Herein are the various picks of what films and other cultural artifacts four present and former animation festival directors would take along with them to a desert island: Tom Knott (former director of the Ottawa International Animation Festival), Gigi Hu (co-founder and co-director of Singapore's Animation Fiesta), Chris Robinson (current director of the Ottawa International Animation Festival) and Philippe Moins (founder and current co-director of the Brussels Animation Festival). They are also joined by Beavis and Butt-head Do America's animation director, Yvette Kaplan.
Tom Knott's baker's dozen . . .
- Crac by Frédérick Back
- Dumbo by Ben Sharpstein
- Begone Dull Care by Norman McLaren
- One of Joanna Priestly's films. I couldn't decide which one, as they
are all good.
- The Thief and the Cobbler in Richard William's version. The
greatest animated feature ever made and never seen.
- The Sweater by Sheldon Cohen
- Adventures of * by John Hubley
- Gerald McBoing Boing by John Hubley
- Feed The Kitty by Chuck Jones
- The Snowman by Diane Jackson
- Creature Comforts by Nick Park
- Tango by Zbignew Rybczinski
- The Simpsons:Last Exit to Springfield by Mark Kirkland (the episode with Homer as the head of the union).
Gigi Hu's picks . . .
These came to my mind within a minute or so when I first saw your email. I decided to stick to it:
- The Monk and the Fish by Michael Dudok de Wit, for its simplicity, music and movement synchronization.
- Song of the Exile. Ann Hui's film about relationship with parents/grandparents, very personal.
- World Apartment Horror by Katsuhiro Otomo, for its multicultural storyline and the anime touch.
- Excerpts from Sleeping Beauty, especially the magic in the air.
- Some haunting Mongolian songs--love of the land, the open space and
- the steppes.
- Shanghai Animation Studio productions--Chinese watercolor paintings coming alive.
- No Problem by Criag Welsch. A wacky animation piece.
- Seven Samurai by Akira Kurosawa. The sheer length, black and
white, such storytelling . . .
- Learning to play Saint-Saëns's piano piece, The Swan, by heart.
- Some Scottish Ceilidh music--for the twirl and whirl, friendship spirit . . .
Chris Robinson's . . .
In no particular order:
- 1895 by Priit Parn & Janno Poldma.
- The Sweater by Sheldon Cohen.
- Dino, the masterful biography of Dean Martin by Nick Tosches.
- Kiss Me Stupid by Billy Wilder.
- Bimbo's Initiation by Dave Fleischer.
- Drunken Master 2 by Jackie Chan.
- 1978 National Hockey League semi-final game between Montreal and Boston.
- Cops by Buster Keaton.
- The Simpsons, particularly the episode where Homer becomes union kingpin (Last Exit to Springfield by Mark Kirkland).
Post new comment