“Animated cinema is the demiurgic art par excellence: matter comes to life and is transformed in the hands and imaginations of the creators. They, more than anybody, know about the secret life of objects.” This description, comes from the exhibition “Metamorphosis: Fantasy Visions in Starewitch, Švankmajer and the Quay Brothers,” now playing at the Centre de Cultura Contemporanea (CCCB) in Barcelona, Spain, and it's a good summary of the work of these four visionary animators.
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Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Luis Buñuel, Bruno Schulz, Max Ernst, Brothers Quay, Georges Melies, Walerian Borowczyk, Ladislas Starewitch, Emile Cohl, Lotte Reiniger, Arnold Böcklin, Centre de Cultura Contemporanea, Charles Bowers, Emma Hauck, Francisco de Goya, Gustave Courbet, James Ensor, Jean Grandville, La Casa Encendida, Max Klinger, Monsu Desiderio, Robert Walser, Segundo de Chomón, Events, Stop Motion, Jan Svankmajer, Salvador Dali, Add a tag

Blog: Cartoon Brew (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Ideas/Commentary, John Lasseter, Bob Clampett, Ward Kimball, Bill Plympton, Don Bluth, Hayao Miyazaki, Genndy Tartakovsky, Chuck Jones, Brad Bird, Frank Tashlin, Don Hertzfeldt, Friz Freleng, John Kricfalusi, Joe Barbera, Frederic Back, John Hubley, Joanna Quinn, Lotte Reiniger, Bill Hanna, Bruno Bozzetto, Emile Cohl, Walt Disney, Nick Park, Seth MacFarlane, Ralph Bakshi, Pen Ward, Richard Williams, Winsor McCay, Tex Avery, Pete Docter, Add a tag
“Animation is a young man’s game,” Chuck Jones once said. There’s no question that animation is a labor-intensive art that requires mass quantities of energy and time. While it’s true that the majority of animation directors have directed a film by the age of 30, there are also a number of well known directors who started their careers later.
Directors like Pete Docter, John Kricfalusi and Bill Plympton didn’t begin directing films until they were in their 30s. Don Bluth, Winsor McCay and Frederic Back were late bloomers who embarked on directorial careers while in their 40s. Pioneering animator Emile Cohl didn’t make his first animated film, Fantasmagorie (1908), until he was 51 years old. Of course, that wasn’t just Cohl’s first film, but it is also considered by most historians to be the first true animated cartoon that anyone ever made.
Here is a cross-selection of 30 animation directors, past and present, and the age they were when their first professional film was released to the public.
- Don Hertzfeldt (19 years old)
Ah, L’Amour
Ah, L’Amour
The Ornament of the Lovestruck Heart
Tapum! The History of Weapons
Hook & Ladder Hokum
Little Red Riding Hood
Fiery Fireman
Larry & Steve
2 Stupid Dogs (TV)
Porky’s Badtime Story (or 23 if you count When’s Your Birthday)
Adventure Time (TV)
Girl’s Night Out
Gadmouse the Apprentice Good Fairy
The Night Watchman
The Little Island
Gold Diggers of ’49
Blue Monday
Puss Gets the Boot
Old Blackout Joe
Luxo Jr.
Amazing Stories: “Family Dog” (TV)
Rupan Sansei (TV)
A Grand Day Out
Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures (TV)
Monsters Inc.
Adventures in Music: Melody
Boomtown
How a Mosquito Operates
The Small One
Abracadabra
Fantasmagorie