The Creator Of ‘Courage The Cowardly Dog’ Dissects His New Comedic Horror Short ‘Howl If You Love Me’
John Dilworth analyzes the inspiration and creative processes of his short werewolf comedy 'Howl If You Love Me.'
John Dilworth analyzes the inspiration and creative processes of his short werewolf comedy 'Howl If You Love Me.'
This hypnotic and surreal new short by Victoria Vincent was produced for Adult Swim's Smalls program.
The studio cannot continue in its current financial state and says it is currently exploring all options for sale or investment.
Sixte de Vauplane, co-founder of Animaj, explains his new technology and how animation can benefit from new generative AI pipelines that serve artists.
Belgian filmmaker Luc Jabon speaks with Cartoon Brew about unearthing Picha's legacy and recontextualizing the work of this European pioneer of adult animation.
The film offers an inventive and hypnotic narrative following a cat, a butterfly, and a snake.
The cut-out animated shorts, initially created for his young daughter, have now been compiled into a feature-length film.
The show about comedian Kevin Hart as a child is BET+’s first original adult animated series.
The amount pledged to animation pales in comparison to the amounts given to tabletop games ($220 million) and comics ($46.5 million).
It is now the seventh-highest grossing film in history.
Walt Disney's first cartoon star is set to make a comeback on streaming.
The entire country of Latvia is celebrating the success of his Oscar-winning film.
The milestone contract marks the first time that production management workers at a feature animation studio have gained representation through The Animation Guild.
Directors André Kadi and Karine Vézina spoke with Cartoon Brew about their new animated feature that explores the life and work of Frida Kahlo.
The film will be produced by Psyop and Sun Creature Studio.
The studio also announced that it was cancelling an unannounced direct-to-streaming feature-length film.
Both the feature and short animation categories were huge upsets by little films that weren't backed by money, celebrity, or power.
The company said in its annual report that it expects its current fiscal year to also be negatively impacted by the ongoing fallout from the Hollywood writers' and actors' strikes.
Universal Pictures is very confident about Shrek — and they have good reason to be.
The company said that it will "no longer set or use aspirational numerical goals related to the race, ethnicity, sex or gender of hires."