Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Sharing Animation - Music Video - The Music Scene (Anthony Schepperd, 2009)

Continuing the animated music video fever, today I'll share yet another completely mind blowing project!

It's funny because this music video is from the same year as my last sharing, and also I saw them both for the first time in the same day! Obviously my professor has very good taste!

The name of this one is The Music Scene, by a band called Blockhead and made by the genious artist Anthony Francisco Schepperd.

He has a very unique visual approach, and as he says: "Animation gives us the rare opportunity to spill our most coveted attribute, the imagination.", and he does! It's always a beautiful thing when someone uses animation to do something that only this wonderful craft can create, and he definetely takes it far, far away! I simply love the sketch-like drawings that he leave as it is, and of course, the bright colors couldn't suit it better! And it's very clear that he is a great draftsman!

He has made many different projects, but the ones that he stands out the most are the music videos.
HERE you can see his Vimeo page and take a look at his other projects. He's certainly a pro.

Enjoy this trip (it really is!) and admire The Music Scene by Anthony Francisco Schepperd.




Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you soon with more music and more fluidity in movement!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Sharing Animation - Music Video - No Corras Tanto (Cesar Diaz, 2009)

Hey! For the next sharings I thought I could go on a Music vibe! So today I'll be sharing my first animated music video ever! =)

And of course, I couldn't start with just any animated music video, I'll start with one of my big favourites! This is my favourite not because of the music, of course, the only important thing for me in this sharings are the animations!

So I'm sharing with you guys No Corras Tanto by Cesar Diaz.

I think this work is so awesome mostly because of the technique. Sand animation is my least favourite animation technique, and that's precisely because I've never seen before one film that I actually enjoyed visually. But Cesar Diaz came to change my whole oppinion about sand animation, mostly with this music video. So that's why I love this video so much!

HERE is the making off video where you can see a little bit about how it's done.

And now enjoy No Corras Tanto by Cesar Diaz.





Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you next week with another animated music video!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Sharing Animation - Gerald McBoing Boing (UPA - Robert Cannon, 1950)

Today I wanted to share one old classic, an old and very funny classic short animation. I loved this animation since my first glance at it, since its first "words" to me, or should I say, since the first "BOING"!

Yes yes, it was time already to share Gerald McBoing Boing!

I love this animation for many reasons. First of all the story, and old classic too. Firstly it's a Dr Seuss story, and for those who don't know that name, that tells A LOT. Well want to know why? The Lorax, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Horton Hears a Who! and The Cat in the Hat rings a bell? Yup, all Dr Seuss stories, and that's just for the Feature Film cathegory. It's an odd little boy, who doesn't seem to fit anywhere. His way of being is just not understood! Well, of course that singularity of his is exactly what, in the end, will make him famous and rich and loved! An old classic, as I sad.
But I also love this animation because of the design of it, the visual aspect. The backgrounds are so simple and yet so expressive. And the characters itself are bent in ways that are just... perfectly expressive!
And the final reason why I love this animation is his special gift itself! Not only he is doing it with his voice (I love sound effects with voices! I shared one very good animation with real voice sound effects a while ago, HERE is the link for it) but also he is professionaly one thing that I find amazing, sound designer/sound mixer! Very cool stuff! But I won't ramble about it.


This is a very light short animation that I'm sure everyone will enjoy! Produced by UPA, distributed by Columbia Pictures and directed by Robert Cannon, this is a must see for all animation lovers, for sure.

Sit back for this very short 6 minutes and enjoy! Gerald McBoing Boing by Robert Cannon.





Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


I'll see you soon with more of this fantastic animated world!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Annecy 2013 - I'm GOING

It's more than official! And I am soooooooooooo happy about it!

I'm going to Annecy 2013! Make that 2013 cheers! =)




Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Sharing Animation - Madame Tutli-Putli ( Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski, 2007)

I wanted to get back to my animation sharings, so I decided I would choose one of my favourite animations!

