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.
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.
Laudenbach previously directed the Annecy-winning feature "The Girl Without Hands," which he animated alone.
In today’s animation industry, which is growing and evolving at warp speed, 50 years seems like a geological age. When Nelvana …
With his folkloric, psychedelic works, Jankovics raised the profile of Hungarian animation and earned a global cult following.
The festival will take place next month both in-person in France and online for those who aren't yet able to travel.
Gina O’Melia traces the rise of the American Saturday morning cartoon and the challenge to its supremacy from anime shows.
Joanna Quinn's new film "Affairs of the Art" took years to make, but that was a reward in itself: "It was like an extended college, and I felt I was learning new things about animation, drawing, and direction all the time."
Kambole Campbell reflects on what feels fresh — and what doesn't — in Netflix's new series about a Black samurai.
Leib created animation for The New York Times and films including "American Splendor" and "American Ultra."
"Hotel Transylvania: The Series" and "Corner Gas Animated" lead the television categories with the most nominations.
Fukushima, who has retired, served as executive producer of the English Animation Studio for more than seven years.
In a new book, Sam Summers sets out to dissect how the Dreamworks formula, with its pop tunes, celebrity actors, wink-wink gags, differs from Disney's.
It still fell far short of the "Demon Slayer" opening last fall.
The pitching event is a key platform for Central and Eastern European animation in particular.
In other news: Netflix was snubbed, while the National Film and Television School got two student films into the shorts category.
Warnermedia Kids and Family has come up with a multi-pronged approach to take on Netflix, Disney, Youtube, and Nickelodeon in the highly competitive kids' space.
Ruthie Harrison and Richie Ward reflect on the opportunities MECA has given them to make art and present it to the world.
Hedgehogs, ninjas, rainbows, and trolls — kids are well catered for at this year's event.