Showing posts with label coraline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coraline. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

PGA Nominations Announced




The Producers Guild America have chosen their nominees.  They are:

AVATAR
Producers: James Cameron, Jon Landau
DISTRICT 9
Producers: Carolynne Cunningham, Peter Jackson
AN EDUCATION
Producers: Finola Dwyer, Amanda Posey
THE HURT LOCKER
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS
Producer: Lawrence Bender
INVICTUS
Producers: Clint Eastwood, Rob Lorenz, Lori McCreary , Mace Neufeld
PRECIOUS: BASED ON THE NOVEL PUSH BY SAPPHIRE
Producers: Lee Daniels, Gary Magness, Sarah Siegel-Magness
STAR TREK
Producers: J.J. Abrams, Damon Lindelof
UP
Producer: Jonas Rivera
UP IN THE AIR
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.


PGA Producer of the Year Award in Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures:
9
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
CORALINE
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
FANTASTIC MR. FOX
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG
Producer: Peter Del Vecho
UP
Producer: Jonas Rivera
PGA Producer of the Year Award in Documentary Theatrical Motion Pictures:
BURMA VJ
Producer: Lise Lense-Moller
The COVE
Producers: Paula DuPre Pesman, Fisher Stevens
SERGIO
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
SOUNDTRACK FOR A REVOLUTION
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
David L. Wolper Producer of the Year Award in Long-Form Television*:
GEORGIA O’KEEFFE
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
GREY GARDENS
Producers: David Coatsworth, Lucy Donnelly, Rachael Horovitz, Michael Sucsy
LITTLE DORRIT
Producers: Lisa Osborne, Anne Pivcevic
PRAYERS FOR BOBBY
Producers: Stanley M. Brooks, Damian Ganczewski, David Permut, Daniel Sladek, Chris Taaffe
THE PRISONER
Producer(s): Awaiting final credit determination.
TAKING CHANCE
Producers: Lori Keith Douglas, Ross Katz, Brad Krevoy, Cathy Wischner-Sola

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

37th Annie Award Nominations



And here are the nominations for the Annie Awards (this isn't looking good for "Ponyo"):