This particular short is an incredible trip to the inside of a very deep character. The whole movie has a mistery to it and many feelings that are very intrinsic. The feelings of the movie are so important that the directors, Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski chose a very unique way to portray them on a stop-motion puppet.

The short I'll be sharing today is Madame Tutli-Putli.

The movie makes you feel very uneasy with all those uncomfortably small spaces and the too close up shots of the characters faces. It's never ment for you to feel confortable and the original score by David Bryant and Jean-Frédéric Messier is incredible successful to help the mood be spot on.

Although the animation is great, the sound is great and the visual is great, the one thing that make the short be so incredible are the way the eyes of the characters were done. The special effects man for the movie was Jason Walker and he ultimately made the short work, as the directors visualized.
Here's how it's explained on the official website for the short: "In the end, the solution arose when Jason tested the tracking and re-timing of live action human eyes onto a stop-motion scene. This test led to the creation of a remarkable production process whereby live action human eyes were added to almost 20 minutes of stop-motion animation in a manner that was perfectly seamless and completely unobtrusive. Jason developed a system of separating and analyzing the previously shot stop-motion puppet moves, choreographing, rehearsing and shooting a human actor's corresponding "eye performance" to match each puppet move, at the same time recreating as closely as possible all light and shadow passes original to the stop-motion. Once the human eyes were shot, each eye was individually positioned, scaled, re-timed and digitally composited onto the puppet scenes. As different actors were cast for almost all the characters, the requirement was not only to integrate the human eyes onto each puppet, but on a frame by frame basis, match the subtle movement of the puppets, the camera, and the train – all the while retaining the flow of the acting. "This required every trick in the book and more!" exclaims Mr. Walker. The creation of the film and this extraordinarily painstaking process took 4 years from concept to completion."

It was genius.

HERE you can find the Producer of the short talking about it in a 4 minute video.

And without further adieu, nominated for the Oscar here is Madame Tutli-Putli by Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski



Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


Hope to keep it up sharing with you all this incredible animations!

See you soon with another incredible animation!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

My Animations - Animation Mentor Class 02: Psychology of Body Mechanics

My animation journey has taken another step! After three more months, I finished my second Class at Animation Mentor with improved skills and hopefully a good progress reel!

My mentor this Class was a fantastic artist originally from Belgium called Marlon Nowe, that today is working as a supervisor animator at Disney Animation Studios! Before that he worked at Blur Studios and at Rhythm and Hues! If you're curious you can find HERE his website and one cool thing about his website is that you can watch some of his early animations while he was a student! That for me is so valuable, it's a way for everyone to see that you have to start somewhere to go to the top! HERE you can watch his reel prior to getting into Disney, and HERE and HERE you can find his film reels for Bolt and Tangled, respectively.

It was a fantastic class and we learned so much that I'm still astonished! My love for animation has never been so big and my will to follow my dream never been so strong! I hope this term goes even better!

So here's my progress at Animation Mentor so far! I can really tell how much I'm improving each shot I animate but I want to get soooooo much further! If you never quit, you can never fail, right? Hope you enjoy this little reel! (Also includes my Class 1 shots)




So if last time I wished you all a Happy Christmas and a Happy New Year, now I wish you all a Happy Easter!

See you in 3 more months with another progress reel!

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

My Animations - Animation Mentor Class 01: Basic Foundations

And here I have it! After three months, those amazing 12 weeks, in my first Class in the incredible online animation school, Animation Mentor, I have my first "progress reel"!
What is a progress reel? Is a little movie where I put (from the newer to the older) all the animations I did in this first term.

