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Humdrum.
© Aardman Animations.
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Humdrum
Also from England comes the Aardman Studios produced film Humdrum,
directed by Peter Peaks. From the beginning of the film -- as its
two characters say, "Anything on telly? . . . Only some weird
animation thing. . . . Oh God." -- it is evident that the film
will be a self parody. Since the characters themselves are composed
of cast shadows from animated figures, the joke is heightened when
they resort to playing shadow puppets with their hands. One character
comments, "I can't think of anything more boring than staring
at some stupid shadows for God's sake. Is this what happens when
you don't have any friends?" One has the feeling the idea for
this film came about after some animators found themselves having
the very same conversation. Heavily reliant on the dialogue of its
two characters, the short work remains a relatively simple, humorous
film that turns on a few good jokes.
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Uncle.
© Adam Benjamin Elliot.
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Cousin.
© Adam Benjamin Elliot.
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Uncle and Cousin
Even simpler in its execution are two films by Australian animator
Adam Benjamin Elliot, Uncle and Cousin, the first
of a trilogy that will be capped by a film called Brother.
As these films' titles suggest, they are personal works based on
relatives of the artist. Strongly driven by voice-over narration,
read by William McInnes, the actual animation in the film is relatively
little. Instead, clay figures tend to remain relatively still in
front of simple, flattened backdrops, as if they were created by
a child.
The stories themselves are at once charming and sad, investigating
two individuals who are removed from mainstream society in some
manner. The "Uncle" is a sensitive man who loses touch
with reality after his wife commits suicide and his dog gets killed.
Living out his last days in a "gentleman's home," he dies
quietly with a cup of tea and a scone in his hand. The "Cousin"
is a boy born with cerebral palsy, who is the subject of ridicule
by neighborhood children but nonetheless finds his own way in the
world. Cousin was funded by the Australian Film Commission,
Film Victoria and SDS Independent, and also is part of an Australia-wide
initiative, "Swimming Outside the Flags," a one-hour showcase
of Australian animation screened on SCS.
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