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  • 10 Forgotten Anime Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish Lucas Kloberdanz-Dyck
    One of the best things about new animeseries is that the quality and quantity have never been better, with dozens of must-watch shows coming out every year, each having better animation and more creativity than the last. With series such as Jujutsu Kaisen and Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, modern anime is at an all-time high, which also means that viewers have shorter attention spans and tend to forget about all the good anime that came before.
     

10 Forgotten Anime Shows That Are Perfect From Start to Finish

8 June 2026 at 20:05

One of the best things about new animeseries is that the quality and quantity have never been better, with dozens of must-watch shows coming out every year, each having better animation and more creativity than the last. With series such as Jujutsu Kaisen and Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, modern anime is at an all-time high, which also means that viewers have shorter attention spans and tend to forget about all the good anime that came before.

  • ✇The Daily Cartoonist
  • Colbert’s Concluding Cartoon Copyright Contravention Content D. D. Degg
    As noted here yesterday Lee Mendelson Film Production is suing entities that illegally used recordings of Vince Guaraldi music specifically created for Peanuts specials. Part of Stephen Colbert’s finale last night included his band playing Peanuts music with Colbert then worrying whether that would incite a lawsuit against CBS. At the three minute ten second […]
     

Colbert’s Concluding Cartoon Copyright Contravention Content

22 May 2026 at 14:16
As noted here yesterday Lee Mendelson Film Production is suing entities that illegally used recordings of Vince Guaraldi music specifically created for Peanuts specials. Part of Stephen Colbert’s finale last night included his band playing Peanuts music with Colbert then worrying whether that would incite a lawsuit against CBS. At the three minute ten second […]

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  • Disney+ Is Ready to Make Summer a Little Spookier With Its New Animated Series [Exclusive] Hannah Hunt
    As much as summer is usually associated with beach trips, vacations, and blockbuster movies, it has increasingly become a season for horror fans as well. Between summer camp slashers, creature features, and the growing popularity of "Summerween," there is no shortage of spooky entertainment arriving long before Halloween. Animation has embraced that trend too, with more family-friendly series finding ways to blend supernatural thrills with comedy and coming-of-age storytelling.
     

Disney+ Is Ready to Make Summer a Little Spookier With Its New Animated Series [Exclusive]

9 June 2026 at 16:00

As much as summer is usually associated with beach trips, vacations, and blockbuster movies, it has increasingly become a season for horror fans as well. Between summer camp slashers, creature features, and the growing popularity of "Summerween," there is no shortage of spooky entertainment arriving long before Halloween. Animation has embraced that trend too, with more family-friendly series finding ways to blend supernatural thrills with comedy and coming-of-age storytelling.

  • ✇The Animated Film Industry
  • 2024 Golden Globe Awards Best Animated Feature Film Amanda Matelonek
    It’s time for the 2024 Golden Globe Awards, which will honor some of the year’s best movies and TV shows. The award show will be broadcast live on CBS on Sunday, Jan. 7 from 8 – 11 p.m. You can also stream the ceremony on Paramount+. The 2024 Best Motion Picture Animated Movies Nominees There are six nominees for the Best Motion Picture Animated Movies category, each with a unique style and innovative animation. My personal favorite is Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, but The Boy and t
     

2024 Golden Globe Awards Best Animated Feature Film

7 January 2024 at 14:00

It’s time for the 2024 Golden Globe Awards, which will honor some of the year’s best movies and TV shows. The award show will be broadcast live on CBS on Sunday, Jan. 7 from 8 – 11 p.m. You can also stream the ceremony on Paramount+.

The 2024 Best Motion Picture Animated Movies Nominees

There are six nominees for the Best Motion Picture Animated Movies category, each with a unique style and innovative animation. My personal favorite is Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, but The Boy and the Heron is also a strong contender.

The Boy and the Heron : The Winner

The Boy and the Heron is a coming-of-age drama directed by Hayao Miyazaki, one of the greatest living directors of animation. This 2D animation features a mythical heron that visits a young boy as he tries to make sense of the world around him.

Elemental

Dive into a world where Earth, Wind, and Fire live among one another but not together. This “COOL” movie by Disney discusses how cultures, or in this case, elements can work together and understand one another. This uniquely animated love story packs an emotional punch with great visual effects from Pixar.

