Ottawa Animation Festival 40th Anniversary Look-Back: ‘Hen, His Wife’
Before he became a key member of the team that made "Rugrats" and "Aaahh!!! Real Monsters," Igor Kovalyov challenged the animation world with his enigmatic short, "Hen, His Wife."
Before he became a key member of the team that made "Rugrats" and "Aaahh!!! Real Monsters," Igor Kovalyov challenged the animation world with his enigmatic short, "Hen, His Wife."
It takes a village of artists and technicians to create a sophisticated CGI character like Elliot the Dragon.
No surprise here: "Sausage Party" did great in theaters!
The directors of "Sausage Party" talk about the challenges of selling an R-rated animated feature in Hollywood, producing a film on a fraction of the budget of other studios, and knowing when you've gone too far in an R-rated cartoon.
Animation historian Maureen Furniss revisits the Ottawa grand prize-winning short "The Man Who Planted Trees."
The action-packed Korean zombie thriller is headed to the United States.
A key lesson for working in Hollywood: when in doubt, blame the animation.
Over 70 guests from 13 countries will attend Pixelatl next month in Mexico.
The first edition of the festival will take place next year in Canada.
Theft in the world of advertising is rarely accidental; it is part of the craft.
Italy’s largest computer graphics and digital media conference has an amazing line-up of speakers this year from Disney, WB, Sony, Pixar, Laika, Zynga and beyond.
This is the story of the fastest man in the world, who almost never was.
What happened in Montreal in 1967 has never happened before or since.
A new production company aims to tap into the growing market for mid-range CGI family features.
American audiences to Fox: please stop making "Ice Age" films.
Here's why Rebecca Sugar's Comic-Con bombshell is a historic moment for animation.
SIGGRAPH can be overwhelming, so here’s an animation and VFX-focused look at what not to miss in Anaheim.
Brad Bird, virtual reality, storyboarding, and true animation legends are part of our must-see Comic-Con events.
Computer animation is known for its precision, but as Michael Fragstein shows, adding imperfections and abstraction into CG can be just as beautiful.
"Futurama" like you've never seen before!