Best Animated Feature
  • Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs — Sony Pictures Animation
  • Coraline — Laika
  • Fantastic Mr. Fox — 20th Century Fox
  • The Princess and the Frog — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • The Secret of Kells — Cartoon Saloon
  • Up — Pixar Animation Studios
Best Home Entertainment Production
  • Curious George: A Very Monkey Christmas — Universal Animation Studios
  • Futurama: Into the Wild Green Yonder — The Curiosity Company in association with 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
  • Green Latern: First Flight — Warner Bros. Animation
  • Open Season 2 — Sony Pictures Animation
  • SpongeBob vs. The Big One — Nickelodeon
Best Animated Short Subject
  • Pups of Liberty — Picnic Pictures
  • Robot Chicken: Star Wars 2.5 — ShadowMachine
  • Santa, The Fascist Years — Plymptoons
  • The Rooster, The Crocodile and The Night Sky — Barley Films
  • The Story of Walls — Badmash Animation Studios
Best Animated Television Commercial
  • Goldfish: In The Dark — Blur Studios, Inc.
  • Idaho Lottery “Twiceland” — Acme Filmworks, Inc.
  • McDonald's Nutty Trade — Blue Sky Studios
  • Spanish Lottery “Deportees” — Acme Filmworks, Inc.
  • The Spooning — Screen Novelties /Acne Media
Best Animated Television Production
  • Glenn Martin, DDS — Tornante, Cuppa Coffee Studios & Rogers Communications
  • Merry Madagascar — DreamWorks Animation
  • Prep and Landing — ABC Family/Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • The Simpsons — Gracie Films
Best Animated Television Production for Children
  • Mickey Mouse Clubhouse — Disney Television Animation
  • SpongeBob SquarePants — Nickelodeon
  • The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack — Cartoon Network Studios
  • The Mighty B! — Nickelodeon/Polka Dot Pictures/Paper Kite Productions
  • The Penguins of Madagascar — Nickelodeon and DreamWorks Animation
INDIVIDUAL ACHIEVEMENT CATEGORIES___________________
Animated Effects
  • Scott Cegielski “Monsters vs. Aliens” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Alexander Feigin “9” — 9 L.L.C.
  • Eric Froemling “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Tom Kluyskens “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” — Sony Pictures Animation
  • James Mansfield “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
Character Animation in a Television Production
  • Mark Donald “B.O.B.'s Big Break” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Mark Mitchell “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Kevan Shorey “Merry Madagascar” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Tony Smeed “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Phillip To “Monsters vs. Aliens: Mutant Pumpkins from Outer Space” — DreamWorks Animation
Character Animation in a Feature Production
  • Andreas Deja “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Eric Goldberg “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Travis Knight “Coraline” — Laika
  • Daniel Nguyen “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Bruce Smith “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
Character Design in a Television Production
  • Bryan Arnett “The Mighty B! - Catatonic” — Nickelodeon/Polka Dot Pictures/Paper Kite Productions
  • Ben Balistreri “Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends” — Cartoon Network Studios
  • Craig Kellman “Merry Madagascar” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Bill Schwab “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
Character Design in a Feature Production
  • Daniel Lopez Munoz “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Shane Prigmore “Coraline” — Laika
  • Shannon Tindle “Coraline” — Laika
Directing in a Television Production
  • Pam Cooke & Jansen Yee “American Dad: Brains, Brains & Automobiles” — 20th Century Fox/Fuzzy Door/Underdog
  • Rob Fendler “Popzilla” — Animax
  • John Infantino, J.G. Quintel “The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack: Candy Casanova” — Cartoon Network Studios
  • Bret Haaland “The Penguins of Madagascar - Launchtime” — Nickelodeon and DreamWorks Animation
  • Jennifer Oxley “The Wonder Pets: Help The Monster” — Nickelodeon/Little Airplane Productions
Directing in a Feature Production
  • Wes Anderson “Fantastic Mr. Fox” — 20th Century Fox
  • Pete Docter “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Christopher Miller, Phil Lord “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” — Sony Pictures Animation
  • Hayao Miyazaki “Ponyo” — Studio Ghibli
  • Henry Selick “Coraline” — Laika
Music in a Television Production
  • Michael Giacchino “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Kevin Kiner “Star Wars: The Clone Wars “Weapons Factory” — Lucasfilm Animation Ltd.
  • Guy Moon “The Fairly OddParents: “Wishology-The Big Beginning” — Nickelodeon
Music in a Feature Production
  • Bruno Coulais “Coraline” — Laika
  • Michael Giacchino “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Joe Hisaishi “Ponyo” — Studio Ghibli
  • John Powell “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” — Blue Sky Studios
Production Design in a Television Production
  • Mac George “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Andy Harkness “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Janice Kubo “Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends” — Cartoon Network Studios
Production Design in a Feature Production
  • Christopher Appelhans “Coraline” — Laika
  • Ian Gooding “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Tadahiro Uesugi “Coraline” — Laika
  • Christophe Vacher “9” — 9 L.L.C.
Storyboarding in a Television Production
  • Sunil Hall “The Mighty B!: Catatonic” — Nickelodeon/Polka Dot Pictures/Paper
  • Robert Koo “Merry Madagascar” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Brandon Kruse “The Fairly OddParents: Fly Boy” — Nickelodeon
  • Joe Mateo “Prep and Landing” — ABC Family/Walt Disney Animation Studios Kite Productions
  • Adam Van Wyk “The Spectacular Spider-Man: Final Curtain” — Culver Entertainment
Storyboarding in a Feature Production
  • Sharon Bridgeman “Astro Boy” — Imagi Studios
  • Chris Butler “Coraline” — Laika
  • Ronnie Del Carmen “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Tom Owens “Monsters vs. Aliens” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Peter Sohn “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
Voice Acting in a Television Production
  • Danny Jacobs - Voice of King Julien - “Merry Madagascar” — DreamWorks Animation
  • Nicky Jones - Voice of Chowder - “Chowder: The Dinner Theatre” — Cartoon Network Studios
  • Tom Kenny - Voice of SpongeBob - “SpongeBob SquarePants — Truth or Square” — Nickelodeon
  • Dwight Schultz - Voice of Mung Daal - “Chowder:The Party Cruise” — Cartoon Network Studios
  • Willow Smith - Voice of Abby - “Merry Madagascar” — DreamWorks Animation
Voice Acting in a Feature Production
  • Jen Cody - Voice of Charlotte - “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Dawn French - Voice of Miss Forcible - “Coraline” — Laika
  • Hugh Laurie - Voice of Dr. Cockroach Ph.D. - “Monsters vs. Aliens” — DreamWorks Animation
  • John Leguizamo - Voice of Sid - “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaur” — Blue Sky Studios
  • Jenifer Lewis - Voice of Mama Odie - “The Princess and the Frog” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
Writing in a Television Production
  • Daniel Chun - “The Simpsons: Treehouse of Horror XX” — Gracie Films
  • Kevin Deters, Stevie Wermers-Skelton - “Prep and Landing” — Walt Disney Animation Studios
  • Valentina L. Garza - “The Simpsons: Four Great Women and a Manicure” — Gracie Films
  • Billy Kimball and Ian Maxtone-Graham - “The Simpsons: Gone Maggie Gone” — Gracie Films
  • Billy Lopez - “The Wonder Pets - Save the Honey Bears” — Nickelodeon Productions/Little Airplane Productions
Writing in a Feature Production
  • Wes Anderson and Noah Baumbach - “Fantastic Mr. Fox” — 20th Century Fox
  • Pete Docter, Bob Peterson, Tom McCarthy - “Up” — Pixar Animation Studios
  • Timothy Hyde Harris and David Bowers - “Astro Boy” — Imagi Studios
  • Christopher Miller and Phil Lord - “Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs” — Sony Pictures Animation
JURIED AWARDS__________________________________
Winsor McCay Award — Tim Burton, Bruce Timm, Jeffrey Katzenberg
June Foray — Tom Sito
Ub Iwerks Award — William T. Reeves
Special Achievement — Martin Meunier and Brian McLean
Certificate of Merit — Myles Mikulic, Danny Young and Michael Woodside