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

Welcome to the Spider-verse! This movie is by far my favorite of the nominees! Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is a thrilling animated movie that follows Miles Morales across multiple universes. It pays homage to many versions of the web-slinger’s appearance from comics to TV shows and has a stunning storyline. It’s my personal favorite of the nominees.

Suzume

Suzume is a visually stunning anime directed by Makoto Shinkai. The movie follows a 17-year-old girl named Suzume and a stranger she meets, who team up to prevent a series of disasters across Japan. The film was inspired by the director’s feelings about the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami and its devastating impact on the country.

The Super Mario Bros. Movie

The Super Mario Bros. Movie has become a hit with audiences of all ages, grossing over $1.3 billion. It incorporates many gaming and contemporary styles of animation from Illumination. The movie delivers a delightful origin story for Mario and Luigi, and its silly and memorable quotes make it a fun watch for everyone. I give it 4 stars out of 5.

WISH

Can Wish, the movie, make its dream come true and win a Golden Globe? The film marks the 100th anniversary of the Walt Disney Animation Studio and follows the story of Asha, a young woman who learns how to make her wishes come true. Although the animation is beautiful and the story is interesting, it’s not one of my favorite Disney movies. However, I did enjoy the references to the studio’s wishing star and some of the characters that have been featured throughout Disney’s history.

  • ✇The Animated Film Industry
  • 2021 Emmy Awards – Outstanding Animated Program Nominees and Winner Amanda Matelonek
    About the 73rd Emmy Awards Ceremony The Primetime Emmy Awards honor the best U.S. television programming from June 1, 2020 until May 31, 2021. The nominees are chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. The ceremony was held September 19, 2021 and broadcasted by CBS and Paramount+. 2021 Emmy Award Nominees and Winner Genndy Tartakovsky’s Primal (WINNER) Photo Credit: Adult Swim Episode: “Plague of Madness”Network: Adult SwimAbout: A relentless dinosaur infected
     

2021 Emmy Awards – Outstanding Animated Program Nominees and Winner

20 September 2021 at 03:02

About the 73rd Emmy Awards Ceremony

The Primetime Emmy Awards honor the best U.S. television programming from June 1, 2020 until May 31, 2021. The nominees are chosen by the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.

The ceremony was held September 19, 2021 and broadcasted by CBS and Paramount+.

2021 Emmy Award Nominees and Winner

Genndy Tartakovsky’s Primal (WINNER)

Photo Credit: Adult Swim

Episode: “Plague of Madness”
Network: Adult Swim
About: A relentless dinosaur infected with a terrifying disease pursues Spear and Fang.

Big Mouth

Photo Credit: Netflix

Episode: “The New Me”
Network: Netflix
About: First episode of the fourth season. At camp, Jessi makes friends with a girl who has transitioned. Nick also must face his two best friends have a little too much in common.

Bob’s Burgers

Photo Credit: LA Times

Episode: “Worms of In-Rear-Ment”
Network: FOX
About: Linda tries to take her family to the symphony on free admission night, but her efforts are thwarted by a pinworm epidemic.

South Park

Photo Credit: Comedy Central

Episode: The Pandemic Special
Network: Comedy Central
About:The on-going Pandemic presents endless challenges to the citizens of South Park.

The Simpsons

Photo Credit: IMDb

Episode: “The Dad-Feelings Limited”
Network: FOX
About: The origin story of Comic Book Guy is revealed as he and Kumiko debate having a baby.

  • ✇Cartoon Research
  • The 80th Anniversary of Make Mine Music Michael Lyons
    When Make Mine Music opened in 1946, The New York Post called it “…a veritable vaudeville show, a three-ring circus, and grand opera thrown together into one technical masterpiece.” It may be the best description for this film made during a difficult time for Walt Disney and his Studio. Between an animators’ strike, and America’s involvement in World War II, production at the Studio had been a challenge during most of the 1940s. Walt kept animation production going during this period by producin
     

The 80th Anniversary of Make Mine Music

24 April 2026 at 07:01

When Make Mine Music opened in 1946, The New York Post called it “…a veritable vaudeville show, a three-ring circus, and grand opera thrown together into one technical masterpiece.”

It may be the best description for this film made during a difficult time for Walt Disney and his Studio. Between an animators’ strike, and America’s involvement in World War II, production at the Studio had been a challenge during most of the 1940s.

