Animation
- Double...NO!...**TRIPLE Feature!**
That's a lie…it's a Triple Short! All one-reelers! An estimated 20 minutes for your animation edification!
1\) Kobu Tori, 1929, Aoji Chuzo, Yokohama Cinema From the western shores of the Pacific, the story of Kobutori Jiisan…
> …translated directly as "Lump-Taken Old Man" is a Japanese Folktale about an old man who had his lump (or parotid gland tumor) taken or removed by demons after joining a party of demons (oni) celebrating and dancing in the night.
-- from Wikipedia. ***
2\) The Karnival Kid, 1929, Walt Disney, Celebrity Productions From the opposite eastern Pacific shores of sunny Hollywood, CA, it's none other than Mickey and Minnie Mouse and singing frankfurters! According to user Dut…
> It was the first short animation in which Mickey actually spoke and his first spoken words were "Hot Dogs!" ***
BONUS TRIPLE CROWN LINK: Evil Mickey attacks Japan, 1934, Komatsuzawa Hajime, J.O. Talkie Manga-bu
Jonathon Crowe of openculture.com says of this one… > …this curious piece of early anti-American propaganda from 1936 that features a phalanx of flying Mickey Mouses…attacking an island filled with…other poorly-rendered cartoon characters [emphasis mine --Mongoose]. All seems lost until they are rescued by figures from Japanese history and legend. During its slide into militarism and its invasion of Asia, Japan argued that it was freeing the continent from the grip of Western colonialism. Of course, many in Korea and China, which received the brunt of Japanese imperialism, would violently disagree with that version of events.
- Bodies of Water | Short filmm.youtube.com Bodies of Water ~ Animated Short Film
When Lake is drowning in his own thoughts, Mac takes him on a lake-break. With all the leisure and chill, he definitely won’t be stuck in his head anymore.Th...
- Scavengers Reign | Official Teaser
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After their deep-space freighter is damaged, the stranded crew of the Demeter must fight to survive on a beautiful yet dangerous planet. In this surreal sci-fi animated series from creators Joseph Bennett and Charles Huettner, the remaining crew of a damaged interstellar freighter ship find themselves stranded on a beautiful yet unforgiving alien planet – where they must survive long enough to escape or be rescued. But as the survivors struggle to locate their downed ship and missing crewmates, their new home reveals a hostile world allowed to thrive without human interference. Featuring lush, visually stunning animation, Scavengers Reign presents a wholly unique view of the consequences of unchecked hubris and humanity’s eternal desire to conquer the unknown.
- Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft | First Look | Netflix
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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/9557664
> Netflix decided that video game adaptations are in
- Wish | Official Trailer
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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/9557210
> From the creators of Frozen comes: Frozen 1.5 > > Looks alright but very much in line with Disney's recent movies.
- GetAFix Visuals: Astrid - High On Melyewtu.be Astrix - High On Mel (No Comment Remix) - - - [[Full Visual Trippy Video Set]] - - - [GetAFix]
NOW LIVE STREAMING @ http://twitch.tv/Getafix_Visuals A trippy animated fan visual for "Astrix - High On Mel (No Comment Remix)" Loads more @ http://youtube.com/GetafixVisuals Fancy being a patron of the channel? - http://patreon.com/GetafixVisuals , I honestly, properly appreciate it :) Merchan...
Mongoose Says: A happy animated music video about the joys of living and loving.
No. It's not. It's not at all. But it's definitely worth seeing as is much of the other work by GetAFix Visuals.
- Studio Ghibli to become Nippon TV subsidiary
cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/moviesnob@lemmy.film/t/475383
> Studio Ghibli Inc., the production company of anime director Hayao Miyazaki, is set to become a subsidiary of Nippon Television Network Corp., with the major Japanese broadcaster aiming to help manage the studio, the companies say
- **THE INVENTOR Discussion Megapost** 2023-09-15 🎨🇫🇷
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.film/post/1212409
> | Title | The Inventor | > | --- | --- | > | Genre: | Animation, Family | > | MPAA Rating: | PG | > | Runtime | 01:32:00 | > | Release Date (USA): | September 15, 2023 | > | Director: | Jim Capobianco, Pierre-Luc Granjon | > | Main Cast: | Stephen Fry, Marion Cotillard, Daisy Ridley, Matt Berry | > | Summary: | Famous artist, engineer and inventor Leonardo da Vinci leaves Italy to join the French court where, with the help of the princess Marguerite de Nevarre, he can experiment freely. | > > Useful links: > > - Wikipedia > - IMDb > - Movie Insider > - Rotten Tomatoes > > --- > > This is the place for all your general discussion, personal and/or linked reviews regarding the new 2023 film, The Inventor, pinned for your convenience! > > Please, for the benefit of the community, use spoiler formatting if you must reveal! > > If you have a new movie release you think should be pinned, let us know (one to two weeks in advance, per cortesia)! And remember, just use the search icon 🔍 to find past Megapost discussions!
