Historic Moment in Canadian Animation: Titmouse Vancouver Workers Vote To Unionize
A watershed moment in Canadian animation history.
A watershed moment in Canadian animation history.
The new studio is creatively led by Brad Lewis, a veteran of Pixar and Dreamworks.
‘Mushka’ was little more than an idea when a lunch reunion with Richard Sherman inspired Deja to bring that concept to life.
The division will produce and distribute “coveted anime series” both in Japan and globally.
Here are the contending animated features at this year’s European Film Awards, set to be presented virtually on December 12.
The show, which the controversial actor created himself, will be “unfiltered and uncompromising.”
Customers in the U.K. and Ireland will get premieres of shows like “Trollstopia” and “Madagascar: A Little Wild.”
Who are the queer heroes walking amongst us now or in recent times?
“I just don’t think we’ll ever get something that game-changing in animation again,” says Louis of Katsuhiro Otomo’s cyberpunk classic.
The manga spin-off took $44 million in its first three days in Japan, more than doubling the previous record.
Japan’s beloved crime-caper franchise is rebooted in 3d cgi with skill and smarts.
“Evangelion: 3.0+1.0: Thrice Upon A Time” wraps up the tetralogy of films that began in 2007.
Forget about live animation events in the U.S. in the first half of next year.
The streamer’s partnerships with the two high-profile creators bring diversity to the fore.
Some of the best, funniest, and downright weirdest films on the animated shorts circuit are now available to view for free online.
“Tut” is described as “an afro-futuristic, coming-of-age story of the boy king Tutankhamun.”
“In the years leading up to this crisis,” writes Warren, “your company prioritized the enrichment of executives and stockholders.”
We dive into the feature projects presented at this year’s pitching forum.
Italy’s View Conference is offering 125 events free to stream this year.
“Covid accelerated the rate at which we made this transition,” said CEO Bob Chapek, “but [it] was going to happen anyway.”