Walt kept animation production going during this period by producing lower-budgeted, easy-to-execute films, known as “package films,” which didn’t have a traditional plot but instead were a series of short subjects strung together during a feature-length running time.

One of these was Make Mine Music, with a common theme among the segments being that each was set to a particular piece of music. As each is so vastly different, the Post’s description of the film is appropriate.

The film plays with the Fantasia formula, opening like a concert complete with a program that reads: “Make Mine Music: A Musical Fantasy.”

From here, the film segues to the first section of the film, “The Martins and the Coys” (billed on the program as “A Rustic Ballad”), narrated by the singing group The King’s Men, as it tells the musical tale of two feuding mountain families.

After this, the Ken Darby Chorus performs the title song, “Blue Bayou.” The slow-paced music features accompanying visuals of a nighttime bayou as a bird takes flight, in a sequence that reuses animation intended for a sequel to 1940’s Fantasia, originally intended to accompany the musical composition “Clair de lune.”

Next up is Benny Goodman and his Orchestra with “All the Cats Join in.” Two “hepcat bobbysoxer” teens of the decade dance to the upbeat music as they get ready for a date, with animation introduced by a pencil that draws images that come to life.

Singer Andy Russell performs the next segment, “Without You,” a ballad, with sad, surreal images that transition into views of lonely woods and nighttime stars.

The following segment is one of the film’s most famous, “Casey at the Bat,” narrated as a “Musical Recital” by comedian Jerry Colonna, in his over-the-top style, as a re-telling of the “baseball poem” by author Ernest Thayer about the Mudville team and their star player. This segment was released later in 1946 as a stand-alone short subject and even spawned a sequel with Casey Bats Again, in 1954.

Singer Dinah Shore sings “Two Silhouettes,” the next segment, a “Ballade Ballet” featuring two ballet dancers in rotoscoped silhouette animation, performing in front of a stylized backdrop and assisted by two cherubic figures.

Next is arguably the most popular segment, “Peter and the Wolf,” narrated by the familiar, comforting voice of Disney stalwart Sterling Holloway, from the famous musical composition by conductor Sergei Prokofiev. This segment (sans narration) was also created to be an additional component to Disney’s Fantasia.

Set in Russia, the segment tells the tale of young Peter and his friends Sascha, a bird, Sonia the duck, and Ivan the cat, who venture off into the woods to hunt a wolf. A different musical instrument represents each character, with a distinct theme.

“Peter and the Wolf” was such a substantial segment that it has been shown on its own several times and even released as a record album (paired with “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice” on the flip side).

“Peter and the Wolf” is followed by another Benny Goodman number, “Since You’ve Been Gone,” which provides the backdrop for a march of anthropomorphized musical instruments.

The Andrews Sisters then perform the musical narration for “Johnny Fedora and Alice Blue Bonnet,” a sweet story of two hats who fall in love after meeting in a department store window.

The concluding segment is baritone singer Nelson Eddy and the story of “The Whale Who Wanted to Sing at the Met,” about a whale named Willie with incredible operatic talents and dreams. He is hunted by a music conductor who believes that the whale has swallowed an opera singer.

Although it contains a sad ending, this segment includes beautiful, lush animation, particularly where Willie sings as Pagliacci the Clown, and full opportunity is taken for sight gags involving the size and scale of Willie.

Directed by Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, Hamilton Luske, Joshua Meador, and Robert Cormack, Make Mine Music features animation by Disney Legends Ward Kimball, Ollie Johnston, and Eric Larson, among others.

The artists balance the different styles. There’s the entertaining, overly caricatured design of “Casey,” with the main character’s jut-jaw, and a player who touches the base with his giant handlebar mustache. This is offset by scenes with such images in “Without You,” which play out like rain cascading down a window.

Make Mine Music has been shown on The Disney Channel and released on home video in 2000 (with “The Martins and the Coys” removed due to violence and gunplay concerns), and on Blu-ray in 2021, but as of this writing, the film is still not available on Disney+ (although it is available on Amazon Prime).

Make Mine Music had its premiere in New York City on April 20, 1946, and went into general release on August 15. As the film now celebrates 80 years, it’s the perfect time to revisit this “vaudeville show, three-ring circus, and grand opera” from a unique era in Disney history.

For more about the music of Make Mine Music, check out Greg Ehrbar’s 2016 article.

