Showing posts with label stop-motion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stop-motion. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Sunday, April 01, 2018
Maker Spotlight: Maggie Rudy & Mouseland
Recently, I discovered a wonderful article about Maker Maggie Rudy, who invited us into her studio where all the magic happens for Mouseland...
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| Artist & Author, Maggie Rudy |
Maggie’s fascination with mice began in the third grade, when her family moved to Lancaster, England, where her father, a biologist, had a two-year postdoctoral fellowship in physiology. She awoke from her “baby stupor” to an English aesthetic that would remain hugely influential in her life: hedgerows, gypsy carts, and a field trip to the home of Beatrix Potter. From a shop in Lancaster, the Rudy household acquired some mice made of felt. She and sisters Susy and Annie dressed them and placed them in a variety of settings. The “rapture of the tiny” that she celebrated in childhood has never left her.
- Rapture of the Tiny
The short film below is fun to watch, where Maggie lets us in to her studio, and shows us a few of her secrets on how she makes the magic happen!
Currently, Maggie has a traveling diorama touring the US, as shown below. Be sure and check it out if you can, when it comes near you!
Tuesday, December 22, 2015
Anomalisa: Stop Motion Alive & Well
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| Anomalisa co-director Duke Johnson, setting up a shot... |
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| Movie Poster [Click to enlarge] |
It's nice to see the older technologies still not only being done, but being done brilliantly.
It's a painstaking process, taking much longer to set up and film shots than in live-action. But if done right, it's something very special.
In one of the first reviews, the writer states,
Anomalisa is a movie with wit to burn and enough incidental touches that the total achievement feels immense.
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Friday, December 26, 2014
Cat, Mouse with a Brick, and Cop: The Eternal Triangle
In the UK in 1996, a three-minute pilot was created in hopes of launching a new Krazy Kat cartoon series. It was directed by Derek Mogford and produced by Spitting Image Productions.Krazy Kat had been animated often before, and always in long-running and successful series. There were theatrical Krazy Kat cartoons in some form or another running from 1916 to the end of the thirties, and in the sixties the character was brought back for a television series.
So what makes this 1996 Krazy Kat cartoon so interesting if the strip has been animated so many times before? The difference is that, apart from being British, was that it was the first (and so far only) time the characters of Krazy Kat had been brought to life using stop-motion animation. The pilot was produced by Spitting Image Productions and directed by Derek Mogford, an animator who had previously directed several stop-motion children shows including Postman Pat and Bertha.
Sadly, the pilot was never aired and did not lead to a series.
- Credit: Smart Than the Average!
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