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"Best of 2008: Animated Features"

5 Comments -

1 – 5 of 5
Blogger James Hansen said...

Solid post. It's good to see that people continue to take animated films more seriously, and that they have moved beyond "just kids movies." That said, Mark Osborne, the director of KUNG FU PANDA, made an astonishing animated short. I don't know if its what pushed him into the bigger films, but its one of the better animated shorts I've seen. We included it for Out 1's Short Films You Must See. I don't remember if you caught it then or not, so here's the link.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRMfDbm7nFo

I still haven't seen KFP and was pretty middle of the road with DESPEREAUX (although it is certaily beautifully animated) but I'm always glad to see animation get more attention. Here's hoping WALL*E nabs a Best Picture nomination. Seems unlikely, but a robot can dream, can't he?

January 19, 2009 at 12:52 PM

Blogger Tony Dayoub said...

James,

Thanks for letting my readers know to check out this wonderful short.

January 19, 2009 at 3:31 PM

Blogger T.S. said...

I'll echo James; I'm glad you've done a thoughtful look back on this year's animated films. A few years ago I was thrilled with they added the Best Animated Film category at the Oscars, but now I'm starting to worry it's turning into one of those categories where all animated films will be corralled (like 99% of non-English language films into foreign films) and they won't get the wider exposure and just placement they deserve in other categories. I'm seriously hoping Wall•E does nab a Best Picture nom, but am doubting it at this point.

I'm looking forward to seeing Waltz with Bashir and you've convinced me to check out Kung Fu Panda and perhaps the others once they hit DVD.

January 19, 2009 at 9:55 PM

Blogger PIPER said...

I have yet to see Waltz With Bashir, but I'm interested in doing so.

To me Wall-E, or at least the first hour or so reminded me of the old Disney. Bold and experimental. It's good to see Pixar not crank out a bunch of Cars rehashes, even though they could and make a killing doing it.

I was in the bookstore and saw a copy of Bakshi's Heavy Traffic and almost picked it up. What animation is missing today is a Bakshi type. An anti-Pixar. It would be nice to see that.

January 20, 2009 at 10:56 PM

Blogger Tony Dayoub said...

True PIPER. Bakshi's satirical influence is sorely missed.

I was even fascinated by his brief Saturday Morning take on Mighty Mouse, which of course, soon got cancelled after the character snorted a powder-like substance to regain his powers I think.

January 21, 2009 at 8:24 AM

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