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Jim Henson's Animated Universes

Some Thoughts on Animated Embodiment in “Muppet Babies: Play Date”

by Timothy Jones • July 23, 2019 • 5 Comments

Forty years after the release of The Muppet Movie (dir. James Frawley) in June 1979, it seems fitting to celebrate the lasting contribution of Jim Henson to puppet animation by considering the Muppet Babies: Play Date shorts on YouTube in…

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Asian Animation, Book Review

Bursting the Bounds of Chinese Animation and Scholarship

by Shannon Brownlee • July 15, 2019 • 0 Comments

Review of Daisy Yan Du. Animated Encounters: Transnational Movements of Chinese Animation 1940s-1970s. University of Hawai’i Press, 2019. Daisy Yan Du’s excellent Animated Encounters: Transnational Movements of Chinese Animation 1940s-1970s is essential reading for anyone interested in Chinese or Japanese…

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Jim Henson's Animated Universes

Labyrinth

by Tim Butler Garrett • July 8, 2019 • 0 Comments

Jim Henson’s 1986 production Labyrinth holds a special place in the Henson canon (as well as in the hearts of many children of the 1980s). Its inception came after one of the first critical misfires of Henson’s film career, the…

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European Animation, Jim Henson's Animated Universes

The French Reinterpretation of Jim Henson’s Muppet Universe

by Samuel Kaczorowski • July 1, 2019 • 1 Comment

After the end of World War II, in all the nations where television had a swift boom, puppets largely invaded the small screen to satisfy an increasingly younger audience eager for fantasy and adventure. While in the 1960s, live action…

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Asian Animation, Book Review

Changing Perspective(s) on Japanese Animation

by Marco Pellitteri • June 24, 2019 • 0 Comments

Review of Masao Yokota and Tze-yue G. Hu (eds.).  Japanese Animation: East Asian Perspectives. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2013. This book was put together by a prominent clinical psychologist with a long experience in the psychological dimensions of animation…

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Early Animation

Pardon, My Mistake

by Giannalberto Bendazzi • June 10, 2019 • 2 Comments

I must correct a mistake that I made and widespread. On the 1996 Spring issue of Animation Journal I published an essay entitled The Italians Who Invented the Drawn-On-Film Technique. The brothers Bruno and Arnaldo Ginanni Corradini, from Ravenna, had…

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Animation and animals

Disrupting Animated Voices: Voiceless Animal/Anthropomorphic Bodies in Bendy and the Ink Machine

by Isabelle Williams • June 3, 2019 • 0 Comments

The origins and development of the animated voice of cartoons provide a compelling way to understand the conflation of animals with the animated language. The animal body and the human body become intertwined through anthropomorphic cartoon body. The body of…

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Animation and animals

Racialized Voice Acting and Transracial Voice Casting of Animated Animals

by Kara Lynn Andersen • May 27, 2019 • 7 Comments

Until now the research on race and ethnicity in animated films and cartoons has mainly taken one of two directions: critiquing racist and ethnocentric characters and stories, and calling for increased diversity, especially in children’s animated media. There have been…

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Book Review

Being Moved by Moving Images

by Andrew Connor • May 20, 2019 • 0 Comments

Review of Meike Uhrig (ed.). Emotion in Animated Films. New York/London: Routledge, 2018. Emotion in Animated Films explores the rich territory of emotions and their representation within animated films, particularly with a view on emotions as represented within computer animation. Books…

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Animation and animals

From Human Animals to Animal Humans: Animation Practices in Three Versions of The Jungle Book

by Tina Ohnmacht and Lukas von Berg • May 13, 2019 • 2 Comments

The Warner Bros. production Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle (2018, by Andy Serkis) uses motion capture for animating the animals. After seeing this film, we were left with a strong, yet uncanny fascination. In order to look further into this,…

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