![]() |
Everyone in London lives like this |
Monday, March 25, 2013
A London Bed Party
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Introducing Silver - Stephan Franck's new Graphic Novel
![]() |
Silver, a new Graphic Novel by Stephan Franck |
Saturday, March 23, 2013
Look! Up in the sky! It's Despicablimp!
![]() |
WHA?????!!!!! |
Dave Rosenbaum, my super-cool boss at Illumination Entertainment, forwarded this announcement from Eddie Egan, President of Marketing:
"Yesterday morning, in Hollywood, California, a unique vessel took its maiden flight: the enormous Despicablimp. It was conceived, designed, and constructed in support of the summer opening of DESPICABLE ME 2!"
Friday, March 22, 2013
Fans Gone Wild: The Brave Little Toaster
Fan art. Just saying it brings a bemused smile to the face of animation artists. Seeing a fan art version of something you worked on is an honor; the naive quality and the unabashed love behind it make it so. And sometimes what makes fan art special is the creativity of it. Enter Ian Knau.
Ian is 22 and a lifelong fan of The Brave Little Toaster. The climactic sequence of the film involves a metal compactor - imagine the climactic scene in Toy Story 3 only twenty years earlier. The Toaster sacrifices herself (yes, herself) to save The Master from being smooshed. The metal crunchng machine made a deep impression on young Ian that has carried into his adulthood.
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Tax Breaks for UK Animation
![]() |
Wallace and Gromit would be proud. Copyright Aardman Animation |
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Why do the movies look so flat? - Cinematographer Barry Gross explains
![]() |
The end of film? |
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
Happy Birthday Dad!
My father is 80 today. Here is a lovely photo of the pair of us, taken some years ago. Dad is best known for his animation but what is perhaps less well known are his many musical accomplishments - he plays cornet at a professional level and his band Dix Six played regular gigs in London for decades, and produced several CDs.
Oy Canada! Nancy Beiman goes Metric!
Animator, teacher, and purebred New Yorker Nancy Beiman becomes a Canadian citizen today. FLIP demanded an explanation.....
FLIP: Why do you hate America?
NB: You never stop being American, and I don't plan to start (stopping). I am still allowed to eat New York Bagels, though I am required to have the Montreal style ones at least once a month. And a moose image must be present in my house at all times. And I can now have a passport for both of my split personalities.
![]() |
Nancy Beiman and her students. |
NB: You never stop being American, and I don't plan to start (stopping). I am still allowed to eat New York Bagels, though I am required to have the Montreal style ones at least once a month. And a moose image must be present in my house at all times. And I can now have a passport for both of my split personalities.
Monday, March 18, 2013
My Night at the Opera - a Very Animated Ballet
Sunday, March 17, 2013
The Orthodox Sweatbox Paradox
In the early days of Disney Studios, the cramped room where Walt critiqued his crew's pencil tests was aptly dubbed "The Sweatbox" by the animators under scrutiny. While the industry has changed radically since Walt's day, the Sweatbox survives; if not as a noun - a designated room, then as a verb - the act of critiquing. Every animator's got sweatbox stories to share at industry parties. I've been on both sides of that Moviola, as animator and director, the sweat-ee and sweat-or.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
Pregnant and Chained to a Lamppost
![]() |
Rebecca today with dog Charlie and the lamppost she saved. She never did get its name. Photo by Roger Wilson, Glendale News-Press |
Back in 1994, animator Rebecca Rees was well on her way to producing her second son, Wilder, when she found herself in the center of a chapter of Glendale, California history known as "The Adams Hill Rebellion". Don't Google it, I just named it that.
Friday, March 15, 2013
Slipping a Mickey
Was I drugged? Did I really see that, or was that a weird dream? Someone took the iconic Mickey Mouse and made a far out looking short - with Disney's backing! Huh? Whu?
![]() |
Sacre merde! Un nouvelle conception de Mickey! Voyez-le ici. |
Unless your internet has been down, you have probably at least heard about the new Mickey short released on the internet. The blogosphere has been buzzing about it. The wondrous part of the internet is its ability to capture one's knee-jerk reaction as public record. My own knee-jerk reaction was smile, smile, wince, smile, lose interest, and that's not Mickey. There. Public record. You can nod in agreement or gnash your teeth.
Thursday, March 14, 2013
Go green with VFX Solidarity International - Tonight!
VFX Solidarity International, whose remit is to "Unite VFX Professionals and the Digital Artist community worldwide for sound international business standards and practices", is having a "Pi Day" today (as in Life of Pi) for visual effects artists everywhere. It's a Town Hall meeting and everyone with an interest in visual effects is invited.
Tom Sito's History of Computer Animation
![]() |
Ivan Sutherland demonstrates Sketchpad, 1963. |
FLIP: What the hell does Tom Sito know about Computer Animation?
