October 22, 2005

Corpse Bride Director in Montreal

Mikek Johnson

FPS magazine began an excellent series of lectures last summer called the Animation Innovator series. Their first guest was animation legend Ray Harryhausen, and the series continues next Wednesday, October 26, with a presentation by CORPSE BRIDE director Mike Johnson. The event takes place in Montreal at Concordia University (Hall Alumni Auditorium, 1455 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Montreal, Quebec). Johnson, who has also worked on THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, JAMES AND THE GIANT PEACH and THE PJS, will discuss the making of CORPSE BRIDE and show puppets from the production. The presentation will also include a screening of Johnson's short film THE DEVIL WENT DOWN TO GEORGIA. Ticket info and further details are at the FPS website.


Posted by AMID at 06:05 PM

October 21, 2005

Guinness "Evolution" Commercial

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This is a pretty cool CG/live-action commercial for Guinness helmed by Danny Kleinman, director of the title sequences of the past five Bond movies. Watch it HERE or read more about the commercial at the BBC.


Posted by AMID at 01:44 PM

October 20, 2005

CRAIG HARRIS

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Craig Harris is a talented newcomer working at James Baxter Animation by day, blogging and illustrating books at night.


Posted by JERRY at 07:58 AM

One Froggy Tune

One Froggy Evening

Most Brew readers have likely seen Chuck Jones's ONE FROGGY EVENING (1955) more times than they can count, but do you know the answers to the following questions:

Were the songs "real" songs or were they written especially for ONE FROGGY EVENING?
Who wrote them and when?
Are these all turn-of-the-century songs?
What are the songs really about - what are the rest of the lyrics?

This neat little WEBSITE answered all those questions and told me more about the classic Jones short than I ever wanted to know.


Posted by AMID at 12:54 AM

DISNEY'S TOTORO DUB

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Sunday night I'll be moderating a Q&A at the Hollywood Film Festival closing night World Premiere for Disney's dub of MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO. Hayao Miyazaki's 1988 animated classic has been re-dubbed by an all-star cast including Dakota Fanning, Timothy Daly and Pat Carroll. It's one of Miyazaki's best, and it's currently getting hard-to-find on dvd. October 23rd at 7pm at the Arclight Cinema on Sunset Blvd. More info HERE.


Posted by JERRY at 12:04 AM

October 19, 2005

MEET JANET WALDO

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She was Josie, Judy Jetson and Penelope Pitstop.... to name but a few. Women In Animation is hosting a luncheon with voice actress Janet Waldo, at the Smoke House in Burbank, on Saturday November 19th.
The latest in WIA's series of "Where The Bodies Are Buried" Salons will feature the legendary Ms. Waldo, who'll tell us what it was like working in cartoons in the early, non-corporate days. If you want to hear the unauthorized version of the Golden years of Animation, reserve a place for yourself on Saturday. November 19, at The Smoke House (one of the last remaining Old Industry watering holes), from 12 noon to around 3-ish. $23.00 per person.

Menu: Choice of chicken teriyaki, caesar salad with blackened salmon or caesar salad with chicken. Coffee or tea included. No-host bar (they offer a martini cited by the Los Angeles Times as legendary). Pre-pay recommended, as seating is limited.

Please RSVP to (310) 535-3838 by November 16th. The price of the event is $23.00, Send your check to: WIA/Waldo Salon P.O. Box 251, Topanga, CA 90290. Please specify your food preference. The Smoke House is at 4420 Lakeside Drive, in Burbank, across from the Warner Bros. lot. Valet parking available.


Posted by JERRY at 08:14 AM

KRAZY KAT SCREENING

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ASIFA-Hollywood will be screening a dozen extremely rare KRAZY KAT cartoons on Saturday October 29th at 3pm - at the AFI in Hollywood.

Columbia Pictures KRAZY KAT cartoons are hard enough to see as they are. Originally made for theatres (1929-1939) and later released to TV in the 1950s, the series has been unavailable for viewing for the last 40 years. Though based on the George Herriman comic strip, the Columbia cartoons were the end of a continous line of shorts that began in 1916. By 1929, producer Charles Mintz (the man who took Oswald Rabbit - and the entire animation staff - away from Walt Disney, forcing him & Ub Iwerks to invent Mickey Mouse) had evolved the character from Herriman's neurotic female into a happy-go-lucky song & dance man - not so different from such early 30s characters such as Bosko, Oswald, Mickey Mouse and Flip the Frog.

