Warner Bros. Is Developing A Speedy Gonzales CGI Heist Caper
“In a time when Donald Trump is gaining momentum, the world needs Speedy more than ever,” says the film's producer.
“In a time when Donald Trump is gaining momentum, the world needs Speedy more than ever,” says the film's producer.
The intensive six-day lab helps young artists develop TV and feature film ideas with the help of industry professionals.
"Anomalisa" writer and co-director Charlie Kaufman just highlighted an ugly truth about the Animated Feature category of the Oscars.
Designed for directors and producers from both animation and live-action documentary, AniDox:Lab expands storytelling possibilities by mixing the two schools of filmmaking.
Claude Cloutier explains the challenges of animating inanimate objects and shares never-before-seen drawings from throughout the filmmaking process.
How a two-hundred-year-old opera made the transition to an online motion comic for contemporary audiences.
"The biggest strength indie animators have is that we can do every aspect of production," says Smith.
Disney is tearing down one of its last symbolic ties to the craft of hand-drawn animation.
A two-day event in November will be dedicated entirely to Pixar's first film.
The Hungarian animation director opens up on his more than 50 years in animation.
Other multi-nominated shows include "Peg+Cat," the Moonbot short "Silent," and "All Hail King Julien."
Disney-Pixar has debuted the first full trailer for its next film, "Inside Out," directed by Pete Docter.
"Freak of the Week," a music video for the Swedish rock band Freak Kitchen, premiered online today, and it just might be the most classically animated teeth-gnashing and hair-flipping metal you've seen in your lifetime.
Animation historian John Canemaker talks about the process and challenges of creating the monumental new biography "The Lost Notebook: Herman Schultheis & the Secrets of Walt Disney's Movie Magic."
Before I got hired at Disney Features, I sold a few magazine articles and developed a love of writing for print, where there was nothing between writer and reader but words on a page. When I became a Disney employee, I realized I was surrounded by animation veterans with vivid memories of the rambunctious days at the old Hyperion studio, and the creative struggles that went into making "Snow White," "Pinocchio," and the other early features. Talking to older Mouse House staffers, it dawned on me they could provide great source material for articles.
David OReilly, a blazing star of the contemporary animation scene, released his first game titled Mountain on July 1st.
Kaio finally tries to poach Smile, Peco gets into the National Training Center with a little help from the old lady, and we learn about coach Koizumi's storied past. This episode was largely devoted to character development, and finally brought into focus just what a complicated web of character interrelations Yuasa has woven out of the original source material, much as he did in Mind Game. There was no single major driving plot element, but rather various themes and plotlines gradually converging. By this point it feels like what we are seeing is more Yuasa than Matsumoto.
Half a year on from the events of the previous episode, it's a winter of the soul for the various protagonists. We see just how much has changed in the intervening months through the kaleidoscopic lens of one Christmas Eve.
Tonight in New York City, Sotheby's will auction a stainless steel, 2000-pound, six-and-a-half-foot-tall Popeye sculpture by Jeff Koons that is estimated to sell for between $25-35 million. Koons, who is already among the top three richest living American artists not to mention an avowed lover of "Croods," made three of these Popeye sculptures, which probably represents the number of people who he thinks are dumb enough to pay between $25-35 million for a Popeye sculpture.
There’s something about Steven’s dad Greg that doesn’t add up. Will we ever really know why Greg distances himself from his son? This week in “Onion Trade," we explored a dad’s horrible ability to remember things, witnessed Steven’s lack of male role models, and learned a lot more about Onion, a character who revealed quite a few new layers.