How Four Major Animation Studios Are Celebrating Pride Month
Watch videos from Nickelodeon, Dreamworks, Cartoon Network, and Disney.
Watch videos from Nickelodeon, Dreamworks, Cartoon Network, and Disney.
Young worked at Disney from 1977 to 2002, animating on all the well-known features of that golden age.
The most striking thing about Dreamworks’s latest is that it’s coming out exclusively in theaters.
The film’s first international trailer has dropped ahead of its Japanese release next month.
“The Very Small Creatures” will incorporate the British studio’s signature plasticine-puppet stop motion.
A look at five notable shorts, from up-and-coming filmmakers and established pros alike, that will screen next week at the famed animation festival.
Since the arson attack on Kyoto Animation in 2019, multiple people have been arrested in Japan following threats made against animation workers.
2d animation performed well at this year’s edition of the awards, which honor animation from Spain, Portugal, and Latin America.
With his folkloric, psychedelic works, Jankovics raised the profile of Hungarian animation and earned a global cult following.
Does Marge’s hair look better when it swings round, rubber band-style, or when it turns crisply?
It’s a big month for original films, with “Luca,” “Wish Dragon,” and “America: The Motion Picture” all set to debut.
At least 36 territories will get to see Pixar’s latest on the big screen. In the U.S., it will play exclusively on Disney+.
The theme this year: “The Business Case for Diversity.”
Welcome to Series Craft, a new series in which we explore a particular creative facet of a show’s production in-depth and discuss the creative choices that lead to the finished result onscreen.
Bob Chapek has given the fullest explanation yet for the decision to move the Pixar film to Disney+.
“The great majority” of their content will move to Disney+, says CEO Bob Chapek.
The MGM library contains some classic animation, including the “Pink Panther” shorts and Don Bluth’s “The Secret of NIMH.”
The show “reminds me of just how profound an impact animation can have on a young mind,” says Bogan.
In an unprecedented move, Universal will make the film available (at no extra cost) to Peacock Premium subscribers.
The film is the first release from London-based animation production company Aniventure.