Animation Magazine's 35 Year Anniversary Issue

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Annecy Festival

Brief and Beautiful Visions A look at some of the exquisite shorts premiering in competition at Annecy this year.

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ach year, Annecy Festival attendees are treated to a wonderfully curated selection of animated shorts from visionary artists all over the world. Although it is impossible to spotlight all 38 projects screening under the Official Selection banner, here is a sampler for what is in store for the lucky audiences:

The Debutante

Lucky Man

Directed by Elizabeth Hobbs (U.K.) hree years ago, London-based artist Elizabeth Hobbs captured the attention of animation fans with her striking, BAFTA-nominated short I’m OK, and the Annecy-nominated Happiness Machine. Her new short The Debutante, which is based on a wild short story written by artist Leonora Carrington in the late 1930s, is about a young woman who persuades a hyena to replace her at a dinner dance held in her honor! “What could possibly go wrong?” asks Hobbs. “I first read the story in 2016 and I’ve been thinking about it for a long time. We started production in earnest in 2020! I used hand-painted frames and paper collage captured under a rostrum camera with Dragonframe. We had a very small team. I animated, wrote and directed the film; I worked with producer Abigail Addison, composer Hutch Demouilpied, editor Mark Jenkins, actors Joanna David, Alexa Davies and Naomi Stafford, and Fonic on the sound design and mix.” Hobbs says she was very pleased to have been trusted with Carrington’s extraordinary short story and to have had the budget to work with a great team. She adds, “I think the film is joyful and dramatic at the same time. The toughest part was finding the funding for the film, but working with Abigail Addison from Animate Projects was a joy, and we were lucky to receive funding support from the BFI through its Short Form Animation Fund, which is made possible thanks to National Lottery funding.” The director says she has a long list of animated shorts that have impacted her. Among them, she singles out Fuji by Robert Breer, The Street by Caroline Leaf, Alison de Vere’s Two Faces, Tale of Tales by Yuri Norstein, Cannon Fodder by Vera Neubauer, Damon the Mower by George Dunning and Very Nice, Very Nice by Arthur Lipsett. For now, she hopes audiences will enjoy her clever outing with the hyena. “I hope they’ll discover Leonora Carrington’s other stories and paintings,” she says. “I also hope that audiences will enjoy this wild story of a young woman’s urgent rebellion!”

Directed by Claude Luyet (Switzerland) wiss director Claude Luyet’s second collaboration with his long-time friend, comic-book artist Thomas Ott, tells the fascinating tale about a man who wins a million-dollar lottery ticket. Luyet, who worked with Ott on the 1994 short Robert Creep: A Dog’s Life, says his goal was to make a dark, ironic and powerful story. “I wanted to depict an unflattering portrait of a man who is rushing to destroy himself. You can call it a kind of elegy to languidness.” Luyet began work on the project about four years ago. He notes, “It took us a year and a half to find the financing and two years to produce the short. We drew on paper, and used photo and paper collages, 2D animation, Photoshop and After Effects. Altogether, seven people worked on the short (including myself and Thomas), and our budget was about $170,000 Swiss Francs ($176,600).” The director, whose other previous animated shorts include Ariadne’s Thread, Patchwork, Animatou and A Question of Optics, says he hopes audiences will get the subtle humor of Lucky Man’s dark vision. When we ask him to give us his favorite animated titles of all time, he responds, “This is the tricky question I dread the most, because there are so many animated shorts that are close to my heart! I am going to choose one to please you, a film made almost entirely by one person — and that’s Rowing Across the Atlantic, which is by Jean-François Laguionie!” And what pleases him most about his latest short? “To have finished it!” he says. “You never know if you’re going to make it!”

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Articles inside

Animated Musings

4min
pages 150-151

Autonomous Animator

3min
pages 148-149

Creative Connections

4min
pages 152-153

Tech Reviews

10min
pages 144-147

Conjuring New Demons

6min
pages 142-143

Experiencing the World of Tomorrow Today

49min
pages 118-139

Unleashing the Dinosaurs Again

7min
pages 140-141

A Few Words from Monsieur le Délégué

6min
pages 102-103

First Look: Netflix Animation Spotlights

3min
pages 116-117

Flight of Fancy

6min
pages 106-107

20 Movies to Catch at Annecy

6min
pages 104-105

Brief and Beautiful Visions

15min
pages 108-115

An Animation Legend Looks Back

6min
pages 96-99

35 Animated Shorts to Explore, Ponder Ignore or Enjoy*

8min
pages 84-87

The Strike That Shifted the Landscape

7min
pages 100-101

The Essentials:35 U.S. Studio Movies of the Past 35 Years

1min
page 82

On Representation and Diversity: How Far Have We Come?

7min
pages 80-81

Riding the Japanese New Wave

5min
pages 78-79

A Lot Can Happen in 35 Years

9min
pages 76-77

Reflections on 1987 and the 35th

4min
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A Crowd-Sourcing Pioneer

4min
pages 72-73

35 Years of Great Quotes

11min
pages 68-71

Blue Skies Ahead for Red Animation

6min
pages 66-67

Drawn to Excellence

6min
pages 62-63

Cyber Group Expands Its Giant Footprint

6min
pages 64-65

Daughter of Invention

6min
pages 60-61

On Being a True Warrior

7min
pages 58-59

Crouching Teen, Hidden Powers

6min
pages 56-57

A Hero Who Keeps on Giving

6min
pages 54-55

And Never Feed Them After Dark

6min
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From Stage to Animated Screen

6min
pages 52-53

A Toon Town Trailblazer

6min
pages 44-45

Sophisticated Sci-Fi Is Back

8min
pages 46-49

The Red Ribbon Army Returns

3min
pages 42-43

Mavka, the Spirit of Ukrainian Culture

5min
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The Tiniest Movie Star

7min
pages 36-37

The Way of the Feline Samurai

6min
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Teddy Bears vs. Unicorns

6min
pages 34-35

Whatever Happened to Those Chipmunks?

6min
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A Real Disney Heroine

7min
pages 20-23

A Toy’s Origin Story

10min
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Here Be Monsters

9min
pages 24-27

Make It Extra — with a Side of Optimism

8min
pages 28-31
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