mbertier In 1949, stop motion animation legend Ray Harryhausen, director of classics like The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958) and Jason and the Argonauts (1963), brought his developing SFX wizardry to the story of Little Red Riding Hood.
mbertier In 1986 while a student at CalArts, Jim Reardon, who went on to direct numerous episodes of The Simpsons, created this fantastic faux trailer for "Bring Me the Head of Charlie Brown," a bizarro world TV special starring the Peanuts gang."The creator of this picture wishes to state that he does not in any way wish to tarnish or demean the beloved characters of Charles M. "Dutch" Schultz's comic strip, "Peanuts". No malice or damage to their goodwill was intended. So please don't sue me, because it will drag through the courts for years, and I haven't got a lawyer - and besides, you've already got half the money in the world, and I haven't got any. OK?"via http://boingboing.net/2017/05/12/bring-me-the-head-of-charlie.html
mbertier Michel Chien, du Club des Chats noous dit : Nous avons participé à l'aventure d'animation 12fps (http://www.12fps.net/) dans le passé : épisode 06 avec "le canard coureur"et surtout le grand final avec 12 invités où nous avons réalisé un épisode des "les vers de bois"à regarder ici:http://www.12fps.net/fr/home/serie/3945/12/slideshow?of=0bravo merci bravo à Frédéric Doazan, Paul Rodrigues et Sylvain Cappellettohttp://www.12fps.net/fr/home/serie/3945/12/slideshow?of=0
mbertier Très beau film d'animation d'après le récit de Jean Giono dans lequel un berger donne une nouvelle vie à un paysage presque desert (Dit par Philippe Noiret. Frédéric Back (1924-2013), Canada 1987). "L'Homme qui plantait des arbres" remporte l?Oscar du meilleur court métrage décerné par l'Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences de Los Angeles, aux États-Unis, le 11 avril 1988.
mbertier In 1992, seven years before the premier of SpongeBob SquarePants, the late Stephen Hillenburg was enrolled in CalArts' Experimental Animation Program. As a student, he created his first cartoons, including "The Green Beret" (1992) seen above, which landed him his job at Nickelodeon, working on Rocko's Modern Life and, later, developing SpongeBob SquarePants.