- WING IT! - Blender Open Movievideo.blender.org WING IT! - Blender Open Movie
WING IT! is an open movie, made entirely with Blender. Get the production files, assets and exclusive making-of videos by joining Blender Studio at https://studio.blender.org/wing-it -- An uptight engineer gets an unwelcome visit from a enthusiastic wannabe-pilot, causing both of them to be launched...
- Remember When 3D Animation Looked Like This? - Doodley
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> Art Direction vs. Realism
- Official Teaser Trailer for Hayao Miyazaki's last Feature film named "The Boy and the Heron"
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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/6938138
> PLOT: > Mahito, a young 12-year-old boy, struggles to settle in a new town after his mother's death. However, when a talking heron informs Mahito that his mother is still alive, he enters an abandoned tower in search of her, which takes him to another world. > > Release Date: The film is set to release in USA/CANADA on December. > Imax release date is December 8th.
- THE PEASANTS from the makers of LOVING VINCENT - teaser release dir. DK Welchman and Hugh Welchmanyt.artemislena.eu THE PEASANTS from the makers of LOVING VINCENT - teaser release dir. DK Welchman and Hugh Welchman
THE PEASANTS (CHŁOPI) Dir. DK Welchman and Hugh Welchman Poland, Serbia, Lithuania | 2023 | oil-painting animation | Polish THE PEASANTS tells the story of Jagna, a young woman determined to forge her own path within the confines of a late 19th century Polish village – a hotbed of gossip and on-go...
(I've put the MovieSnob LinkMonkey™ to work temporarily here at !animation@lemmy.film and here's what it dug up for today -- @kingmongoose7877@lemmy.film)
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🔗🐒 Hi! I'm the MovieSnob LinkMonkey™! 🔗🐒 Enjoy this link! It's Google-free!
Alternate Google-free link: https://yewtu.be/watch?v=RfsoP--5_NM
Bonus MovieSnob LinkMonkey™ Link: Official Movie Site
- Jim Tyer's Wiggly Worldwww.cartoonbrew.com Animator Spotlight: Jim Tyer
Tyer's crude drawings and off-kilter movements can give the impression of being slapdash, but like a great jazz musician improvises around a melody, Tyer expertly bent and stretched his characters with a playful sense of experimentation.
Even as a kid watching the original Terrytoons cartoons I couldn't help noticing there was always something strange about 'em. They wiggled, wobbled and warped like no other cartoons I'd seen! And here's one of the main reasons why: animator Jim Tyer.
Enjoy Vincent Alexander's tribute to the rubbery animations of Jim Tyer over at CartoonBrew!
- The Mystery of the Third Planet (1981) Soviet Sci-Fi Animation with English and Russian subtitles
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With all the present-day ugliness continuing far too long, here's something to remind us of the beauty that can be created.
From 1981, here is Roman Kachanov's beautifully animated children's story, The Mystery of the Third Planet, in its original form. With subtitles, yet!
Based on one of the Alisa Selezneva series of children's books by screenplay writer Kir Bulychev, Kachanov's film is beautfully animated using traditional cel animation techniques. No made-for-TV 4-frames-per-second job is this, the animation is technically spectacular. While parts are most likely rotoscoped, most of the film is not, demonstrating the grasp Kachanov and crew had on the art of movement.
Natalya Orlova's art direction and character design is a wonderful mix of Heinz Edelmann and eastern european design of the time (being mid-to late 1970s when production started). In my less-than-humble opinion, it is always refreshing seeing a style that isn't merely a Disney or Anime retread.
