The Stories Behind 3 Animated Documentaries: ‘Carlotta’s Face,’ ‘Egg,’ ‘Travelogue Tel Aviv’
We speak to the filmmakers of three short animated documentaries from the current festival circuit and learn how they came to be made.
We speak to the filmmakers of three short animated documentaries from the current festival circuit and learn how they came to be made.
The first edition of “Animation Next” will tour U.S. theaters this fall.
North America’s largest animation festival will screen 54 shorts and six features in competition.
Over 170 people have been invited to join the Academy’s animation and vfx branches.
The Danish school’s bachelor projects comprise half a dozen films and a video game. All but one is available to view online.
The French school produced five signal films for this year’s Annecy Festival. Watch them all here.
New Looney Tunes debuted on Wednesday in front of a standing-room only crowd of 1,000 festival attendees.
With its new short “Sherman,” Unity is showcasing what’s possible in real-time rendering of fur, hair, and feathers.
Nickelodeon announces the start of a new shorts program headed up a respected creative force in the animation world.
In an exclusive English-language interview, Yoshiaki Nishimura speaks with Cartoon Brew’s about the growth of his company, Studio Ponoc.
“From the start, I wanted to create a film that uses code,” says Frei, whose film will screen next week at Annecy.
Twenty Disney artists have already directed shorts for the program.
The creator of “Courage the Cowardly Dog” is sharing insights into the creative process of his new independent film.
Marta Pajek discusses the ideas behind her captivating and complex short film trilogy “Impossible Figures and Other Stories.”
How the Blender team made a main character for their latest short film.
Sony Pictures Animation has acquired an independent animated short for theatrical release.
The French animation festival has announced 80 films in its first group of competition selections.
113 films were selected for the competition programs at Animafest Zagreb.
It’s the first time that Warner Bros. has made an entire series of cartoonist-driven Looney Tunes in nearly 60 years.
Artists from Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay participated in this stylistically diverse project.