The twelve cartoons being screened by Asifa next week were never part of the 50s television package, never distributed in 16mm and have not been seen since their original release in the late 20s and early 30s. They contain various characters drinking liquour, vicious ethnic stereotyping and hints of pre-code sex! Several have surreal Fleischer-like imagery and extreme rubber-hose animation - and all contain hot jazz soundtracks typical of their day. Asifa will be screening brand new restored 35mm prints, each retaining their rare original titles.

If you enjoy oddball black & white 1930s animation, if you are into funky early sound cartoons - or if you think you've seen it all - you haven't seen these! I urge you to join me on Saturday October 29th. Take it from me: these will never be released on DVD. More information here.


Posted by JERRY at 07:42 AM

October 18, 2005

Rex Hackelberg's Blog

Rex Hackelberg painting

I wasn't familiar with the work of Canadian cartoonist Rex Hackelberg until he submitted a terrific entry for our Ottawa Animation Festival contest. Not only does he draw super-goofy cartoons, but he also has a superb sense of color. Now he's sharing his drawings and paintings regularly on his new blog HERE.


Posted by AMID at 05:21 AM

EYE CANDY

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Coolest video this year: Try Telling That To Your Baby by Montreal's Fluorescent Hill, a directing team comprised of Mark Lomond, Johanne Ste-Marie and Darren Pasemko. The song isn't so great, but the visuals are superb. More stuff here.

Lomond writes a bit about the production of the video:

The video is made from several thousand photos of candy, which were then digitally painted and composited together. Animation was completed with cg cutouts, stop motion, video, and plain ol' drawings. The mouths are all 2d and although we were tempted to go 3d for the bulk of the project, we opted for ulcers, headaches, and passion.


Posted by JERRY at 12:36 AM

October 17, 2005

Dahl/Disney's Gremlins are Back

Gremlins

Somehow I missed the news that Dark Horse Comics is working on a February 2006 re-release of the 1943 Roald Dahl children's book, THE GREMLINS, illustrated primarily by animator Bill Justice (with the above cover reportedly by Mary Blair). The book has long been out of print, and copies run in the hundreds, and often thousands, of dollars. In the early-1940s, GREMLINS was being prepped as a full-length animated feature by Disney, and a lot of development art was created, but this book is ultimately the only thing that Disney ever released. Dark Horse is also planning to release a 3-issue comic book mini-series with new Gremlin adventures. Who knew WWII lore was so popular. What's next: a Kilroy revival?

Update: Noted animation historian Jim Korkis writes:

It was Mark Kausler who identified for me that the cover of the original book was done by Mary Blair. The interiors were done by Bill Justice and Al Dempster, two longtime Disney artists. In fact, Bill was responsible for some of the gremlin designs and worked closely with Dahl. When I contacted the editor at Dark Horse, he said he wanted to make the reprint like a "DVD" with some extras but they hadn't decided yet what those extras would be. I did offer them the extensive article that I did for the yet-to-be-published World War II issue of "Persistence of Vision" magazine on the unmade film.


Posted by AMID at 07:19 AM

Monday Morning Inspiration: Joseph Holt

I've been a fan of Joseph Holt's work ever since I ran across a big stack of his exquisite background layouts for MY LIFE AS A TEENAGE ROBOT. Haven't seen much else of his animation work, but here's a website that features his personal paintings.

Painting by Joseph Holt

Also, be sure check out this gallery of incredible title cards that he designed for TEENAGE ROBOT.

Title card by Joseph Holt


Posted by AMID at 05:51 AM

October 16, 2005

Pictoplasma Animation Festival

Pictoplasma is holding their first-ever animation festival, CHARACTERS IN MOTION, on November 25-26 in Berlin. It is being billed as a "two-day celebration of contemporary character design in animation, music visuals and motion graphics." Besides screeenings, there will also be lectures by Shynola and Fons Schiedon. Cartoon Brew friend Harald Siepermann gave an enthusiastic review of last year's 1st Pictoplasma Conference On Contemporary Character Design & Art so this animation-specific event may also be worth checking out.


Posted by AMID at 04:48 AM