Archive for the 'Animation Greats!' Category

Nov 04 2010

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Watch Animation Greats! Online.

Movie Title: Animation Greats!
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This is a unbelievable collection.

I can’t mediate of a finer compilation for someone enthusiastic in exploring the diverse uses of animation (defintely non-Disney, thank God) and adult always in theme and occassionally frontal nudity (a couple very brief seconds in “Special Delivery”) and this is most assuredly not porn (soft or hard.) But what happens in some of these classics may be bit too harsh for children or outside their view. Parents or guardians should settle for themselves.

(1) I believe “Special Delivery” a masterpiece. A execute ( that is not at all execute) that is a very incisive lift on hypocrisy and immorality (or is that amorality.) A gracious example of how a “cartoon” can do a lot more than come by an hysterical laugh out of you. It’s black-humor, will probaby give most anyone a smart smile, chuckle or cry.

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(2) “Getting Started” is one of Richard Condie’s first films and another masterpiecce. Condie seems incapable of not making a masterpiece. His consume on everyday delusions of grandeur and reality is a charmer with his improbable off-center sense of humor. Beautifully engrossing and executed. Once you adjust to Condie’s humor and style, you’ll be coming befriend for more. This is novel individualist creation at its best.

(3) “The Huge Snit” is another Condie masterpiece of a mighty higher order. Here Condie makes a statement on the unthinkable that is hilarious until literally the demolish. This isn’t one of the best titillating films, it belongs in the company of the greatest films ever made. Condie is an absurdist in the W.C. Fields tradition. The couple in this at first seem unreal, but their bizarre eccentricities originate them somehow, more realistic, believable and, even, lovable, while maintaining a giddy swipe at “normalcy.

(4) “Gather A Job” is an exceedingly bewitching and probably successful distress using rock ‘n roll to reveal how to do what the title and classic song query. With plenty of sparkling, almost Looney-Toonish animation, it is unprejudiced tiring, fun to peruse and delievers it’s message without bludgeoning. Would that all public service messages were this kewl and quick-witted. A classic.

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(5) “The Cat Came Encourage” is a film I had heard about for years, and I was fearful it wouldn’t live up to its praise. It more than lived up to the kudos it has justly received. It is about a guy, who makes the mistake of taking in a cat on his doorstep and comes to,uh, regret it. He keeps tossing out the cat. The cat returns and as only a cat can demolishes the guys house and life. Never has there been such sunny dark humor. This is as droll as the best Loony Tunes and better than the average. Pure gold with an ending that makes it a gem. Masterpiece every moment of the diagram.

(6) “Juke Bar” combines live action with animation as cockroaches live it up in a newly delivered old-style juke box to a greasy spoon hot dog joint. The fancifully conceived and inspiring roaches turn the juke box into a bar. And then the partying begins. A shining delight. But all parties must demolish and this one has a excellent double surprise ending. Actually, not surprising if you’ve ever battled the small SOBs. Broad character animation. A classic.

(7) “Blackfly” is an animation based on a song written by the Canadian who wrote and sings about his experiences as a lumberjack. Another classic. After 6 and 7, you may feel like scratching.

(8) “The Lump” is a cautionary account on wanting everything to discover perfect and how insisting on perfection that is cosmetic demonstrate can lead to inconvenience, i.e. seeing only the beauty and not the reality, which is spun to inspect aesthetic. Another masterpiece to get one search for a very loyal blind-spot in all of us. More relevant than ever in today’s unbelievably ghastly unusual regime of politicians

If you are a old (in all ways) adult, this is a superior one for taking a examine at “alternative” animation and its riches-artstic and snort.

I don’t know why this DVD is getting hard to glean all of a sudden. My copy arrived today, but it looks like you can no longer order it.

First off, this DVD isn’t really for American kids. With that in mind, please read the following review. Anyway, this is a more keen selection of National Film Board of Canada though-provoking shorts than the Leonard Maltin Animation Favorites DVD. The Maltin selections were obedient too but too arty for the average viewer (I nearly fell asleep throughout “Pas de Deux” on that video) .

In “Animation Greats!” we discover a variety of crowd pleasers, beginning with the surprising “Special Delivery” and ending with “Blackfly”, an challenging adaptation of a Canadian folk song. Honest, there is composed “The Lump” after that one, but “The Lump” is objective so Plain and tiring,. An overlong pixilation/collage short with unappealing characters.

The thing about this DVD is that unlike a lot of short film collections, the ratio of sincere Splendid shorts is higher. The best ones are “Special Delivery”, Richard Condie’s “Getting started” (which is also on the Maltin DVD but the sound is better on this print), “The titanic snit” (also by Condie, an astounding explain of Condie’s fresh humour), the rarely-seen, albeit superb musical comedy “Net a Job” starring Bob Dog…and of course, “The Cat Came Serve” which seems to be in nearly every single compilation of NFB shorts (It’s on the Maltin DVD as well as on any number of past, prove and future compilations) .

The only shorts I had no appreciate for were “The Lump” and “Juke Bar”, a pre-”Joe’s Apartment” cockroach-infested stop-motion escapade. It unbiased wasn’t amusing enough. Overall I recommend getting this if you idea on watching the cartoons with friends, and the Leonard Maltin DVD if you want some lovely visuals.

This would’ve got 5 stars from me if they replaced “The Lump” with McLaren’s “Neighbours” and “Juke Bar” with “What on Earth”.
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