November’s Biggest Stories From The World Of Animation
A look at the stories that had the biggest impact on the animation world last month.
A look at the stories that had the biggest impact on the animation world last month.
TAG says the studio's decision was influenced by a recent NLRB ruling regarding production workers at Walt Disney Animation Studios.
SVA students and alumni discuss extracurricular activities that helped to enrich their educational experience at the school.
The Walt Disney Company, recently a bogeyman for Florida governor Ron DeSantis, is once again caught in the crosshairs of a public feud.
The black-and-white short earned its Oscars qualification by winning the Bruce Corwin Award at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival.
Facing stiff competition from 'Trolls Band Together,' 'Wish' came up short on box office projections.
The 2d charcoal-drawn short is one of the year's top animated shorts and won the Golden Dove at DOK Leipzig.
AI developers say it's not their fault that their machine learning programs produce copyrighted material, even though they are the ones who trained their systems on copyrighted materials without permission.
The studio reassured fans that "there is absolutely no need to worry.”
The key issue: Microsoft’s AI image-creation tools were generating a Disney-Pixar logo.
The film is Nickelodeon and Pinkfong's latest production spun off from the most popular video in Youtube history.
The layoffs come as Netflix reduces the division's output to two tentpole films per year.
The tremendous breakthrough hails a new dawn for vfx workers in Canada.
The hybrid project had tested strongly with audiences.
2024 promises to be another exciting year for animated features!
Virginia becomes the fifth state in which TAG will represent animation industry workers.
GKIDS will release both subtitled and dubbed versions of the film in U.S. theaters on December 8.
Disney will pay at least $8.61 billion for Comcast’s 33% stake in the company, but that total could change before the deal is finalized.
Also known as Fauntleroy Fox and Crawford Crow in their comic book appearances - the duo starred in twenty-one cartoons in the 1940s.
The family friendly short, which features a cast of not-so-spooky monsters, arrives just in time for Halloween.