This term I had as a teacher the one and only amazing animator and teacher Anthony Wong, and boy, am I happy that I chose him! He has worked through out the industry in everything there is to work in animation, games, commercials, TV shows (the Simpsons) and feature films (he worked in Walt Disney studios in films such as "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" and is now working at Pixar, and has worked on Ratatouille, Cars2 and some more and is now working on Monsters University).
I don't know exactly how are the other mentors at Animation Mentor, but Anthony Wong has certainly put a high standard of quality in the teaching. Never in my life was I part of such a learning environment, it was great, it was perfect. But I'm quite confident about my next mentor as well! He is great and I hand picked him for the next term. His name is Marlon Nowe and he is currently working at Walt Disney Studio (worked in Tangled, Wreck-it Ralph and the short Paperman, as far as I know).


I'll just explain, in order of appearance the animations I have here.

  • The first one is the last I did, I actually completed it last week, and the objective of it was to refine and finish a walk with personality with that little character.
  • The week before, the next shot that look fairly the same, was just a "blocking" stage, where we create some poses with that 3D character, and come up with a timing and show it to our mentor.
  • The two after that, I had to go through a blocking stage again, but now for a normal walk, what they call a vanilla walk, which is the character just walking, with no personality, so the two are blocking stage and refine stage after that.
  • The one next was Tailor, this little character that resembles a squirrel. That character is there so we could learn more about animating that tail, overlap actions it is.
  • After tailor I have a pendulum like thingy, which was the introduction to overlapping actions, that pendulum like arm, lifeless, as opposite to Tailor's tail.
  • The little ball going all around was an obstacle course ball, for us to learn the principle of squash and stretch.
  • The two different balls, as you can imagine, are different weights balls, so we can learn more about the difference animating something heavy and something very light.
  • And the first one was really a normal ball (football or basketball) jumping, the animation every animator had to do at least once in his life!



The truth is, this last three months went by in a rush! Animation Mentor is truly super intensive! And in this last week of the Basic Foundations Class, this is what I ended up with.





Probably in the future I will update this video, with better renderings of the animations, and better to look at, but for now I'll leave it like this.
I can't wait for the next term to start, but for the next two weeks I'll be able to take a little rest and enjoy family and Christmas!

So I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Sharing Animation - Franz Kafka's Country Doctor (Koji Yamamura, 2007)

And here I come again with another animation to share with everyone! This week I chose a somewhat dark environment, but it is a very well done and very well conceptualized animation.

The director nowadays is like a guru of animation and a very well know artist. Besides the godlike animator and director Hayao Miyazaki he was the only Japanese animator to receive a Oscar nomination (this honor with the short called Mt. Head).

But this week's animation short I'm here to share is called Franz Kafka's Country Doctor (Kafka Inaka Isha), by the japanese independente animator, Koji Yamamura.

Apart from the downer mood, it really is a very recomended watching!

HERE you can find Yamamura's website.


Here it is, Kafka's Country Doctor, by Koji Yamamura. (It's divided in three parts because it was in better quality)







Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you soon with another great sharing (next time more happy themed)



No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Sharing Animation - The Aroma of Tea (Michael Dudok de Wit, 2006)

Today I wanted to share with you all a short animation that has widely influenced me, and I love it so much that I actually used it's unique graphic quality in one of my works.

This very short animation is called The Aroma of Tea by Michael Dudok de Wit. This is the third short animation that I share by this great artist, which can really show my love for his masterpieces.

This one very much simpler than the others, but still you could find a very deep meaning in it. But in the end it's a very "sit back and enjoy" kind of film, so I don't have much to say about it. Well it was painted with tea! =)

First I want to share this interview about the artist:




And here is this wonderful art:



Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you next week with another inspirational animation!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

My Animations - Traditional Animation Project

Today I want to wrap up, finally, my university animations here in my blog. So there's only one more to talk about and this one was the one that took me longer to get as far as it is. Just because it's a 2 min short all done with traditional animation, so for those who have experienced something like this, they'll know how long this can take for one person alone to make. And that's why in some parts it isn't finished. Maybe in the future this will be one more project for me to finish, but not right now, as I'm busy with another even more awesome stuff like learning animation from the top animators in the world!