And dig that crazy sov-synth soundtrack by composer Aleksandr Zatsepin, (from the Wikipedia article) often described as a milestone in Soviet electronic music.
Alternate Google-free Link: https://iv.melmac.space/watch?v=DBOVmZgLsxk&t=206&iv_load_policy=1
- On this day in 1908, the first animated film was released: Émile Cohl's "Fantasmagorie"
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/2259501
> >An animated film by French caricaturist, cartoonist and animator Émile Cohl. It is one of the earliest examples of hand-drawn animation, and considered by many film historians to be the very first animated cartoon. Despite appearances the animation is not created on a blackboard but rather on paper, the blackboard effect achieved by shooting each of the 700 drawings onto negative film. The title is a reference to the “fantasmograph”, a mid-19th century variant of the magic lantern that projected ghostly images on to surrounding walls. > > (The Public Domain Review)
Thanks to @antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com!
- One of These Days...Ian Emes R.I.P.www.cartoonbrew.com Ian Emes, Celebrated British Animator And Long-Time Pink Floyd Collaborator, Dies At 73
An artist who worked across many mediums, his animation work with Pink Floyd and Linda McCartney still has the power to dazzle.
Today's kind of a sad day here at c/animation@lemmy.film.
"I Hate Pink Floyd." That was the phrase famously scrawled on Johnny Rotten's t-shirt when he first "auditioned" for The Sex Pistols way back in 1975. And it was also true for me as a kid, cemented (much) later by Roger Waters' masturbatory epic "cry for the rich kid" The Wall. I also hate Pink Floyd. But I digress.
Ian Emes, experimental animator most famous for the work done for Pink Floyd (and many others in the music business) had died, as best as I can nail it down, July 23 of this year. And that is very sad.
When I was a MovieSnob in training, I saw (EDIT 16:00:32, CEST) Emes' French Windows on the big screen, the opening short of an all-animation festival (including Will Vinton's Closed Mondays and the Fleischers' Superman, The Mechanical Monsters!). And Kid MovieSnob was impressed. So, regardless of being considered the de facto Pink Floyd animator, thanks from the bottom of my icy heart, Mr. Emes. You at least showed me what animation could be.
Bonus-Because-I-Love-You Link: Emes' French Windows in HD, instead of CB's 360px linked video.
- Cartoon Brew: The Animation That Changed Me: Elaine Bogan on 'Pee-wee's Playhouse'www.cartoonbrew.com The Animation That Changed Me: Elaine Bogan on 'Pee-wee's Playhouse'
The show "reminds me of just how profound an impact animation can have on a young mind," says Bogan.
Since I'm on the same page as director/storyboard artist Elaine Bogan regarding all things Pee-Wee, I'll forgive her for liking dragons and trolls a lot…I mean, a lot. Bordering on unhealthy "a lot."
R.I.P. Paul Reubens.
- A Lousy Shame
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Waaaaaaay back in pre-Russian War in Ukraine, pre-COVID-19 2017, The Blender Foundation released their annual proof-of-concept short, Agent 327: Operation Barbershop, based on Dutch comic strip artist Martin Lodewijk's secret agent, Agent 327.
It was wonderful!
Unlike, many of the other proof-of-concept short the Blender groups present, this one had none of that…smell, that new features showreel smell where the 3D took center stage and precedence over the actual writing or plot. Agent 327: Operation Barbershop was almost four minutes of solid entertainment and certainly deserving of further exploration.
The project died there. No feature-length nor featurette ever came of it like it was discussed at the time of its release. Too bad. Who knows what could have come of it?
Anyway, enjoy Agent 327: Operation Barbershop.
- «FÉRTIL» by Felipe Del Rio
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Have a peek. It's only (just over) two minutes of your time. Better than, say, Zack Snyder's Justice League. And who isn't a sucker for timelapse photography?
- Ippei Kuri, Co-Founder And Former President Of ‘Speed Racer,’ ‘Robotech,’ 'Gatchaman' Studio Tatsunoko Production, Dies At 83www.cartoonbrew.com Ippei Kuri, Co-Founder And Former President Of ‘Speed Racer,’ ‘Robotech,’ 'Gatchaman' Studio Tatsunoko Production, Dies At 83
Kuri was an accomplished manga artist, producer, character designer, animator, and director several iconic anime series.
