Animation Coming To Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max, Peacock, And More In January 2022
Bring in the new year with lots of animation.
Bring in the new year with lots of animation.
"Soul" and "Wolfwalkers" topped the feature film nominations with ten apiece, but most bizarrely, they aren't competing against each other in the main feature category.
Aardman's sci-fi send-up is their first feature to debut on streaming in the U.S. — but it has received a theatrical release elsewhere.
Cartoon Brew speaks to directors Luis Usón and Andrés Aguilar about their award-winning hybrid short film.
Analyst are projecting an opening weekend of $50-65 million.
"The Simpsons" is one of the surprise animation series that's heading to Disney's new streaming service.
What's ahead in vfx for 2019: a look at the upcoming superhero films, sequels, and live-action adaptations of animated classics and video games.
Details on Netflix's new genre-driven adult animation anthology.
Read our quick primer on the latest "Star Wars" film: "Solo."
A desire to make the alien creatures scarier led to the last minute redesign for ILM.
Visual effects legend Phil Tippett looks back at two decades since "Starship Troopers," and shares recently unearthed location scout and on-set video from the film.
Do we need an Addams Family reboot? MGM seems to think so.
We spoke with Martino about merging the worlds of 2D and 3D animation, and why a Charlie Brown who is actually recognized and praised isn't much of a stretch for Schulz.
The award-winning Brazilian director Alê Abreu reveals details exclusively to Cartoon Brew about his next animated feature.
In a wide-ranging conversation, Genndy Tartakovsky talks to Cartoon Brew about the challenges of making "Hotel Transylvania 2" and what he's trying to do next.
An animation-specific roundup of panels, presentations, and other cartoon goodness at America's biggest pop culture festival.
The classic anime space saga may actually get the blockbuster franchise it deserves.
What the critics are saying about the cutesy alien invasion offering from DreamWorks.
There’s too much post-apocalyptic fiction around, in books and movies, TV and games. I’d toss the lot into a dumpster now, except for "Adventure Time."
On a couple occasions throughout the years, people have asked me, Why do so many animated films have dead mothers in them?