TS: Hah! You’re right. My name is not the first to come to mind when you think CG. When I was completing Drawing the Line, I included a chapter on the Digital Revolution. I needed to explain about CG’s origins to show how it affected the animation community and how it changed the traditional animation production pipeline, which had been sacred since J.R. Bray in 1913. The chapter grew so large that my editor cut it by two-thirds, and told me “ You have another book here.”
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
From DreamWorks to Greece and back again - Nassos Vakalis tells the story of an animation startup
![]() |
Who wants to live in Greece? |
In 2001 Nassos left DreamWorks to set up his own company, TimeLapse Pictures, in his home town of Athens. He is now back at DreamWorks, most recently storyboarding on Puss in Boots and Madagascar 3. FLIP asked him what it was like running an independent studio.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Knotty Pine
By David Knott
When David Knott isn't winning Emmys for The Penguins of Madagascar, he's a dad helping his two little girls with their Pinewood Derby entries. Dave shares this experience with FLIP.
David's Totoromobile entry for the dads' race. |
Pinewood Derby has been going on for quite a long time. I built and raced them for 3 years when I was a wee Cub Scout. My fastest car got me 3rd place overall. I was surprised to learn that the Y-Tribes also do an annual Pinewood derby race. Like most of you reading this, I said "What are the Y-Tribes?" It's run by the YMCA, and is a dads and daughters or dads and sons group/tribe, a bit like Scouts but with no merit badges and way less structure. Our tribe (the Zuni tribe) is dads and daughters. Since my girls are only one year apart I put them both in the same tribe. There are monthly meetings, but the big draw is the two weekend camps we do each year. One in Big Bear in January (for snow play,) and one on Catalina Island in April. And then there's also the Pinewood Derby.
Sunday, March 10, 2013
Upstairs to Arnold Roth
![]() |
The Harvey Kurtzman exhibit at the Society of Illustrators. |
After indulging my eyes in two floors of artwork from Harvey Kurtzman and his colleagues at the Society of Illustrators in Manhattan, I was about to leave when I noticed artwork by other artists leading up the stairs. I'm here, why not? I thought. At the top of the stairs I was pleasantly surprised to see the hallway lined with Arnold Roth's work from magazines such as Punch, The New Yorker, and Playboy. As one of Kurtzman's contemporaries, and a partner in Humbug, it was only fitting to have Roth's work represented as well. The only artist missing from the mix was Al Jaffee.
Saturday, March 9, 2013
Chicken Fat at the Society of Illustrators
![]() |
Even Harvey Kurtzman's signature is funny. |
I don't live in New York, but I just happened to be there when the Society of Illustrators on 63rd Street opened its new exhibit, The Art of Harvey Kurtzman. I have been a fan of Kurtzman since I was a pre-teen and discovered Mad comics through reproduced inserts in Mad magazine's "Super Special" issues. Even as a kid, I noticed there was something about those old comics that was lacking in the Mad magazine of 1974. I didn't know it then, but the missing piece was Harvey Kurtzman.
Friday, March 8, 2013
It's Official - 2D Animation at Disney is Dead
![]() |
The Princess and the Frog - Disney's last 2D feature |
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Introducing Mike Nguyen's animated labour of love - My Little World
Mike Nguyen is an animator and director whose credits include Beauty and The Beast, The Iron Giant, Space Jam and The Road to El Dorado. He has been working for some years on the independent animated film My Little World, which he has written and directed. FLIP asked Mike to explain what it takes to get such an ambitious personal project off the ground.
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Roger Rabbit 25th Anniversary Toontown Reunion
On April 4th there will be a 25th Anniversary screening by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences of a digitally restored version of Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, at the Sam Goldwyn Memorial Theatre in Los Angeles.
Monday, March 4, 2013
What Does a Visual Effects Producer Do, Exactly?
Martin Gabriel is a visual effects producer with a long list of successful feature films on his resume, including Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, X-Men, The last Stand, and Lara Croft: Tomb Raider. He also worked on the TV series Band of Brothers and The Prisoner.
Following the collapse of Oscar-winning facility Rhythm and Hues, FLIP asked Martin to talk about what, exactly, a visual effects producer does, and how a vfx film gets put together. In short - how does the industry really work?
Following the collapse of Oscar-winning facility Rhythm and Hues, FLIP asked Martin to talk about what, exactly, a visual effects producer does, and how a vfx film gets put together. In short - how does the industry really work?
Saturday, March 2, 2013
My Meeting with Bakshi, or, Goodbye Cool World
![]() |
Ralph Bakshi on the set of Cool World. |
In the fall of 1989, I got a call from Ralph Bakshi. He was just starting pre-production on a new feature called Cool World and asked if I'd like to meet to discuss working on it. Why not? Ralph Bakshi is an animation legend. Right?......Right?......Right?.....Anyway, I was intrigued and took the meeting at his office on the Paramount lot.
Friday, March 1, 2013
Animation History QUIZ!
Call yourself an animator? Think you know the history of animation? Sharpen your pencil, get yourself a piece of paper, and test your knowledge with our brand-new exclusive-to-FLIP animation history quiz! The story begins 18,000 years BC....
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)