I can't believe nobody posted anything in regards here anywhere at https://lemmy.film! 5000 posts drooling over Barbie and Oppenheimer* but not a word about Kuri's passing. And I don't even like anime, generally!
From the linked article…
> The Yoshida brothers’ impact on the Japanese animation industry is hard to overstate. The work done by Kuri and his siblings and Tatsunoko has stood the test of time and helped define several generations of the art form.
…emphasis mine.
- Star-Studded Stop-Motion Musical 'The Inventor' Gets Official Trailer Ahead Of August 25 Theatrical Debutwww.cartoonbrew.com Star-Studded Stop-Motion Musical 'The Inventor' Gets Official Trailer Ahead Of August 25 Theatrical Debut
'Ratatouille' scribe Jim Capobianco makes his feature directorial debut with 'The Inventor,' which screen in the main competition at Annecy.
From the linked article…
> This is one of the most exciting independent animated features set to come out in 2023 and feels like it could be a serious contender come awards season. In 2022 the film got an Annecy work-in-progress presentation and this year it played in the festival’s main competition.
With the voices of Stephen Fry, Daisy Ridley, Marion Cotillard, Gauthier Battoue, and Matt Berry.
- East Coast WGA Members Promise To Add Animation Writers To Their Ranks After Strike Is Resolvedwww.cartoonbrew.com East Coast WGA Members Promise To Add Animation Writers To Their Ranks After Strike Is Resolved
The fight to get animation writers included among the ranks of the Writers Guild of America is moving forward - at least on the east coast.
cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/874980
> The fight to get animation writers included among the ranks of the Writers Guild of America is moving forward - at least on the east coast.
- Queer Wish-Fulfillment and Parent Death in Steven Universecohost.org Queer Wish-Fulfillment and Parent Death in Steven Universe
@fraaan asked: <blockquote> am I remembering correctly that you liked Steven universe? Would you wanna go off about it? a more focused question that you are welcome to ignore if you'd rather focus on something else abt the show: Why does it somehow feel like an even more...
I saw this essay on Cohost and found it an interesting read. I've been rewatching Steven Universe recently, and have been getting back into the really meaty part of the show, where the idolized image of Steven's mother starts to unravel. For a show for kids/teens, Steven Universe goes pretty hard.
- Want poignant?
Leave the emotional blackmail to Spielberg and Disney. Some movies don't need to resort to incinerating toys or deer, or hunting down dying, friendly aliens to elicit an emotional reaction less lizard-brain than a jump scare from an audience.
It was truly touching in its subtlety, Ma vie de Courgette (2016), a French-Swiss co-production released as My Life as a Courgette (UK) or My Life as a Zucchini (North America), a stop-motion animated featurette by Swiss director Claude Barras, based on the novel, Autobiographie d'une Courgette by Gilles Paris.
The plot revolves around a child nicknamed Courgette, how he ends up in an orphanage, his adjustment to his new life and to the other children living there. This isn't Annie or Oliver!: although it's an animated film, these ugly-cute characters are rarely cartoonish. After Courgette's arrival at the orphanage, the film then goes into the other orphan's stories. While their stories are obviously never pleasant, some are downright tragic with accompanying emotional scarring.
Director Barras never goes for shock or melodrama during Courgette. It's his restraint that gives the film its strength. The film is airy, but not lightweight. The characters and their personal tragedies are presented as matter of fact, enough to give them depth but not to horrify or titillate. Despite the character design they are all presented as realistic, from the children to the policeman that handles Courgette's case to the administrators of the orphanage. Despite the subject matter, the children and the staff bring plenty of genuine smiles and occasional laughs to the table throughout the film. There are two especially touching moments—one, Rosy, the orphanage worker, kisses the children good night on the cheek; the other when Courgette and Camille hold hands on the schoolbus—that could have been merely maudlin tropes but instead illustrate how loving physical contact is as necessary as eating and breathing.
The only "cartoon" character is the aunt of Camille, a newly arrived orphan, and her storyline was the only discordant note of the film, veering out into cliché territory, but under Barras' direction, not too far out.
Ma vie de Courgette was nominated for the 2017 Academy Awards' Best Animated Feature Film and won Best Animated Film at France's 42nd Cesár Awards, but who cares? If you didn't catch it the first time around or if you're looking for a poignant film that won't insult your intelligence, I strongly suggest you see Courgette.
Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons, fair use
- In dreams, you're mine
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.film/post/231568
> I have a confession to make that may disturb many of you. I've tried to combat this aversion but have failed, so now I have to live with it. Let me don my Kevlar™ vest. Take a deep breath and… > > I generally don't like anime. I find it mostly boring and repetitive. If you've seen one giant robot… > > You must have heard this one knock knock joke regarding a banana before. You must have. Oh, well… > > Knock knock > Who's there? > Banana > Banana who? > Knock knock > Who's there? > Banana > Banana who?? > Knock knock > Who's there? > Banana > Banana who??? > Knock knock > Who's there? > Banana > Banana who?!? > > …this charming exercise goes on ad nauseum until the racconteur decides to finish with… > > Knock knock > Who's there? > Orange > Orange who? > Orange ya glad I didn't say Banana?! > > …and that, mes ami, is how I perceive most anime. > > Why did I call you all here today? To talk about Paprika (2006) by Satoshi Kon, produced by Madhouse animation studio. It's a wild, wobbly, surreal ride into the world of dreams. I'm not going to say it's anime cliché-free: just as American or Indian cinema have their own formulaic bromides—stylistic or cultural—Nipponic cinema, especially anime, also has its own. There's no escaping your roots. > > The plot is a science-fiction police procedural: Tokita—a cartoonish, morbidly obese, bumbling engineering genius—invents a headset device dubbed the DC Mini for an unnamed firm headed by The Chairman, who—get this—is literally confined to a wheelchair. So far, so anime. The DC Mini headset allows dream co-habitation between two or more wearers (theoretically, doctor and patient); the psychiatrist (headset wearer no. 1) may enter and influence a (headset wearer no. 2) patient's REM dream state to better study the patient's psyche. The DC Mini is still in prototype stage, all its security precautions haven't yet been worked out, and of course multiple headsets have been stolen. Someone is trying to control everybody's dreams. It's up to the other protagonists, mainly Detective Konakawa, Dr. Chiba and her dream alter ego, Paprika, to solve the mystery. > > While the idea is high-concept science-fiction, the story itself isn't much deeper than your typical manga[^1]—the film is based on 1993 novel by Yasutaka Tsutsui—nor is the style anything you haven't seen before in anime. For the given subject matter, the art direction is quite linear and not at all abstract nor dreamlike. But it's Kon's presentation that gives it its depth. The dream sequences that unexpectedly weave in and out of the film's reality are intriguing enough; the opening titles are a wonderful example as is the hilarious shot of a line of salarymen, in tribute to Esther Williams, that take a nosedive off of an office building! But the main event is "The Festival", a fever-dream mad parade that extends to the horizon of marching refrigerators, medical simulation mannequins, waving neko cats, golden Buddhas, dolls dolls and more dolls and just about every other absurdity in a never-ending parade. Everything ebbs and flows like made of soft putty. > > It is impossible not to make the connection between this film and Nolan's later Inception (2010). Paprika had to be an inspiration to Nolan (and apparently your King presumes correctly). > > For such a surreal premise, it's paradoxically grounded and straightforward; it's closer in spirit to Vanilla Sky than Mulholland Drive. The film's broadstroke characters, its resolution and the ending were all a bit…anime…for my tastes (there's no escaping kaiju or mecha in Japanimation, I suppose). But forgiving all that, Paprika is still entertaining and definitely worth seeing at very least for its spectacular eye candy. So, for now you can keep your Akiras, your Evangelions and your Cowboy Bebops. But I am all about Paprika! > > [^1]: Relax, I know saying your typical manga means nothing as there are hundreds of different genres. Nevertheless, admit it, you're not normally going to find Sartre-, Hemingway- or Dostoevsky-level literature in your average comic book/manga/fumetto/whatever. No matter how much incest or revenge you want to infuse, it still ain't Shakespeare.
- ‘Castlevania’ Studio Unionizes, Marking Expansion for The Animation Guildwww.hollywoodreporter.com ‘Castlevania’ Studio Unionizes, Marking Expansion for The Animation Guild
A new union at the Austin-based Powerhouse Animation Studios is the IATSE Local's first foray outside of California and New York.
As a member of the guild who's big on WFH and the potential to not have to live in LA, this is great news! 💪