Two Animated Features from Uruguay: “Anina” and “Selkirk, The Real Robinson Crusoe”
Uruguay, a small South American country of slightly more than 3 million people, managed to complete two animated features last year. …
Uruguay, a small South American country of slightly more than 3 million people, managed to complete two animated features last year. …
Cattle Call (2008) offers a fascinating glimpse into a world that is completely foreign to me.
Here's a gorgeous little graduation film from Bezalel Academy of Art and Design out of Jerusalem, combining hand drawn animation with live miniature sets.
The Flintstones (1960) have been duly celebrated throughout the years, but one part of the Hanna-Barbera series that hasn’t received much …
Imagine the Oscars. Now, imagine the Oscars if they were presented in French and no one cared about them. That’s the César …
Here's all the important nutritional information about Good & Plenty candy, spelled out by the candy itself, in stop-motion.
Painter Llyn Foulkes will be the subject of a major retrospective at the Hammer Museum.
Warner Bros. is releasing an anniversary DVD box set of selected H-B cartoons from the '50s, '60s and '70's.
Downtown Los Angeles gallery exhibition is the latest in an ongoing series centered on the art of animation.
Earlier this week, we upgraded our commenting system to the widely used Disqus. Certain aspects of our commenting system haven’t changed. …
He was one very lucky artist.
The only way to see the Oscar nominated short films before the Academy Awards ceremony in February.
My favorite animated performance in Pixar’s Brave was the Queen-as-a-bear character. It was a fine piece of cartoon-inspired …
Pac-Man brought up-to-date in this clever reinvention.
"Anal Retention in Three Dimensions" has a certain ring to it...
It's awards season and we've got one of our own to hand out on Cartoon Brew: our 2012 Student Animation Festival Audience Award.
BREAKING NEWS: The Oscar nominations for Best Animated Feature and Shorts go to...
Cartoon voice acting from the Golden Age of theatrical and TV animation (1930s to 1960s) was almost uniformly excellent.
Here's a bit of irony: this piece of animation went viral primarily because people didn't realize it was animated.
I was quite impressed with Jake Fried's animation when I first saw it last year, and I'm just as impressed with his latest piece.