Here Are 3 (Nearly) Solo-Produced Animated Features To Watch Out For
Welcome to Peak Indie.
Welcome to Peak Indie.
Tubi will start by streaming ten films from the Japanese mega-franchise.
Harmony Gold USA and Japan’s Big West, two companies at the center of the long-running dispute over the “Macross” franchise, have struck a groundbreaking deal that few fans saw coming.
Most of the films are on the streamer now, with World War II drama “In This Corner of the World” coming next year.
The anime musical hits Japanese theaters this fall and will come to North America soon.
The studio has recently invested in a number of anime productions.
The senior creative team is shaping up to be unusually international for a Japanese animated feature.
The feature hits North American theaters on April 23.
The historical drama is fresh from its win at the Césars, France’s equivalent of the Oscars.
“It was Otsuka-san who taught me the fun of working,” Hayao Miyazaki once wrote.
It still fell far short of the “Demon Slayer” opening last fall.
The award-winning artist talks about his unconventional route into animation, and the pivotal role the software played in his career.
According to Ryoko, her wages are high for a young animator in the country.
The titan of Chinese subculture continues its shift toward mainstream animation production.
The streamer will cover tuition fees and around $1,400/mo in living costs for participants in its new Wit Animator Academy.
Meanwhile, Studio Ghibli’s “Earwig and the Witch” took $132,768 in five days in North America, and “The Croods: A New Age” remains one of the top releases in the U.S.
The film is out now in select theaters and on HBO Max in the United States.
The exhibition will take place at Gallery Nucleus from February 6 to 21.
In a new documentary, animator Shingo Tamagawa explains the unusual back story to his indie short.
This weekend, animated films topped the box office in many major territories with a functioning theatrical sector.