Desert Island Series . . . Festive Festivalers Make Their Picks

Tom Knott, Gigi Hu, Chris Robinson, Philippe Moins and Yvette Kaplan.

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 . . .

  1. Crac by Frédérick Back
  2. Dumbo by Ben Sharpstein
  3. Begone Dull Care by Norman McLaren
  4. One of Joanna Priestly's films. I couldn't decide which one, as they are all good.
  5. The Thief and the Cobbler in Richard William's version. The greatest animated feature ever made and never seen.
  6. The Sweater by Sheldon Cohen
  7. Adventures of * by John Hubley
  8. Gerald McBoing Boing by John Hubley
  9. Feed The Kitty by Chuck Jones
  10. The Snowman by Diane Jackson
  11. Creature Comforts by Nick Park
  12. Tango by Zbignew Rybczinski
  13. 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:

  1. The Monk and the Fish by Michael Dudok de Wit, for its simplicity, music and movement synchronization.
  2. Song of the Exile. Ann Hui's film about relationship with parents/grandparents, very personal.
  3. World Apartment Horror by Katsuhiro Otomo, for its multicultural storyline and the anime touch.
  4. Excerpts from Sleeping Beauty, especially the magic in the air.
  5. Some haunting Mongolian songs--love of the land, the open space and
  6. the steppes.
  7. Shanghai Animation Studio productions--Chinese watercolor paintings coming alive.
  8. No Problem by Criag Welsch. A wacky animation piece.
  9. Seven Samurai by Akira Kurosawa. The sheer length, black and white, such storytelling . . .
  10. Learning to play Saint-Saëns's piano piece, The Swan, by heart.
  11. Some Scottish Ceilidh music--for the twirl and whirl, friendship spirit . . .

Chris Robinson's . . .

In no particular order:

  1. 1895 by Priit Parn & Janno Poldma.
  2. The Sweater by Sheldon Cohen.
  3. Dino, the masterful biography of Dean Martin by Nick Tosches.
  4. Kiss Me Stupid by Billy Wilder.
  5. Bimbo's Initiation by Dave Fleischer.
  6. Drunken Master 2 by Jackie Chan.
  7. 1978 National Hockey League semi-final game between Montreal and Boston.
  8. Cops by Buster Keaton.
  9. The Simpsons, particularly the episode where Homer becomes union kingpin (Last Exit to Springfield by Mark Kirkland).







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