10 Till 6: Most Discussed Posts

Archer Trivia Contest Giveaway!

Posted In | Blog Categories: Cartoons | Site Categories: Cartoons, Television

We're giving away a copy of Sterling Archer's new book, HOW TO ARCHER, to the first person to email info@awn.com with the correct answer to the following Archer trivia question:

Where does Archer's codename "Duchess" come from?

The Cost of Being the Great Gatsby

Posted In | Blog Categories: Feature Films, Art | Site Categories: Films
Just how much money did it cost to be The Great Gatsby?  Check out Nikolay Lamm's infographic to find out.

Tasty Quotes from the 2012 VFX Bakeoff

Posted In | Blog Categories: Reviews, People, Feature Films | Site Categories: 3D, Awards, CG, Events, Films, People, Technology, Visual Effects
Martin Scorsese's Hugo. Image © 2011 GK Films. All Rights Reserved.
Martin Scorsese's Hugo. Image © 2011 GK Films. All Rights Reserved.

 

Two hours of schmooze followed by over three hours of presentations by teams all vying for Best VFX Oscar gold, the annual VFX Bakeoff was a long but ultimately enjoyable evening. Always a gathering of industry legends, this year was no different – giants Rob Legato, Scott Farrar, Joe Letteri, Michael Fink, John Knoll and John Dykstra were just some of the presenters.  Though it’s possible to glean new insights into how a particular vfx shot was handled, the most entertaining part of the evening remains the occasional quip or funny anecdote shared by a presenter.  While the victuals at Kate Mantelini are always great (upscale mac n’ cheese + cold night = smile), each year it seems more and more people get squeezed into an impossibly narrow space.  While not great for locomotion or bathroom breaks, the sardine can confinement does make for interesting eavesdropping.  You don’t really catch entire conversations, nor complete context, but your ears do perk up if you catch something particularly funny, biting or just plain mean.  After all, this still is Hollywood.  And while it’s not quite Housewives of the Renderfarm, it’s still pretty amusing. 

Watch Andrew Stanton's Commencement Address at Animation Mentor

Posted In | Blog Categories: People | Site Categories: Education and Training, Events, People
Pixar Director and Writer Andrew Stanton.
Pixar Director and Writer Andrew Stanton.

We've posted two-time Oscar-winner Andrew Stanton's (Monsters Inc, Toy Story, John Carter, Finding Nemo and others) commencement address from last month's Animation Mentor graduation.  Humor, insight and enthusiasm from one of Pixar's brightest stars.

Watch it exclusively on AWNtv!

The Cost of Being Fast and Furious

Posted In | Blog Categories: Feature Films, Art | Site Categories: Art, Films
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Just how much money does it cost to be Fast and Furious?  Check out Nikolay Lamm's infographic to find out.

3-D Fit for The Lion King: Retrofitting a Classic, Filmmakers Look Back

Posted In | Blog Categories: Feature Films | Site Categories: 3D, Films
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Lion King

On IndieWire, Bill Desowitz delves into the 3-D retrofitting of Disney's The Lion King. He talks to those in charge of the work and those who worked on the original classic as well.

The Search for a da Vinci Masterpiece

Posted In | Blog Categories: Profiles, Art | Site Categories: 3D, CG, Places, Technology
Randi Rost
Randi Rost

By Randi Rost

In the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence, Italy, a feverish search occurs seemingly in slow motion. In order to make progress in the search, a team of researchers from the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), has been inventing a brand-new field of work called “art forensics.” Armed with innovative new portable sensing devices and Intel technology, they are searching for a lost masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci called “The Battle of Anghiari.” This impressive painting, considered by some to be da Vinci’s greatest artistic accomplishment, was lost more than 450 years ago.

Review: Wallace & Gromit’s World of Invention DVD

Posted In | Blog Categories: Reviews | Site Categories: 2D, Home Entertainment, Stop-Motion, Television
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Engineers, scientists and other supposed great-thinkers don’t often make for interesting copy.  Centrifuges, remote sensors, pressure valves and biopsies don’t bring smiles to most people’s faces, unless of course, you’re my mom, who never met a biopsy she couldn’t fret over, going back to Marcus Welby, M.D. To those who don’t understand, like or appreciate scientific thought, even MacGyver is mundane and hopelessly highbrow.

Enter stage left the magnificent pair of stop-motion Brits, Aardman’s Wallace & Gromit, front and center in a new DVD release of their complete six-part BBC1 TV series, Wallace & Gromit’s World of Invention.  This nifty series pairs the eternally bumbling but kind-hearted inventor Wallace, along with his trusted companion, always-in-the-nick-of-time dog Gromit, and a series of live action vignettes on engineers, scientists and designers whose contraptions are truly extraordinary.  Part Mythbusters, part National Geographic, the pairing is clever, with our animated duo introducing and wrapping in and around the live action segments.

WIA/LA Joins Community To Help Rusty Mills

Rusty Mills
Rusty Mills
I wanted to pass along this notice from Women in Animation's LA Chapter, announcing a fundraising effort to support Rusy Mills, Exec VP at Studio Kinate, animation teacher as well as award winning director/producer for Animaniacs/Pinky & the Brain, who is fighting a difficult battle with colon cancer.  We are all saddened to hear of his illness and our thoughts are with him and his family at this time.

10 Till 6 #1: Crying Through Toy Story 3, A Stick Figure Action Hero Returns & Animated Politicos

Posted In | Blog Categories: Web Articles, Short Films, Feature Films | Site Categories: Films, Flash, People, Short Films

Belinda Luscombe just published an article on the Time Magazine website in which she ponders why adults cry so easily when they watch animated kids movies.  My guess is that they’re still upset over the cost of tickets and armfuls of popcorn, candy and sky blue slushies, but the economics of the cinematic experience are not to be confused with the more cerebral and emotional aspects of the animated film viewing experience discussed in the article... Alan Becker’s fantastic flash-animated stick figure is back with another installment of the ongoing personal computer battles popularized in 2 previous films...Filmmaker Ray Grigg’s conservative political documentary I Want Your Money opens this Friday in selected theatres throughout the US, complete with a very animated Barack Obama.