2015 Marks 2nd Straight Year Without A Woman-Directed Animation Feature
Good news for men though: they directed 100% of American animated features released in 2015.
From fully-animated features to vfx-driven live-action films, animation is an integral part of the theatrical marketplace today.
Good news for men though: they directed 100% of American animated features released in 2015.
Laika’s fourth film, “Kubo and the Two Strings,” is an honest-to-goodness action-adventure film set in a mythic Japan.
The tenth time’s the charm for Blue Sky Studios.
The new Turtles trailer contains plenty of cartoon fun, thanks to ILM.
One man; one insane animated horror film.
“Anomalisa” was a lot of work: Three years in the making, 1,261 faces, 1,000+ props and costumes. and 118,089 frames of film.
The film opened in second place at Russia’s box office earlier this month.
How many scatalogical references can you fit into a single trailer for a wholesome family film?
We spoke with Allers about awards season, women in animation, and why we still don’t see enough anthology animation at the multiplex.
“The Good Dinosaur” isn’t the greatest Pixar film ever made, according to reviewers — but its painstaking replication of the Real World is astounding.
“Anomalisa” is proving that great animation can compete against anything — even live action film.
“We ultimately ran into creative differences on the direction of the project,” Faust told Cartoon Brew.
In the new “Zootopia” trailer, Disney takes us to the magical fantasyland known as the Department of Motor Vehicles.
DreamWorks says that it is not a reboot of its abandoned project “Me and My Shadow.”
“Klaus,” a hand-drawn all-ages holiday comedy, is anticipating a 2019 release.
Aardman’s low-budget, big-picture animation continues to compete in our blockbuster marketplace, with stop-motion animation more real than hyperreal CGI.
Minkoff’s Flying Tigers Entertainment has sealed a two-picture deal with China’s Le Vision Pictures, including an animated adaptation of ‘Wolf Totem.’
The Annecy Cristal-winning French animated feature will arrive in the U.S. in 2016.
2016 is shaping up to be the year of the animated animal feature, and “Sing” just might be the quirkiest film of the bunch.
The director of “Coraline” and “Nightmare Before Christmas” is plotting a return to feature films with comedians Key & Peele.