All Things:Animated

We watched From Up On Poppy Hill this evening. It's on In Demand (TWC) right now.

As always with a Ghibli work, it's breathtakingly beautiful, visually. This story is decidedly less fantastic than most others (set in real-world early 60s Yokohama). Still, lovely story. Great flick by Ghibli. Again.
 
Akira: 25th Anniversary Edition Blu-ray Detailed

FUNimation's 25th Anniversary Edition release includes:

Original 1988 Kodansha/Streamline English Dub, starring Cam Clarke and Jan Rabson
2001 Pioneer/Animaze English Dub, starring Johnny Yong Bosch and Joshua Seth
Restoring Akira Featurette
Subtitled Interview with Director Katsuhiro Otomo
The Writing on the Wall
Akira Sound Clip (1988)
Music for Akira
Storyboard Collection
Original Subtitled Trailers
Original Subtitled Commercials
Glossary
U.S. 2013 Trailer
Additional Trailers
 
Further Details About The Live Action Patlabor Film, Mamoru Oshii Confirmed As Director - Bleeding Cool Comic Book, Movies and TV News and Rumors

There are a number of other tantalising details too, which originate from a press conference about the film. The Patlabor live action project will actually be made up of twelve forty-eight minute episodes that will be released theatrically in 2014, an episode zero, and a one-hundred minute feature film in 2015.

The project is reportedly budgeted at $26,000,000 and will tell a new story set in the present day.
 
Henry Selick to Direct A TALE DARK AND GRIMM for FilmNation | Collider

Deadline reported on Selick being tapped to helm A Tale Dark and Grimm. Here’s what the director had to say about the source material:

“I remain completely enraptured by Adam Gidwitz’ marvelous book A Tale Dark & Grimm,” said Selick. “It’s a hilarious, deeply inventive tale about survival in the world of fairytales and what it takes to forgive one’s parents. So it’s a huge thrill to be joining the team of Kamala Films and FilmNation as the director of the film based on it. Between the great material and a team that really gets it, I hope to make something really special that lasts.”

Here’s the synopsis for A Tale Dark and Grimm (via Amazon):

Hansel and Gretel walk out of their own story and into eight other classic Grimm (and Grimm-inspired) fairy tales. An irreverent, witty narrator leads us through encounters with witches, warlocks, dragons, and the devil himself. As the siblings roam a forest brimming with menacing foes, they learn the true story behind the famous tales, as well as how to take charge of their destinies and create their own happily ever after. Because once upon a time, fairy tales were awesome.
 
The shows he did were some of the most inexpensively-produced cell-animated shows, ever. Characters had very little overall movement (often only their mouths moved in a scene) and when large movements were made, those cells were used over and over again in episode after episode until the cells wore out. Then, an interning in-betweener would quickly ink and paint a copy.

In other words, his shows were just mass-produced...and it showed. Granted, he cranked it out, but aside from the nostalgia factor his shows have, his work was neither interesting nor ground-breaking.
 
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