Saturday, October 24, 2009

The Sound of Animation

We've had a great year for animation, but one aspect of these animated films that are rarely being discussed is the music.  Believe it or not, not ONLY has animation managed to one-up many of the live action movies this year in terms of quality, but the soundtracks are also more memorable then most of the live action films.  Of course Michael Giacchino looks like a shoo in to get a nomination for his (yet to be released on CD) score for "Up," but let's face it: That nomination - while justified - will be there just to rack up the nominations for Pixar.  Below are some of the OTHER animated scores that deserve to recognized by the Academy (but most likely won't):





Ponyo


Up

Personally, if I had to award an Oscar to a score this year, it would be for "Ponyo."  Thankfully the score of "Ponyo" IS available on CD...for those willing to play the import game.  For those who WANT to play the import game but don't know how, here's a good place to start.

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Cloudy With A Chance of Oscars




Well folks, I personally didn't care for "Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs" much.  You can read my review here, but I thought that the movie - while funny - wasn't something worth remembering.  That said the movie does hold a 86% fresh rating from Rotten Tomatoes and was a surprise number 1 hit at the box office, so at this point anything is possible.  I'm still not sure if we're getting three nominated films or five (I'm guessing three), but Sony's animated underdog (in the sense that Sony needs this film to succeed...badly) might just squeeze into the nominees at one point.  If we get stuck with three nominees they should be:

  • Ponyo
  • The Princess and the Frog
  • Up

If we get five nominees they should be:

  • 9
  • Coraline
  • Ponyo
  • The Princess and the Frog
  • Up

I would hate to see 'Cloudy' sneak in on either of those lists (but if we have five, nudging out "9" for a slot would be a lesser offender since that was a movie with lots of style but little substance).

