Har, har. Marry Christmas!
animation
A video by Michael Levy done in Maya to the music of John Coltrane. Flawless timing and a brilliant idea.
There really is a grace to classical animation that hasn’t yet been achieved with digital. Something funny I learnt in college is that in digital animation, the minute something stops moving, it doesn’t look alive anymore – like it’s breaking character. This is funny because one of the things I really love about anime is that it is so dynamic, and they achieve so much with frozen characters. Here are my top five classically animated movies:
- The Triplets of BellevilleSo great, one of my favourite scenes is when they are crossing the ocean, the music is also incredible.
- MetropolisObviously not the 1927 original – this was created from the manga version of the story by Osamu Tezuka, who created Astro Boy
- Grave of the Fireflies Get ready to cry – it’s about a boy struggeling to take care of his little sister in Japan after WWII.
- Iron GiantReally nice story and animation that is kid friendly without the song and dance sequences or formulaic story line.
- Okay, this last one is hard. I love all of Hayao Miyazaki‘s films. All of them. They are sweet and random and brilliant and have amazing characters. The four that I could watch a million times and never get tired of are:
- Princess Mononoke
- Laputa: Castle in the Sky
- NausicaƤ
- Spirited Away
P.S. Use your effing subtitles. There is nothing worse than a dubbed movie. Except maybe NausicaƤ because Captain Piccard does one of the voices… that one is okay dubbed.
I have an unholy love for cartoons and never really grew out of the Saturday morning thing. This is the absolute best American animated series I have ever seen. The only other series that is on par is Samurai Jack. Actually, there are a lot of great anime series but these two are the best produced outside of Japan.
Back to Avatar. Three well-written, beautifully animated seasons that reached audiences well outside of it’s 9-11 year old demographic. It is set in an Asian influenced world where four nations practise martial arts and bending their respective elements.
Be careful, you will sit down to watch only an episode or two and end up watching a whole season.
