A Thrilling Tour Through The History Of Wild Takes In Animation
Get ready to have your eyes pop out of your skull, because today we’re taking a look at some of the great wild takes throughout animation history.
Get ready to have your eyes pop out of your skull, because today we’re taking a look at some of the great wild takes throughout animation history.
To commemorate the release of ‘Migration,’ we’re revisiting some of our favorite ducks throughout cartoon history.
The release of Chip ’N Dale: Rescue Rangers got us thinking about the long history of mixing live action and animation in the days before computers.
Don’t blink or you’ll miss some of these tributes in “Scoob!”
Don Lusk worked on the first animated feature made by Walt Disney, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.”
These rare videos document the presentation of the animated short Oscar from 1949 through 2013.
A rare behind-the-scenes look at how they made a seminal animated TV series.
Young ladies, put down that issue of “Tiger Beat” because this is the only poster you’ll ever need to hang above your bed.
Among the most frustrating aspects of spring—if you don’t live in southern California—is the fluctuating weather. One moment it’s T-shirt weather, the next, heavy overcoat. The 1936 MGM cartoon “To Spring” explains the scientific reason for why this occurs: the elves who live underground aren’t working hard enough.
“Animation is a young man’s game,” Chuck Jones once said. There’s no question that animation is a labor-intensive art that requires mass …