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  • Only 8 Animated Action Shows Are Better Than 'Invincible' Jiminna Shillingford
    Invincible burst onto screens in a wave of bright colors and epic action brilliance that quite frankly stunned its entire audience. The series centers around the young Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun), who finally gains his superpowers after his 17th birthday and desires to follow in his superhero father's footsteps — only to discover that his father isn’t as heroic as he once believed. While its story and adult animated action are both unapologetically brutal and brilliant, there are quite a few epic
     

Only 8 Animated Action Shows Are Better Than 'Invincible'

13 June 2026 at 13:05

Invincible burst onto screens in a wave of bright colors and epic action brilliance that quite frankly stunned its entire audience. The series centers around the young Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun), who finally gains his superpowers after his 17th birthday and desires to follow in his superhero father's footsteps — only to discover that his father isn’t as heroic as he once believed. While its story and adult animated action are both unapologetically brutal and brilliant, there are quite a few epic animated sagas that have the superhero icon beat.

25 Years Later, Disney’s Most Underrated Sci-Fi Classic Is Officially Getting a Sequel

2 June 2026 at 16:26

Disney built an empire on fairytales and talking animals and earworm songs, but it's important to note that they do sometimes go off the beaten path and try something different. Unfortunately, that doesn't always work for them, and this is a great example of that. It wasn't a traditional Disney movie but that's maybe why time has made its reputation stronger and 25 years later, the underrated sci-fi is getting a sequel.

  • ✇The Animated Film Industry
  • 2021 Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 2 Amanda Matelonek
    About the Ottawa International Animation Festival The Ottawa International Animation Festival (OIAF) has provided animation and entertainment since 1976. The second oldest film institute in the world and also the hub of animation in Canada, has a lot to offer. The festival will be held online from September 22 to October 3, 2021. Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 2 Sleater-Kinney ‘High in the Grass’  Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival D
     

2021 Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 2

21 September 2021 at 23:54

About the Ottawa International Animation Festival

The Ottawa International Animation Festival (OIAF) has provided animation and entertainment since 1976. The second oldest film institute in the world and also the hub of animation in Canada, has a lot to offer. The festival will be held online from September 22 to October 3, 2021.

Ottawa International Animation Festival Shorts Competition 2

Sleater-Kinney ‘High in the Grass’ 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: Kelly Sears
From: United States 
About:A fantastic world of radical empathy and ecstatic care. What initially appears as horrific transforms into the euphoric.

The Clearing 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: Daniel Robert Hope 
From: United Kingdom
About: A holiday of a lifetime! Or a final attempt to save a failing marriage. Bill and Deb struggle to see eye to eye, and their last-ditch camping trip takes a sinister turn.

Dogadjaji za zaboraviti (Events Meant to Be Forgotten) 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: Marko Tadic 
From: Croatia
About: Based on a poem by Hans Magnus Enzensberger, forgotten people, their lives and their deeds are recalled.

Zubroffka 2021 Festival Trailer

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: David Stumpf 
From: Poland 
About: A promo for the Zubroffka Short Film Festival.

Maalbeek 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director:  Ismaël Joffroy Chandoutis 
From: France
About: A amnesiac survivor of the attack at Maalbeek metro station in Brussels seeks the missing images of an event of which she has no memory.

Norges blindeforbund ‘Hjelp, vi har en blind pasient’ (Norwegian Association of the Blind and Partially Sighted ‘Help! We have a blind patient’) 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director:  Robin Jensen 
From: Norway 
About: 3 comic films made for the Norwegian Association of the Blind and Partially Sighted.

Space 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: Zhong Xian 
From: United Kingdom 
About: Personal space plays an important role in a relationship.

The End Of Stories 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: David OReilly 
From: Ireland & United States 
About: A lost generation struggles to understand the present or imagine the future.

Peaches ‘Pussy Mask’ 

Photo Credit: Ottawa International Animation Festival

Director: Leah Shore 
From: Germany, United States & Canada 
About: A music video for the band, Peaches that is absurd and fun.

