“Haring” by Davor Bujakovic & Junaid Chundrigar

Haring tells the tale of Diederik, a guy who makes the mistake of eating a herring right before a date. When he finds out his fishy breath destroys everything in its path, he does his best to get rid of the smell, while also trying to reach his date in time.

Haring was made with the collaboration from the Netherlands Film Fund, SNS Reaal and Pathé and was made for the 2014 UltraKort program. The film screened in front of Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” in all Dutch Pathé cinemas. It was made using TVPaint.

HARING

WRITTEN, DIRECTED AND PRODUCED BY
Davor Bujakovic & Junaid Chundrigar

ANIMATED AND COLORED BY
Davor Bujakovic
Tom Mourik
Erwin Langstraat

BACKGROUNDS BY
Anna Engels

MUSIC BY
Jochem Weierink

SOUND DESIGN AND MIX BY
Erik Griekspoor

VOICES BY
Erik Griekspoor
Lana Topalovic
Junaid Chundrigar

SPECIAL THANKS TO
Lana Topalovic
Egbert de Ruiter
Roloff de Jeu

2 Credits

The Dirdy Birdy Redux by John R. Dilworth

Official online premiere of John R. Dilworth’s 1994 underground classic re-edited to restore over one minute of never seen footage. Learn the deep dark secret of abnormal bird behavior! Also included an exclusive introduction by Dilly himself. This version is the 20th Anniversary re-issue that screened in over 50 film festivals around the world.

Editing by William Hohauser, as well as the special animation in the introduction.

THE HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME: 90 ORIGINAL CONCEPT ART COLLECTION

hunchback-notre-dame-ca47-1024x756

When you think about it, The Hunchback of Notre Dame is a true animated masterpiece from an animation standpoint. The amazing Disney team managed to turn what was supposed to be a hideous deformed hunchback into an endearing hero that we all rooted for. The songs I could have done without but it also had some truly beautiful dancing animation (in front of a HUGE crowds no less) making it an exceptional 2d animation masterpiece in my mind. Anyway, here’s 90 pieces of art from the film the Hunchback of Notre Dame! Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_mk763-9e6k

100 Pieces of Iron Giant Art!

iron-giant-ca93-1024x749

I really do love this film and lately new bits of art keep cropping up, and I find it a shame that a giant company such as Warner Bros. can’t get it’s act together to make another animated film (and no Happy feet doesn’t count). Well today here’s a gallery of 100 pieces of art from Iron Giant! Enjoy!

You can see the full post here.

“The Old New World” by Alexey Zakharov

“The Old New World” is an amazingly detailed photo-based animation project that brings alive turn of the century photos by photographer and animator Alexey Zakharov of Moscow, Russia. Zakharov found old photos of US cities from the early 1900s and brought them to life.

There are clearly some issues with the added animation such as at 1:47 where the man isn’t even holding the box in his hands. not sure how that got though but nevertheless if you don’t scrutinize too hand it’s a pretty cool little project!
——————————————————
It’s a travel back in time with a little steampunk time machine.
The main part of this video was made with Camera projection based on photos.
——————————————————
Source photos by shorpy.com
Music: Al Bowlly – “Guilty”
Still frames and illustrations: behance.net/gallery/35310703/The-Old-New-World-Photo-based-animation-project

 

The photos show New York, Boston, Detroit, Washington, D.C., and Baltimore between 1900 and 1940, and were obtained from the website Shorpy.

It’s a “photo-based animation project” that offers a “travel back in time with a little steampunk time machine,” Zakharov says. “The main part of this video was made with camera projection based on photos.”

Why this Scene Looks so Amazing

LTS1

Andreas Deja has an interesting post up about the animation process behind the scene above from Lady and the Tramp which while it was animated by Frank Thomas, both Milt Kahl and Iwao Takamoto went over the scene for ultimate drawing appeal. Iwao Takamoto if you remember was a very large part of Hanna Barbera’s style.

You can read the entire article here.