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Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

🦋 Top fifty

Thanks to Alvy Singer for pointing out a new list of top-fifty animated films from Time Out, with some commentary by Terry Gilliam! I'm glad to see they gave Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs a place on the list, even though it's so new and unproven. I am as convinced as they are that "this maddeningly ingenious and wildly original smart kidsâ?? adventure will one day take its rightful place in the animated pantheon. " Most of the Miyazaki masterpieces make the list, with My Neighbor Totoro taking top ranking as is well and good. The list is a little biased toward feature films -- it seems like the shorts by Chuck Jones and Tex Avery deserve pride of place. Jones has "The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie" from 1979 at number 3, but that was decades after his finest work.

posted evening of October 14th, 2009: 2 responses
➳ More posts about Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs

Thursday, October first, 2009

🦋 Mussorgsky

More animation from Alexeïeff and Parker! I found a compilation of all their pinboard cartoons. The listing:

  • 0:00 Night on bald mountain (1933) -- Just extraordinary. 7 years ahead of Walt Disney. Look at the metamorphosis about 1:40 in...
  • 8:22 Parade des Sools (1936) -- Hats! and lots of 'em. (IMDB oddly has this piece listed as "Parade des Chapeaux" -- this accurately describes the piece but it is not the title.) Possibly Chapeaux Sools is a hat company, and this an advertisement for them?
  • 9:38 Etoiles Nouvelles (1937) -- commercial for Davros Nouvelle Egyptian size cigarettes
  • 11:04 Chants Populaires (1944) -- "Alouette" w/still image
  • 11:42 En Passant (1943) -- bucolic scene, terrifying squirrels
  • 13:04 Fumées (1952) -- smoke rings. Looks like a commercial for a brand of pipe tobacco called V.E.?
  • 14:25 Les Rimes (1954) -- entertaining Brun Lune biscuit commercial
  • 15:23 Pure Beauté (1954) -- soap commercial (Monsavon brand) / meditation on the female nude
  • 16:25 La Sève de la Terre (1955) -- Esso commercial? -- totally psychedelic
  • 18:26 Automation (1960) -- Renault commercial; boring/technically impressive
  • 20:12 The Nose (1963)
  • 31:33 Pictures at an Exhibition (1972) -- with a spoken introduction in English
  • 42:25 Three Moods (1980)
I'm kind of taken with how Mussorgsky pieces bookend their career. It's interesting that all of their commercial pieces have titles and credits.

posted evening of October first, 2009: 1 response
➳ More posts about Music

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

🦋 Russian Fairy Tales


At A Journey Round My Skull (which looks in general to be a fantastic source for trippy imagery -- thanks for linking to it, badger!), Will posts several illustrations from Russian Fairy Tales (1945), drawn by Alexandre Alexeïeff; also, a link to the pinscreen animation work of Alexeïeff and his wife and partner Claire Parker.
The Nose, adapted from Gogol:

posted evening of September 30th, 2009: Respond
➳ More posts about Pretty Pictures

Monday, September 28th, 2009

🦋 Toonerville

My grandfather had a big collection of books of comic strips -- Pogo, Katzenjammer Kids, Li'l Abner, Gasoline Alley -- that I would read whenever I went over to his house. One of them was a collection of Fox Fontaine's Toonerville Trolley -- Sylvia has gotten into the video game Toontown lately, so I suggested we take a look at Toonerville -- thinking its name had the same source*. I never knew it had been made into a cartoon! Here are the three episodes -- Nicely done!

(Another find from the same search: The Electric Prunes performing Toonerville Trolley on the Mike Douglas Show in 1967 -- not The Prunes' finest moment, which if you're interested in seeing their finest moment take a look at this footage.)

* Looks like I was wrong about this. Image searching for "Toonerville Trolley" brings up some pictures of an actual trolley in Louisville in the early 20th Century, when Fontaine was working as a reporter in Louisville...

posted evening of September 28th, 2009: Respond

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

🦋 Climbing the walls

Another utterly spectacular production from Blu -- this one is in collaboration with David Ellis.

I linked to a previous video of theirs last year; I see from their website that they also did a short piece in Gdansk playing with ideologies...

posted morning of September 26th, 2009: Respond
➳ More posts about Graffiti

Friday, June 19th, 2009

🦋 Headshots

Martha's latest work is up on YouTube:

Catchy!

posted evening of June 19th, 2009: Respond

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

🦋 A flor máis grande do mundo

Saramago has made his entry into animation! Juan Pablo Etcheverry animated "A flor máis grande do mundo" based on Saramago's book A maior flor do mundo, which doesn't seem to be in translation -- I had never heard of it before I saw Saramago's post about the cartoon just now. It is his only children's book, written in the 70's -- oops; not reading closely. The idea is from the 70's but the book was not written until 2000.

posted evening of May 24th, 2009: Respond
➳ More posts about Saramago's Notebook

Sunday, February first, 2009

🦋 Mind Wall

Thanks for linking this video, Dad! "Mind Wall", by Towa Tei.

Note: if you click the little square icon in the bottom right, you can view this video on your full screen, recommended. Also, there is higher-quality video available; for some reason you can only request it after you have started playing the video -- click on the up-arrow icon in the bottom right, one of the options that comes up will be "HQ".

posted evening of February first, 2009: Respond

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

🦋 City of Books

4th Estate celebrates 25 years of publishing books with a beautiful video presentation. The resolution is high enough to watch it full screen, I very much recommend doing so.

(h/t The Wooster Collective)

Also at Vimeo: timelapse photography of building and shooting the city of books and the museum.

posted evening of December 30th, 2008: Respond

Monday, September 8th, 2008

🦋 Rabbit

In comments at The Great Whatsit, Rogan posts a link to a truly mind-blowing animation, by Run Wrake of Sclah Films (and based on the art of children's book illustrator Geoffrey Higham). It's got insects, jewels, words, idolatry, mindless brutality -- it takes my breath away:

posted evening of September 8th, 2008: Respond

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