  • ✇Cartoon Research
  • The 25th Anniversary of “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” Michael Lyons
    In the forward to the book Atlantis, the Lost Empire: The Illustrated Script, the filmmakers write, “There was a kind of film that we all loved when we were growing up: the action-adventure movie. It was a genre that Walt Disney popularized in the 1950s with movies such as 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Swiss Family Robinson, and In Search Of The Castaways. Later, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas invigorated the genre with Raiders of the Lost Ark. We loved these movies. We loved far-off places
     

The 25th Anniversary of “Atlantis: The Lost Empire”

29 May 2026 at 07:01

In the forward to the book Atlantis, the Lost Empire: The Illustrated Script, the filmmakers write, “There was a kind of film that we all loved when we were growing up: the action-adventure movie. It was a genre that Walt Disney popularized in the 1950s with movies such as 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Swiss Family Robinson, and In Search Of The Castaways. Later, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas invigorated the genre with Raiders of the Lost Ark. We loved these movies. We loved far-off places, expert explorers, perilous navigation, and romantic ruins. We loved Adventureland at Disneyland, and we wanted to go there again… this time on the movie screen.”

Inspired by the wonder in these films and Disney attractions, producer Don Hahn and co-directors Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale set out to make Atlantis: The Lost Empire.

Atlantis, which celebrates its twenty-fifth anniversary this summer, marked a distinct shift for Disney, moving from musical fairy tales and fables to an action-adventure format. The film’s intention was to explore new creative ground while honoring the spirit of classic adventure stories.

The filmmakers initially considered adapting Jules Verne’s Journey to the Center of the Earth. However, a quote from Plato emerged during early production: “…in a single day and night of misfortune, the island of Atlantis disappeared into the depths of the sea.”

This quote appears on a title card at the opening of Atlantis: The Lost Empire. Set in 1914, the story centers on Milo Thatch (voiced by Michael J. Fox), a linguist at the Smithsonian Institution who is obsessed with the lost city of Atlantis.

Eccentric millionaire Preston Whitmore (John Mahoney of TV’s Frasier) assembles a team to search for Atlantis, inviting Milo to join the expedition. Led by Commander Rourke (James Garner), the crew includes lieutenant Helga Sinclair (Claudia Christian), demolition expert Vinny Santorini (comedian Don Novello, SNL’s “Father Guido Sarducci”), Dr. Sweet (Phil Morris), mechanic Audrey Ramirez (Jacqueline Obradors), radio operator Mrs. Packard (Florence Stanley), geologist Gaetan “Mole” Molière (Corey Burton), and their cook “Cookie” (Jim Varney in his last screen role).

On their journey, the crew discovers Atlantis, ruled by the King (Leonard Nimoy) and Princess Kida (Cree Summer). When an expedition member double-crosses the crew, they unite to save Atlantis.

To bring Atlantis: The Lost Empire to the screen, Disney artists adapted the style of comic book artist Mike Mignola, creator of the popular Hellboy, and the artist was brought in as one of the film’s production designers.

The filmmakers also hired linguist Mark Okrand (who had created Star Trek’s Klingon language) to craft an Atlantean language for the denizens of the lost city.

Co-directors Wise and Trousdale stage several impressive, dizzying action sequences in Atlantis. The crew’s submarine Leviathan, attacked by Atlantean vessels, is a striking underwater set-piece, and the film’s finale, where Milo and the others commandeer Atlantean flying ships, is a compelling dogfight.

There is also noteworthy character animation throughout, as the animators craft a distinct crew. John Pomeroy, who supervised Milo and Randy Haycock animating Kida, brought impressive acting and heart to their work as the two characters discover each other and their worlds throughout the film. There is subtle comic timing to Vinny from Russ Edmonds, and Mike Surrey crafts Rourke as a captivating, enigmatic figure.

Atlantis: The Lost Empire opened on June 15, 2001, receiving a lukewarm welcome from critics and audiences. Since its release, Atlantis has cultivated a following among Disney, animation, and science fiction fans who feel it has been unfairly overlooked, in the twenty-five years since its release.

These fans share sentiments similar to film critic Roger Ebert’s rave review upon the film’s premiere. He wrote: “The story of Atlantis is rousing in an old pulp science fiction sort of way, but the climactic scene transcends the rest and stands by itself as one of the great animated action sequences. Will the movie signal a new direction from Disney animation? I doubt it. The synergy of animated musical comedies is too attractive, not only for entertainment value but also for the way they spin off hit songs and stage shows. What Atlantis does show is a willingness to experiment with the anime tradition–maybe to appeal to teenage action fans who might otherwise avoid an animated film. It’s like 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea set free by animation to look the way it dreamed of looking.”

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