This project was a personal short that intended to honor the animation world. Not only its history and how it grew to be this spectacular art form we know today, but also to make reference of some of the most influential artists in the area.

So in the end what I chose to represent were some of the objects that preceded animation itself, objects that created the illusion of movement through images before it went out onto the screens. Many objects like the thaumatrope, phenakistoscope, zoetrope/praxinoscope, mutoscope are here represented but also the film and paper itself are shown here as methods of creating motion. The whole animation is representing and simulating other objects, but in the end it was made in paper, everything was drawn, so the paper itself cannot be forgotten, that is the reason that the main character, an illusionist, since he is creating the illusion of motion, the illusion of life, is drawn in such a sketched way, and organic drawing that is moving for it's own, has a life but still is a drawing. That is also the reason that the last thing animated is the paper itself.

Not only the objects and methods of animation are represented but also animators and their work. The first representation is a generic bouncing ball, and it's there because it is one of the first exercises a person learning animation must do, so is an exercise that every professional animator has done one way or the other.
Then some artists are referenced, like Winsor McCay with Gertie the Dinosaur, Norman McLaren with Blinkity Blank and Pas de Deux, and also traditional animation studios like Walt Disney Studios with the enchanted broom of the Sorcerer's Apprentice part of Fantasia, and 3D studios like Pixar and Dreamworks animation studios with Luxor Jr. and the fishing rod/line.

(all the links are to images search in Google and Wikipedia, I think all the animations I refer above can be found in the internet if you search for it)

Of course there were many other artists and studios that were equally, if not more, important for the development of this art form, but this was a personal choice, having in mind that when I first planned this short, I was starting my animation studies, so the references are not as knowledgeable as I could have make them today. And also, this was to be just a quick reference to a very few group of artists that were/are in fact important for the evolution of animation. Another interesting aspect of this animation is that some parts I animated when I haven't really animated almost nothing at all before, so I was even more an amateur than I am today, and other parts were animated almost two years later, so the quality in movement is clearly better.


To finish up this rambling, I want to mention that although many parts are made as references to other animations, all the animation in this unfinished short was done by me, and no method of copying animation, like rotoscopy was used at all.

So here it is, the most time I spent, ever, in any kind of project, and still needing more time (maybe in the future, who knows?), one of the animations of my last year of university, this traditional animation project.



Tradicional Animation Project from Rodrigo Costa on Vimeo.


For now on, the animations I'm creating are for the online animation school Animation Mentor which I'm currently in week 6! So stay tuned!

Sharing Animation - The Silence Beneath the Bark (Joanna Lurie, 2010)

Hey animation lovers!

This week I would like to share with you a quite recent, beautiful and very deep short animation I found some time ago when I was in university. We were to look for animations that had different techniques, and I chose to talk about simplicity in different techniques and simplicity in different ways. This short has a simplicity of it's own, mostly in the main characters that although are CG three dimensional characters, are so simple yet so expressive.

There are many aspects of this short that I just love. One of them is the obvious good taste for composition of the creators. Another thing is the incredible script it has, another way to show that no words are needed to tell a good story.

This hybrid animation with CG and traditional mixing together in a perfect and pleasant composition has great texture and it really is a good piece of art.

So enjoy the 2007 Annecy Judge Award Winner short The Silence Beneath the Bark (Original title: Le Silence Sous L'écorce) by Joanna Lurie.




Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you soon with another beautiful animation short!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Sharing Animation - Gertie the Dinossaur (Winsor McCay, 1914)

Here we are for another short animation for you to enjoy, and since last week I posted a recent one (2010 Love & Theft), today I'm posting a really old one (actually, the oldest in my list!)

So, as a really old one, and really influential one, I wish I could give it a special attention and really enhance the incredible work this animator did. His name is Winsor McCay and this animation is called Gertie the Dinosaur.

