Cartoon Brew Podcast: Animating While Black
How is the movement for racial justice shaping animation? We speak to industry figures who are pushing for change.
How is the movement for racial justice shaping animation? We speak to industry figures who are pushing for change.
Sony Pictures Animation is working on several adult animated features.
Tartakovsky hasn't given up on the world's most famous pipe-smoking cartoon sailor.
Tepid reviews and a controversy over the hedgehog's redesign are unlikely to hold the film back.
The veteran director talks to us about "Primal," his series-turned-feature, currently in the running for an Oscar.
As the National Film Board of Canada moves to a new headquarter, its senior animation producers tell us what kinds of filmmakers they're looking for.
Bill Morrison is the latest comic artist whose artwork made someone else rich.
A new way of looking at Hong Kong through animation…
We take an in-depth look at the animation strategy at each of the major U.S. streaming services.
Genndy Tartakovsky features and a new "Boondocks" series are part of Sony's new alternative animation division.
Showrunner Anton Vereschagin shares the pipeline and tech challenges that come with producing a high-quality cg series in Russia.
Warning: It's bloody!
“There are no experts in virtual reality," says Corentin Lambot. "If someone says they are one, don’t believe them."
Sony hasn't announced a director yet for the fourth entry in its most successful franchise.
Georgia Cano, one of the three lead plaintiffs in the animation wage-fixing lawsuit, speaks out for the first time.
The audience's read on a character is "so influenced by how their hair looks," says ILM vfx supervisor Jeff White.
Bidding and budgeting in vfx is a "dark art" to some - but it doesn't have to be.
Cartoon Brew makes sense of the virtual production phenomenon, and provides resources that filmmakers can use to start experimenting with virtual production techniques.
Sony is pushing American studio animation in a new direction.
Fans may love their toys, but Wall Street wasn't impressed.