Saturday, February 7, 2009

"Coraline" Opens Big


Some of you may be worried that I'm jumping the gun a bit, but in my eyes "Coraline" has solidified it's status of being an early contender for the Best Animated Film Oscar for this year. The movie has opened to great reviews (88% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes.com) and good box office (close to $5 in it's first day). Considering we live in a world of computer animation and fart jokes, this is pretty impressive. I wrote about the project when I first heard about it, and despite being in a position where I'm supposed to be agnostic about a films prospects, I had a good feeling about this film. The combination of stop-motion master Henry Selleck and graphic novel genius Neil Gaiman sounded like a recepeit for instant magic. I haven't seen the film yet. I was supposed to see it last night but there was a problem and I couldn't go. Now that word-of-mouth is out on how good this film is I feel more mad that I didn't get to see it last night.

I also feel "Coraline" is the first horse in a race that hasn't been interesting in years. I love Pixar as much as the next person, but it's frustrating to see them win every year. Of course, the only reason this is the case is because the competition normally doesn't step up to the plate to offer any real competition ("Persepolis" aside). This year we have "Coraline," we have the Tim Burton produced "9," we have the latest from Hayao Miyazaki "Ponyo On A Cliff," we have Disney's return to traditional animation "The Princess and the Frog," etc, etc...let's just say that Pixar's "Up" has some serious competition this year. Which is a good thing. Far too long the animated feature race has been too predictable and boring. This year it looks like animation is going to come fully swinging as something to be taken seriously. And who knows: Maybe "Up" will even receive a Best Picture nomination.

Update 2-8-2009: Well the numbers are in, and "Coraline" opened at number 3 with about $16 million dollars in it's first weekend. It made more money then "The Pink Panther 2" (which many predicted to be the number 1 movie this week), and judging on good word-of-mouth this movie should do very well in the coming weeks.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

9



This is the trailer for the upcoming animated film "9," directed by Shane Acker and produced by Tim Burton. Oh, and the movie has an all-star cast including Elijah Wood, Jennifer Connelly, Academy Award winner Martin Landau, and many more. I know that we're already predicting that Pixar's "Up" is next years front-runner for Best Animated Feature, but looking at "Ponyo On A Cliff," "Coraline," and now "9," all I have to say it...woah, next years looks to be a very interesting year for animation.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

"Coraline" Has High Stakes


One of the movies I'm anticipating more then other's is Henry Selicks "Coraline," a new stop-motion movie adapted from a Neil Gaiman book. Apparently the studio that is making it was founding by some guy who used to work for Nike, and while they don't believe they will make an instant financial hit, they hope to make a critically financial hit so that they can compete in an ever growing animation market:

The risk is unmistakable. The world of animation gets more crowded by the day, with feature films, DVDs, TV series and video games competing for consumers' attention. And "Coraline" isn't your typical talking-animal romp or potpourri of pop culture references.

Rather, it's a spooky, through-the-looking-glass tale of a lonely tweener girl who moves to Ashland and steps into a mirror world where sinister impostors stand in for her parents.

And did we mention that there's also a burlesque, Benny Hill-style interlude that mixes Shakespeare, trapezes and the doffing of clothes -- all set to a song written by "Coraline" director Henry Selick?

By choosing unconventional source material, as well as the decades-old stop-motion technique over the computer-generated animation familiar from such hits as the "Shrek" franchise and "The Incredibles," Laika is breaking with nearly all the conventions that helped make animated movies one of the surest bets in Hollywood.

Friday, August 22, 2008

The Dark (Animated) Horse

I've already predicted that Hayao Miyazaki's new film has the best chance of upsetting "Wall•E" at the Oscars this year, but I may have discovered a dark horse in the race:



An animated film from Neil Gaiman? Directed by "The Nightmare Before Christmas" director Henry Selick? This may be something to keep an eye out for. Maybe the animation companies are starting to get serious about this award.