Before this animation, McCay had already done two other animations, one called "Little Nemo" (which Google celebrated in a Doodle this week) and other called "The Story of a Mosquito". This last one had a problem with the audience, that tought the mosquito was moving through wires (imagine in the very early 1990's thinking that was actually a moving drawing). So in the next animation McCay decided to animate a dinossaur, to prove his drawings were moving.

Ten thousand drawings of Gertie were done for this animation. This is the first time a character is actually given life in a screen, with real emotions and real responces that people recognize and have empathy.


After this animation he made several other animations, including another one with Gertie in 1921, but this one went out to be his masterpiece and one of the most influential animations of all time.

Enjoy Gertie the Dinossaur by Winsor McCay.





Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you next week with another influential animation!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Sharing Animation - Love & Theft (Andreas Hykade, 2010)

Hello peeps!

Since I started AM I haven't actually kept my promise of sharing a new inspirational animation every week, but hey, I'm trying to do my best and today, although I'm quite late with my assignment, I thought I could come and share some other special animation with you!

For this week I bring a recent short animation called "Love & Theft", that is one hell of an artistic piece in my opinion. The creator, director and animator of this wonderful animation is Andreas Hykade.

I think this animation is highly illustrational, and the way he explores the loops is just great! It's somewhat fast, but you can clearly see most of his references to many cartoons of many kinds and also (I've read this in a news blog) some other animators, such as Bill Plympton). Among the many animations that are referenced you can find Betty Boop, The Hat, mickey mouse and donald duck, his own Ring of Fire, Sponge Bob, Droopy, and many many others.

Please enjoy this wonderful digital animation "Love & Theft" by Andreas Hykade.




Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you next week, or soon =P, with another great animation!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Sharing Animation - The Band Concert (Walt Disney Studios - Wilfred Jackson, 1935)

Hello again dear fellow animation lovers!

Finally my longe holidays are over and I'm finally back on studying! And what excitement it is to be in one of the top schools of animation in the world! That's right, yesterday I started my fantastic one and a half year animation learning at Animation Mentor! The happiness I'm feeling right now is quite incredible and indescribable!

But enough about that! Since I'm back to work, I thought it would be a perfect time to get back with the animation sharing in my blog!

So to get back from this long absense, I'm here to show you one of the most powerful short animations I've ever seen and certainly my favorite from that studio!

The fantastic studio, as we all know it, is the Disney Animation Studios, and the wonderful short is the 1935 The Band Concert, directed by Wilfred Jackson.

Starting with the well known "Silly Symphonies" was the goal of achieving a great relationship between music and animation. In the book "The Illusion of Life", chapter 11: The Disney Sounds, there's a paragraph I would like to quote about this short.


<< In those first symphonies, the actions had been simple, staying with dance steps and runs that easily could be made to follow the beat of the music. But with Walt's insistance on humor and personality, the films built quickly into stories that demanded the acting match the tempo, too. This reached a peak in 1935 with the Band Concert, which combined well-known music with strong personalities and a situation played entirely in pantomime. It was rare combination, reflecting still another use of music as language. As one producer said, "Who else would take a band concert out of Walt's boyhood, mix in 'William Tell' and 'Turkey in the Straw' and a Kansas cyclone, and come out with a performance that would enchant Toscanini?" (Tipical of Walt, he did not stop there but began thinking of an ever bigger use of the same principle. He called that one Fantasia.) >>


This short for me is the perfect demonstration of in which levels can music and animation come close together. This is a highly inspirational short, as far as I'm concerned.

Enjoy The Band Concert by Wilfred Jackson and the fantastic Walt Disney crew!




Check out the other short movies from the Sharing Collection HERE!!


See you next week (when I'll be in week 2 in animation mentor!) for another awesome animation!


No copyright and related rights infringements are intended with these sharings, all these animations are properties from their respective authors or studios always credited in the post.