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POSTS FOR “September, 2005“September 13, 2005 10:34 am
![]() If you live in L.A. and can’t get to Ottawa next week - several screenings at Disney Concert Hall’s REDCAT Theatre in October might help. From Thursday Oct. 6th through Saturday Oct. 8th there will be three screenings of New International Animation.On October 6th, NEW ANIMATION FROM HONG KONG, CHINA AND JAPAN will feature several new shorts and the acclaimed Chinese feature MY LIFE AS McDULL. Friday night, October 7th, showcases HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE ANNECY FESTIVAL which includes new shorts by John Canemaker, Anthony Lucas and Ali Taylor. On Saturday night, PHANTOMS AND DREAMS is a program of more personal and experimental work, by the likes of Maureen Selwood, Raimund Krumme and Alex Budovsky, among many others. All programs start at 8pm. For more info check www.redcat.org September 13, 2005 10:20 am
I don’t know if you have any Dollar Tree stores near you, but thought you might want to know that they are carrying Chuck Jones’ book “Daffy Duck for President” for (you guessed it) $1 each. Out west we have the 99 Cents Only stores which seem to carry the same stock. I haven’t checked my local one yet, but the book is certainly worth a dollar. September 13, 2005 10:06 am
Reader Aaron Neathery sends in this observation: I saw this on Ebay and had to share. September 13, 2005 2:23 am
Studio 360, a program on Public Radio International, ran a 7-minute segment last weekend on the end of hand-drawn animation at Disney. The piece has some nice comments from historian John Canemaker and animator Tony West (co-director of DREAM ON SILLY DREAMER). The show also did a shorter segment about the passing of Joe Ranft with more thoughts from Canemaker. You can listen to both segments at the Studio 360 website, but I have no idea how long the audio files will be available, so you may want to head over there soon. Update: Tom writes in, “Your readers might want to know that they have a podcast feed at Studio 360. The episode on the end of Disney hand-drawn animation can be downloaded, for a limited time, September 13, 2005 1:55 am
![]() Here at Cartoon Brew, our general focus on entertainment-related animation makes it easy to forget that animation is a sophisticated visual medium that can also be used to educate and inform audiences. I was reminded of this when I ran across a new animated short by Lutz Vogel and Benjamin Stephan called TRUSTED COMPUTING, a visually striking “message film” about the potential hazards of the computer industry’s move towards a trusted computing platform. The film offers an introduction to this technology in layman’s terms, and gets across its point in a surprisingly effective manner, especially for a non-technical person like myself. Well worth checking out. September 13, 2005 1:45 am
We know that a lot of animation exec types read this site so here’s a message for you folks. Following the destruction of Hurricane Katrina, the School of Art at Louisiana State University is desperately seeking art supplies for children, college students and displaced adult artists. Dori Littell-Herrick, the chair of animation at Woodbury University, believes the animation industry can help. She writes:
Below is the original call for help from Stuart Baron, director of the School of Art at Lousiana State University. Contact details are included:
If your studio is capable of helping, let us know, and we’ll keep Brew readers posted on what the animation community is doing to help Katrina victims. September 12, 2005 2:25 am
Thanks to Jerry who’s been holding down the Brew fort while I was away in New York City. I was out there working on the design and layout for my upcoming 1950s animation design book. I’m pleased to report that the book is coming together really nicely. It’s been a long, occasionally difficult, journey getting to this point, but everything’s on track and the massive amount of artwork and text is slowly but surely taking form as a mighty solid book. I have to give props to Chronicle; they’ve been immensely supportive and helpful throughout the entire process. Last week, my editor offered up an additional sixteen pages, bringing the book’s total page count to 192. My designer and I will definitely be putting those extra pages to good use. ![]() Also, a couple more New York book plugs. My cartoonist friend Mark “Garbage Pail Kids” Newgarden is wrapping up work on a coffeetable collection of his cartoons and artwork called WE ALL DIE ALONE. I’ve seen handfuls of his work before, and I’m really looking forward to finally seeing an extensive collection of Mark’s funny and skewed cartoon work. The book will be out in October from Fantagraphics. Also, got to visit with the esteemed John Canemaker and had a chance to see the new revised edition of his book on Winsor McCay. No surprise here, but it’s yet another must-have Canemaker book. When I got back to LA, there was a review copy waiting for me in the mail and I can’t wait to dig in. Classic cartoonists rarely get this type of classy coffeetable book presentation, but if anybody deserves it, it’s McCay. Even if you already have the earlier version of John’s Winsor McCay book, there’s more than enough new material in this revised edition to justify the purchase. As a sidenote, Mark Newgarden also treated me to a cartoon screening of some of the weirdest classic cartoons I’ve seen in a while. If Jerry Beck is the master of the “worst cartoons show” then Mark is king of the “oddball cartoons show.” Among the highlights:
The other animation highlight of my New York trip was finally getting the chance to see the much-lauded animated feature MIND GAME (2004), directed by Masaaki Yuasa. The film was screening as part of the Museum of Modern Art’s anime film series, and ![]() The film’s brilliance doesn’t stem simply from the variety of visual styles and techniques that it employs, but rather from how director Yuasa incorporates style and technique into a thematically-complex, emotionally-involving narrative. To borrow a thought from animation critic Ben Ettinger (the individual who first turned me onto this film), “Few films I’ve ever seen combined artistic experimentation and comprehensibility in as thought-provoking and mind-bogglingly imaginative a package as this one…Never have I seen animation that was simultaneously so constantly interesting and exciting and that served a greater purpose than mere surface-level titillation. It all works together perfectly, and every moment has surprises.” My mind is so swamped with other things at the moment that I can’t devote the time to writing a proper review of this film, but rest assured I’ll be writing plenty more about MIND GAME in the months to come. This film heralds the arrival of a new age of the animated film where art, technology and story will be integrated in previously unimaginable ways. Here are links to more MIND GAME praise (and believe me, not a single word of it is hype): September 11, 2005 10:31 am
![]() Michel Gagné has just posted a free, hi-quality Quicktime version of his cult classic animated short PRELUDE TO EDEN (1995). The film is a tour de force of EFX animation and dynamic staging and layout. According to the production details posted on his site, it took Michel over four years to complete this film. Download PRELUDE TO EDEN HERE.
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