Patrick McHale, Ian-Jones Quartey, Rebecca Sugar, Pen Ward Team Up For Experimental Adult Swim Special
The network also announced a new series in development by Genndy Tartakovsky, among other announcements.
The network also announced a new series in development by Genndy Tartakovsky, among other announcements.
Third Floor co-founder Josh Wassung explains how they built an animation studio around "Predator: Killer of Killers."
The 96-minute film will be introduced next week to buyers at the Cannes Film Market, and will premiere at the Annecy animation festival next month.
The festival will present "the trippiest, most transcendentally beautiful, riotously bizarre and third-eye-opening animation from around the globe."
'The Wild Robot' and 'Dune: Part Two' led the pack with four wins apiece.
The first film that they will collaborate on is 'Night of the Zoopocalpyse.'
Two projects dominated at the 52nd annual Annie awards.
A bounty of classic cartoon and comic characters have entered the public domain this year.
As animation directors explore longer film formats, the trend is causing headaches for producers, distributors, festival programmers, and educators.
A subjective guide to this year's vfx tentpoles, franchise entries, outliers, and streaming content.
Many members of the animation community have suffered unimaginable losses – here is how to help them directly.
In this exclusive series, the filmmakers behind each of this year's Oscar-shortlisted shorts reveal their favorite shots.
After months of negotiations, members have ratified a new agreement that will be in effect until 2027.
'Inside Out 2' and 'Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl' picked up seven nominations apiece.
The hotly-anticipated big pharma comedy-thriller is set to premiere February 2, 2025, on Adult Swim.
Not that it matters, but critics didn't like 'Moana 2.'
The festival is set to take place in Los Angeles from October 18-20.
Powerhouse is the first Texas animation studio to join a union.
The new series from Raphael Bob-Waksberg will debut next year.
If ever a franchise was critic-proof, it might be 'Despicable Me.'