Flesh (Carne) is a Brazilian animated documentary directed by Camila Kater in 2019. Flesh follows the story of five women in different phases of life as they speak about their ambiguous relationship with their own bodies, as well as their…
Documentary
The Truth about “Animating Truth”
by Sofía Poggi • October 19, 2021 • 0 Comments
Review of Nea Ehrlich, Animating Truth: Documentary and Visual Culture in the 21st Century, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2021. For those of us who are interested in nonfictional animation, Nea Ehrlich’s new book is, to tell the truth, a proper…
Virtual Animated Documentaries
by Nea Ehrlich • December 7, 2020 • 0 Comments
When I first began researching animated documentaries, over 10 years ago, I remember being asked at an art-related conference “but where do you find your case studies”? Indeed, at the time a challenging part of the research process was to…
On Biology and Natural History in “Fantasia” (1940)
by Colin Williamson • November 30, 2020 • 3 Comments
In 1955, Walt Disney Productions released A World Is Born, a 16mm short animated educational science film that visualized the natural history of Earth from the origins of cellular life to the extinction of the dinosaurs (see Figure 1). The…
“Nobody’s Metaphor”: A Decolonial Film of Voices, Swords, and Brushstrokes
by Anna Sowa • September 7, 2020 • 0 Comments
In the short documentary, Nobody’s Metaphor (2019), Chouette Films worked with Maslaha to capture the unfolding stories of a group of Muslim girls and young women of color who try out fencing and poetry workshops after school. These workshops, run…
Sound as an Indexical Element in Nonfiction Animation
by Sofía Poggi • October 7, 2019 • 0 Comments
Indexes, icons, and symbols. According to Charles Sanders Peirce’s semiotic theory (1974), we can identify three basic types of signs: indexes, icons, and symbols. Indexes, such as photos, videos, and films, have a factual connection with their objects since they…
Animating the Documentary
by Robert Musburger • February 25, 2019 • 0 Comments
Review of Nea Ehrlich and Jonathan Murray (eds.). Drawn from Life: Issues and Themes in Animated Documentary Cinema. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2019. This book project evolved from a collection of proceedings during a 2011 conference held at Edinburgh University…
Using Animation as a Playground for My Memories
by Tom Margett • January 7, 2019 • 1 Comment
‘Memory is a perpetually actual phenomenon, a band tying us to the eternal present […] Memory nourishes recollections that may be out of focus or telescopic, global or detached, particular or symbolic [… It] takes root in the concrete, in…
Animated Opening Titles and Intertitles in German Newsreels of the 1950s and 1960s (West and East)
by Sigrun Lehnert • June 11, 2018 • 2 Comments
Starting in the first years of the 20th century with short documentary films, newsreels have had a long tradition of being glued together as a program. Newsreels were produced by different film production companies. After 1930, the films were accompanied…
Making the Invisible Visible: Ari Folman’s Waltz with Bashir
by Carlo Avventi • February 26, 2018 • 0 Comments
‘With animation you can do everything’. This is what director Ari Folman says in the extras of his award-winning animated film Vals Im Bashir (Waltz with Bashir, 2008)[1]. And, indeed, it seems that there is nothing animated films are not capable…