What Animation Does Disney Own?
From Mickey to Marvel, Buzz Lightyear to Homer Simpson, Disney is home to a who's who of animation legends.
From Mickey to Marvel, Buzz Lightyear to Homer Simpson, Disney is home to a who's who of animation legends.
The sequel's frantic mashup of studio IP is far from a slam dunk, say critics.
"'Battu' is unlike anything we have ever tried at the studio,” says Cartoon Network Studios president Sam Register.
Warner Bros., Cartoon Network, DC Comics, HBO Max, Looney Tunes, Hanna-Barbera: Warnermedia has one of the world's most famous animation portfolios, period.
Welcome to Series Craft, a new series in which we explore a creative facet of a show’s production in depth and discuss the choices that led to the finished result.
The R-rated Netflix comedy is directed by "Archer" veteran Matt Thompson.
All African citizens can apply for this program, which offers three months of paid skills development.
Our notes from a panel on Japanese animation including Tomm Moore, Sofia Alexander, and Michael Dudok de Wit.
For the Greenpeace campaign video "Wasteminster," the studio had to drop the equivalent of 67.7 million items of cg trash onto the U.K. prime minister's residence.
Dreamworks, Illumination, Mr. Magoo, Woody Woodpecker, He-Man, Felix the Cat: the telecom titan owns one of the deepest libraries of animation characters, past and present.
The platform, which hosts videos of up to 60 seconds, is competing with Tiktok and others for artists and influencers.
The venerable Japanese superhero finds himself fathering a baby monster in the film.
A continuing series in which we map out what major corporations own in terms of animation-related characters, studios, and distribution platforms.
The Mike Rianda-directed film has also notched six straights days at no. 1 worldwide.
Gina O’Melia traces the rise of the American Saturday morning cartoon and the challenge to its supremacy from anime shows.
"Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train" can now add one more accolade to its already record-shattering global box office run: the number one film in the United States.
The festival looks to build on the "huge success" of its first virtual edition.
The Lin-Manuel Miranda musical was previously set for a theatrical release on June 4. A new date has not been announced.
Award season ends with big wins for Disney and Netflix.
The Asian import is generating far more enthusiasm than Disney's Southeast Asian-flavored film.