes in 10 months." In this exclusive gallery, Holman breaks down the insides of a scene from a Fifth Season episode, whereArcher, Cyril and Ray have just been arrested in South America. The scene starts as they are en route to prison.